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                      2: .TH GNUPLOT 1 "31 August 1990"
                      3: .UC 4
                      4: .SH NAME
                      5: gnuplot \- an interactive plotting program
                      6: .SH SYNOPSIS
                      7: .B gnuplot
                      8: [ X11 options ] [file ...]
                      9: .br
                     10: .SH DESCRIPTION
                     11: .I Gnuplot
                     12: is a command-driven interactive function plotting program.
                     13: .PP
                     14: If files are given,
                     15: .I gnuplot
                     16: loads each file with the
                     17: .I load
                     18: command, in the order specified.
                     19: .I Gnuplot
                     20: exits after the last file is processed.
                     21: .PP
                     22: Here are some of its features:
                     23: .PP
                     24: Plots any number of functions, built up of C operators, C library
                     25: functions, and some things C doesn't have like **, sgn(), etc.  Also
                     26: support for plotting data files, to compare actual
                     27: data to theoretical curves.
                     28: .PP
                     29: User-defined X and Y ranges (optional auto-ranging), smart axes scaling,
                     30: smart tic marks.
                     31: .PP
                     32: Labelling of X and Y axes.
                     33: .PP
                     34: User-defined constants and functions.
                     35: .PP
                     36: Support through a generalized graphics driver for
                     37: AED 512,
                     38: AED 767,
                     39: BBN BitGraph,
                     40: Commodore Amiga,
                     41: Roland DXY800A,
                     42: EEPIC,
                     43: TeXDraw,
                     44: EmTeX,
                     45: Epson 60dpi printers,
                     46: Epson LX-800,
                     47: Fig,
                     48: HP2623,
                     49: HP2648,
                     50: HP75xx,
                     51: HPGL,
                     52: HP LaserJet II,
                     53: Imagen,
                     54: Iris 4D,
                     55: Linux,
                     56: MS-DOS Kermit,
                     57: Kyocera laser printer,
                     58: LaTeX,
                     59: NEC CP6 pinwriter,
                     60: PostScript,
                     61: QMS QUIC,
                     62: ReGis (VT125 and VT2xx),
                     63: SCO Xenix CGI,
                     64: Selanar,
                     65: Star color printer,
                     66: Tandy DMP-130 printer,
                     67: Tek 401x,
                     68: Tek 410x,
                     69: Vectrix 384,
                     70: VT like Tektronix emulator,
                     71: Unix PC (ATT 3b1 or ATT 7300),
                     72: unixplot,
                     73: and X11.
                     74: The PC version compiled by Microsoft C
                     75: supports IBM CGA, EGA, VGA, Hercules, ATT 6300,
                     76: and Corona 325 graphics.
                     77: The PC version compiled by Borland C++
                     78: supports IBM CGA, EGA, MCGA, VGA, Hercules and ATT 6300 graphics.
                     79: Other devices can be added simply, but will require recompiling.
                     80: .PP
                     81: Shell escapes and command line substitution.
                     82: .PP
                     83: Load and save capability.
                     84: .PP
                     85: Output redirection.
                     86: .PP
                     87: All computations performed in the complex domain.  Just the real part is
                     88: plotted by default, but functions like imag() and abs() and arg() are
                     89: available to override this.
                     90: .SH X11 OPTIONS
                     91: .I Gnuplot
                     92: provides the \fIx11\fP terminal type for use
                     93: with X servers. This terminal type is set automatically at startup if
                     94: the \fBDISPLAY\fR environment variable is set, if the \fBTERM\fR environment
                     95: variable is set to \fBxterm\fR, or if the \fB\-display\fR command line
                     96: option is used.
                     97: For terminal type \fIx11\fR, \fIgnuplot\fP
                     98: accepts the standard X Toolkit options and resources such as geometry, font,
                     99: and background. See the X(1) man page for a description of
                    100: the options.
                    101: In addition to the X Toolkit options:
                    102: .PP
                    103: \fB\-clear\fP requests that the window be cleared momentarily before a
                    104: new plot is displayed.
