gnuplot-0.3.4: 2D and 3D plots using gnuplot

Graphics.Gnuplot.Advanced

Description

Modularized interface to gnuplot that allows complex graphics and fine control of their components. It is designed for non-interactive use, e.g. scripts for plotting statistics.

The hierarchy of objects is as follows:

Although the Haskell wrapper shall save you from the burden of learning gnuplot script syntax, it happens frequently that people ask, how to express a certain gnuplot script using this package. Thus let's annotate the gnuplot script generated by Demo.multiplot2d in order to show, what belongs to where:

 # the terminal selection is part of the 'plot' command of this module set terminal x11 # multiplot initialization belongs to MultiPlot - of course set multiplot layout 3, 5 # hiding the names of the temporary files is a FrameOption unset key set xrange [-1.0:1.0] # this plot contains only one graph, # but several graphs could be given separated by commas plot "curve0.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve1.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve2.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve3.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve4.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve5.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve6.csv" using 1:2 with lines set xrange [-2.5:2.5] set yrange [-2.5:2.5] # this is a plot build from a Graph3D splot "curve7.csv" using 1:2:3 with pm3d set xrange [-1.0:1.0] set yrange [*:*] plot "curve8.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve9.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve10.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve11.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve12.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve13.csv" using 1:2 with lines plot "curve14.csv" using 1:2 with lines unset multiplot 

Synopsis

Documentation

plot :: (C terminal, C gfx) => terminal -> gfx -> IO ExitCodeSource

The plot function returns ExitCode, which is nice for programming but ugly for interactive GHCi sessions. For interactive sessions, better use Graphics.Gnuplot.Simple. gfx must be one of the types Plot, Frame, MultiPlot.