Or R. Spreadsheets provide some LIGHT data base and statistical functions but are not database or statistrical analysis or graphing applications. A large percentage of the traffic on this list is about how to get Gnumneric to do things it was not designed to do. For example, there was a recent query on how to do a database join. Spreadsheets are nice for storing small (browsable) datasets, and you can do a few simple statistical, database, or graphing things. But if you want more functionality, or need to tweak things, you probably need software designed for just that sort of thing.
----- Forwarded message from Andres Kuusk via gnumeric-list <[email protected]> ----- Date: Wed, 26 Feb 2020 12:58:38 +0200 (EET) From: Andres Kuusk via gnumeric-list <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: Re: New to Gnumeric -- attempting to plot data User-Agent: Alpine 2.21 (LRH 202 2017-01-01) Hi! Copy the table (or part of it) to a text file and plot you graph with gnuplot. Andres Kuusk Tartu Observatory, Estonia -------- > > > I wish to plot the data in C30:C65 against the data in A30:A65. > > > I wish the labels on the x-axis to run from the value in A30 to > > > the value in A65. _______________________________________________ gnumeric-list mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumeric-list ----- End forwarded message ----- -- _ | | Robert W. Hayden | | 5 Howard Street, Apartment 206 / | Wilton, New Hampshire 03086 USA | | | | email: bob@ the site below / | website: http://statland.org | x / '''''' _______________________________________________ gnumeric-list mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnumeric-list
