

Gnuplot 4.0 Released 31
RazorBlack writes "Almost a year and a half after Gnuplot's previous stable release (3.7.3), version 4.0 has arrived! It boasts quite a lot of very interesting new features, including interactive mouse control, coloured 2D maps and 3D surfaces, interpolation and more flexible data files. Science geeks rejoice!"
Sweet. GNUPlot rocks (Score:2, Interesting)
Groovy.
And it's Friday afternoon
No pie for me (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No pie for me (Score:3, Interesting)
Looks not so great (Score:1)
Re:Looks not so great (Score:4, Informative)
Topic misleading. (Score:5, Informative)
You can read this in the gnuplot FAQ [gnuplot.info]
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:1)
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:1)
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:2)
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:1)
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:1)
It's also not clear (at least to me) if it's OK to include gnuplot code in other programs. If it's not OK, then it's a lot more proprietary than Free.
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:2)
"Permission to distribute the released version of the source code along with corresponding source modifications in the form of a patch file is granted with same provisions 2 through 4 for binary distributions."
IANAL, but to me this says: you can even distribute a modified, ready to compile version (no need for the end users to manually apply patches). It's just that you need to _also_ include the patch file, so that users can see what is
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:1)
Re:Topic misleading. (Score:2)
It's funny, I've been using Gnuplot since 1991 (under Windows 3.0), and I had always thought it really was Free software (though I knew it had nothing to do with GNU).
Thanks for the correction.
Great Tool (Score:3, Informative)
For fancier stuff there are fancier tools (including opendx [opendx.org]), but for simple stuff gnuplot works well, is reasonably priced and is hard to beat.
Re:Great Tool (Score:2)
(however, nothing beats gnuplot when it comes to very simple one-line-almost-no-data-manipulation plots)
Grace (Score:2)
While I'm always glad to see progress on every front, gnuplot has been sitting on the 3.* level for a long time. I had the idea that the original authors left without properly designating heirs.
The SVG device driver support is intriguing, but being a "Gnu" thing it doesn't take advantage of the extensive plotutils [gnu.org] library that, sadly, seems to have experience strong development only up to a point.
Anyway, for people interested in doing serious xy 2D scientific plots, you owe it to yourself to checkout Gra [weizmann.ac.il]
Not a 'gnu' thing (Score:2)
What use is SVG (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Grace (Score:1)
I was using 3.7 back in early 1999 - so it took 5+ years to past 3.7.x. Nice to see an upgrade to a very useful program.
What I like best about gnuplot is that interactive mode and batch mode use the same commands - makes it really easy to write scripts and easy to write scripts that write scripts. One favorite was writing an awk script that would spit out a gnuplot script to plot 50+ files wor
New LaTeX support (Score:2, Interesting)
For me, the best feature of gnuplot was the pslatex [gnuplot.info] terminal, which allows you to let LaTeX take care of typesetting the labels, legends and so forth, making the graph you include look much more integrated into your document than including just a plain .eps exported from some other software. Apparently there is now also an epslatex [gnuplot.info] terminal, and I would be interested to find out what benefits using this instead has.
On a side note, xfig [xfig.org] allows the creation of simple diagrams with LaTeX formatted captions.
GraphCalc (Score:1)
I just thought I put this out there as it's a good free that also works for Windows and I'm sure that they could use a few more developers.
Looks good so far (Score:2)
The developers did a good job of keeping the code portable - not loaded with gcc'isms as is the case with some open source packages. It compiled with no problem other than a scheissload of warning messages under Sun's Forte 6u2.
Documentation is improved and the pdf is much easier to read with Acrobat than was the case for the 3.7 docs.
A bit disappointed with the lack of the "gif" terminal - with the LZW patent now expired in the US. I know "png" is