                    105: .PP
                    106: \fB\-gray\fP requests grayscale rendering on grayscale or color displays.
                    107: (Grayscale displays receive monochrome rendering by default.)
                    108: .PP
                    109: \fB\-mono\fP forces monochrome rendering on color displays.
                    110: .PP
                    111: \fB\-persist\fP lets plot windows survive after main gnuplot program exits.
                    112: .PP
                    113: \fB-raise\fP raises the plot window after each plot.
                    114: .PP
                    115: \fB-noraise\fp does not raise the plot window after each plot.
                    116: .PP
                    117: \fB\-tvtwm\fP requests that geometry specifications
                    118: for position of the window be made relative to the currently displayed
                    119: portion of the virtual root.
                    120: .PP
                    121: These options may also be controlled with resources in your \fB.Xdefaults\fR
                    122: file.
                    123: For example: \fBgnuplot*gray: on\fP .
                    124: .PP
                    125: \fIGnuplot\fP provides a command line option (\fB\-pointsize \fIv\fR) and
                    126: a resource (\fBgnuplot*pointsize: \fIv\fR) to control the size of points
                    127: plotted with the "points" plotting style. The value \fIv\fR is a real
                    128: number (greater than 0 and less than or equal to ten) used as a
                    129: scaling factor for point sizes. For example, \fB\-pointsize 2\fR uses
                    130: points twice the default size, and \fB\-pointsize 0.5\fR uses points
                    131: half the normal size.
                    132: .PP
                    133: For monochrome displays, \fIgnuplot\fR does not honor foreground or
                    134: background colors. The default is black-on-white. \fB\-rv\fP or
                    135: \fBgnuplot*reverseVideo: on\fP requests white-on-black.
                    136: .PP
                    137: For color displays \fIgnuplot\fP honors
                    138: the following resources (shown here with default values). The values
                    139: may be color names in the X11 rgb.txt file on your system, hexadecimal
                    140: RGB color specifications (see X11 documentation), or a color name
                    141: followed by a comma and an \fIintensity\fR value from 0 to 1. For example,
                    142: \fBblue,.5\fR means a half intensity blue.
                    143: .sp
                    144: .B  "gnuplot*background: white"
                    145: .br
                    146: .B  "gnuplot*textColor: black"
                    147: .br
                    148: .B  "gnuplot*borderColor: black"
                    149: .br
                    150: .B  "gnuplot*axisColor: black"
                    151: .br
                    152: .B  "gnuplot*line1Color: red"
                    153: .br
                    154: .B  "gnuplot*line2Color: green"
                    155: .br
                    156: .B  "gnuplot*line3Color: blue"
                    157: .br
                    158: .B  "gnuplot*line4Color: magenta"
                    159: .br
                    160: .B  "gnuplot*line5Color: cyan"
                    161: .br
                    162: .B  "gnuplot*line6Color: sienna"
                    163: .br
                    164: .B  "gnuplot*line7Color: orange"
                    165: .br
                    166: .B  "gnuplot*line8Color: coral"
                    167: .br
                    168:
                    169: When \fB\-gray\fP is selected, \fIgnuplot\fP honors
                    170: the following resources for grayscale or color displays (shown here with
                    171: default values). Note that the default background is black.
                    172: .sp
                    173: .B  "gnuplot*background: black"
                    174: .br
                    175: .B  "gnuplot*textGray: white"
                    176: .br
                    177: .B  "gnuplot*borderGray: gray50"
                    178: .br
                    179: .B  "gnuplot*axisGray: gray50"
                    180: .br
                    181: .B  "gnuplot*line1Gray: gray100"
                    182: .br
                    183: .B  "gnuplot*line2Gray: gray60"
                    184: .br
                    185: .B  "gnuplot*line3Gray: gray80"
                    186: .br
                    187: .B  "gnuplot*line4Gray: gray40"
                    188: .br
                    189: .B  "gnuplot*line5Gray: gray90"
                    190: .br
                    191: .B  "gnuplot*line6Gray: gray50"
                    192: .br
                    193: .B  "gnuplot*line7Gray: gray70"
                    194: .br
                    195: .B  "gnuplot*line8Gray: gray30"
                    196: .br
                    197:
                    198: \fIGnuplot\fP honors the following resources for setting the width in
                    199: pixels of plot lines (shown here with default values.) 0 or 1 means
                    200: a minimal width line of 1 pixel width. A value of 2 or 3 may
                    201: improve the  appearance of some plots.
