ref: 38c0cf0737de03906729054ad7b7b011dd1ca475
dir: /appl/math/doc.txt/
==========graph.b, gr.b================ I believe scientific authors and readers are best served by a minimalist approach that makes all plots look boringly alike, except for the data content. Here is a library that does the task of accumulating data to find a bounding box and then draws the curves, points, and text surrounded by readable axes. The command appl/math/graph.dis is meant to be launched from wm and then provided a file containing (x,y) pairs. There are no options. The library version, appl/math/gr.b, is a little more flexible. Include gr.m and call p := GR->open(). To draw a curve, call p.graph(x,y) where x and y are of real arrays. To add the string s at a point (u,v), call p.text(j,s,u,v) where j is LJUST, CENTER, or RJUST to indicate whether the left, middle, or right of the string should be at (u,v) plus one of HIGH, MED, BASE, or LOW to indicate where the baseline of the text should be relative to (u,v). To get text running in the y direction, add UP. To enforce the same scaling in x and y, call p.equalxy(). To change from the default solid line, call p.pen(j) where j is one of the symbols: DASHED, DOTTED, REFERENCE, SOLID, CIRCLE, CROSS, or INVIS. A CIRCLE and CROSS "pen" just puts markers at the points, and doesn't connect with line segments. A REFERENCE line is lighter than other lines. DASHED curve follows the curve even within one dash, and preserves arclength of dashes and spaces. An INVIS line is sometimes handy as "strut" for maintaining a consistent scale across a series of plots. Finally, call p.out(p,"xlabel","xunit","ylabel","yunit") to put out the curves and text in PostScript on standard output. Axes are produced with "Guggenheim slash notation," in which the user variable is divided by scaled units to get dimensionless numbers of reasonable magnitude. The function name := p.getfilename(); opens a dialog box to get a filename from the user and update the titlebar; p.bye(); pauses until the user clicks the "X" exit button in the titlebar. <[email protected]> 16 May 1996