On Friday, 5 Jun 2020 at 20:09, TEC wrote:
> What I like about org-plot is that it basically allows for use of big
> templates :) you'll see more on this in my upcoming PR ;-)
I look forward to it!
--
: Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50, Org release_9.3.6-640-g9bc0cc
Eric S Fraga writes:
Sometimes, or often, a translator is too constraining. I find
it
easier/faster to write my own gnuplot code directly as it gives
me the
fine control I need for publication quality figures.
The great thing about gnuplot is that *everything* can be
tweaked. The
bad thi
On Thursday, 4 Jun 2020 at 16:29, Mario Frasca wrote:
> hi. thank you. seeing hand written code in the target language is
> always useful, when writing a translator. :+1: :-)
Sometimes, or often, a translator is too constraining. I find it
easier/faster to write my own gnuplot code directly
hi. thank you. seeing hand written code in the target language is
always useful, when writing a translator. :+1: :-)
On 04/06/2020 06:53, Eric S Fraga wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 Jun 2020 at 16:06, Mario Frasca wrote:
consider this table, partially from the Wikipedia:
If you are willing to in
On Wednesday, 3 Jun 2020 at 16:06, Mario Frasca wrote:
> consider this table, partially from the Wikipedia:
If you are willing to invoke gnuplot directly, using a src block, the
following is a start towards what you might want. Proper nice looking
colours etc. left as an exercise for the reader.
consider this table, partially from the Wikipedia:
#+PLOT: with:histogram ind:1
| Region | Area | Production |Productivity |
| | (Mha) | (Mtonnes) | (tonnes/ha) |
|+++--|
| Western Europe | 2.490 | 5.730 | 2.3012