                    202: .sp
                    203: .br
                    204: .B  "gnuplot*borderWidth: 2"
                    205: .br
                    206: .B  "gnuplot*axisWidth: 0"
                    207: .br
                    208: .B  "gnuplot*line1Width: 0"
                    209: .br
                    210: .B  "gnuplot*line2Width: 0"
                    211: .br
                    212: .B  "gnuplot*line3Width: 0"
                    213: .br
                    214: .B  "gnuplot*line4Width: 0"
                    215: .br
                    216: .B  "gnuplot*line5Width: 0"
                    217: .br
                    218: .B  "gnuplot*line6Width: 0"
                    219: .br
                    220: .B  "gnuplot*line7Width: 0"
                    221: .br
                    222: .B  "gnuplot*line8Width: 0"
                    223: .br
                    224:
                    225: \fIGnuplot\fP honors the following resources for setting the dash style
                    226: used for plotting lines.  0 means a solid line. A 2 digit number \fIjk\fR
                    227: (\fIj\fP and \fIk\fP are >= 1  and <= 9) means a dashed line with a
                    228: repeated pattern of \fIj\fR pixels on followed by \fIk\fR pixels off.
                    229: For example, '16' is a "dotted" line with 1 pixel on followed by 6 pixels
                    230: off.  More elaborate on/off patterns can be specified with a 4 digit value.
                    231: For example, '4441' is 4 on, 4 off, 4 on, 1 off. The default values shown
                    232: below are for monochrome displays or monochrome rendering on color or
                    233: grayscale displays. For color displays, the defaults for all are 0
                    234: (solid line) except for \fBaxisDashes\fR which defaults to a '16' dotted
                    235: line.
                    236: .sp
                    237: .br
                    238: .B  "gnuplot*borderDashes: 0"
                    239: .br
                    240: .B  "gnuplot*axisDashes: 16"
                    241: .br
                    242: .B  "gnuplot*line1Dashes: 0"
                    243: .br
                    244: .B  "gnuplot*line2Dashes: 42"
                    245: .br
                    246: .B  "gnuplot*line3Dashes: 13"
                    247: .br
                    248: .B  "gnuplot*line4Dashes: 44"
                    249: .br
                    250: .B  "gnuplot*line5Dashes: 15"
                    251: .br
                    252: .B  "gnuplot*line6Dashes: 4441"
                    253: .br
                    254: .B  "gnuplot*line7Dashes: 42"
                    255: .br
                    256: .B  "gnuplot*line8Dashes: 13"
                    257: .br
                    258: .PP
                    259: The size or aspect ratio of a plot may be changed by resizing the
                    260: .I gnuplot
                    261: window.
                    262: .SH AUTHORS
                    263: Thomas Williams, Pixar Corporation,
                    264: .br
                    265: (info-gnuplot@dartmouth.edu)
                    266: .br
                    267: and Colin Kelley.
                    268: .PP
                    269: Additions for labelling by Russell Lang, Monash University, Australia.
                    270: .br
                    271: (rjl@monu1.cc.monash.edu.au)
                    272: .br
                    273: Further additions by David Kotz, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, USA
                    274: (formerly of Duke University, North Carolina, USA).
                    275: .br
                    276: (David.Kotz@Dartmouth.edu)
                    277: .SH BUGS
                    278: The atan() function does not work correctly for complex arguments.
                    279: .br
                    280: The bessel functions do not work for complex arguments.
                    281: .br
                    282: See the
                    283: .I help bugs
                    284: command in gnuplot.
                    285: .SH SEE ALSO
                    286: See the printed manual or the on-line help for details on specific commands.
                    287: .br
                    288: X(1).

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