Provided by: tklib_0.6-3_all bug

NAME

       Plotchart - Simple plotting and charting package

SYNOPSIS

       package require Tcl  ?8.5?

       package require Tk  ?8.5?

       package require Plotchart  ?2.1.0?

       ::Plotchart::createXYPlot w xaxis yaxis args

       ::Plotchart::createStripchart w xaxis yaxis

       ::Plotchart::createTXPlot w timeaxis xaxis

       ::Plotchart::createXLogYPlot w xaxis yaxis

       ::Plotchart::createLogXYPlot w xaxis yaxis

       ::Plotchart::createLogXLogYPlot w xaxis yaxis

       ::Plotchart::createPolarPlot w radius_data

       ::Plotchart::createWindrose w radius_data sectors

       ::Plotchart::createIsometricPlot w xaxis yaxis stepsize

       ::Plotchart::createHistogram w xaxis yaxis

       ::Plotchart::create3DPlot w xaxis yaxis zaxis

       ::Plotchart::create3DRibbonPlot w yaxis zaxis

       ::Plotchart::createPiechart w

       ::Plotchart::createSpiralPie w

       ::Plotchart::createRadialchart w names scale style

       ::Plotchart::createBarchart w xlabels yaxis noseries

       ::Plotchart::createHorizontalBarchart w xaxis ylabel noseries

       ::Plotchart::create3DBarchart w yaxis nobars

       ::Plotchart::create3DRibbonChart w names yaxis zaxis

       ::Plotchart::createBoxplot w xdata ydata orientation

       ::Plotchart::createTimechart w time_begin time_end args

       ::Plotchart::createGanttchart w time_begin time_end args

       ::Plotchart::createRightAxis w_or_plot yaxis

       ::Plotchart::createTableChart w columns ?widths?

       $anyplot title text position

       $anyplot subtitle text

       $anyplot canvas

       $anyplot saveplot filename args

       $anyplot xtext text

       $anyplot ytext text

       $anyplot vtext text

       $anyplot xsubtext text

       $anyplot ysubtext text

       $anyplot vsubtext text

       $anyplot xconfig -option value ...

       $anyplot yconfig -option value ...

       $anyplot background part colour_or_image dir ?brightness?

       $anyplot xticklines colour ?dash?

       $anyplot yticklines colour ?dash?

       $anyplot legend series text ?spacing?

       $anyplot removefromlegend series

       $anyplot legendconfig -option value ...

       $anyplot balloon x y text dir

       $anyplot balloonconfig args

       $anyplot plaintext x y text dir

       $anyplot plaintextconfig args

       $anyplot object itemtype series args

       $anyplot deletedata

       $xyplot plot series xcrd ycrd

       $xyplot plotlist series xlist ylist every

       $histogram plotcumulative series xcrd ycrd

       $xyplot trend series xcrd ycrd

       $xyplot rchart series xcrd ycrd

       $xyplot interval series xcrd ymin ymax ?ycentr?

       $xyplot box-and-whiskers series xcrd ycrd

       $xyplot vector series xcrd ycrd ucmp vcmp

       $xyplot vectorconfig series -option value ...

       $xyplot dot series xcrd ycrd value

       $xyplot dotconfig series -option value ...

       $xyplot contourlines xcrd ycrd values ?classes?

       $xyplot contourlinesfunctionvalues xvec yvec valuesmat ?classes?

       $xyplot contourfill xcrd ycrd values ?classes?

       $xyplot contourbox xcrd ycrd values ?classes?

       $xyplot colorMap colours

       $xyplot legendisolines values classes

       $xyplot legendshades values classes

       $xyplot grid xcrd ycrd

       $xyplot xband ymin ymax

       $xyplot yband xmin xmax

       $xyplot labeldot x y text orient

       $polarplot plot series radius angle

       $windrose plot data colour

       $plot3d plotfunc function

       $plot3d plotfuncont function contours

       $plot3d gridsize nxcells nycells

       $plot3d plotdata data

       $plot3d colours fill border

       $plot3d ribbon yzpairs

       $plot3d plot yzpairs

       $xyplot dataconfig series -option value ...

       $pie plot data

       $pie colours colour1 colour2 ...

       $pie explode segment

       $radial plot data colour thickness

       $pie colours colour1 colour2 ...

       $barchart plot series ydata colour ?dir? ?brightness?

       $barchart config -option value ...

       $barchart plot series xdata colour ?dir? ?brightness?

       $barchart config -option value ...

       $barchart plot label yvalue colour

       $barchart config -option value ...

       $ribbon line xypairs colour

       $ribbon area xypairs colour

       $boxplot plot series label values

       $timechart period text time_begin time_end colour

       $timechart milestone text time colour

       $timechart vertline text time

       $timechart hscroll scrollbar

       $timechart vscroll scrollbar

       $ganttchart task text time_begin time_end completed

       $ganttchart milestone text time colour

       $ganttchart vertline text time

       $ganttchart connect from to

       $ganttchart summary text args

       $ganttchart color keyword newcolor

       $ganttchart font keyword newfont

       $ganttchart hscroll scrollbar

       $ganttchart vscroll scrollbar

       $isoplot plot rectangle x1 y1 x2 y2 colour

       $isoplot plot filled-rectangle x1 y1 x2 y2 colour

       $isoplot plot circle xc yc radius colour

       $isoplot plot filled-circle xc yc radius colour

       $table row items

       $table separator

       $table formatcommand procname

       $table cellconfigure args

       ::Plotchart::viewPort w pxmin pymin pxmax pymax

       ::Plotchart::worldCoordinates w xmin ymin xmax ymax

       ::Plotchart::world3DCoordinates w xmin ymin zmin xmax ymax zmax

       ::Plotchart::coordsToPixel w x y

       ::Plotchart::coords3DToPixel w x y z

       ::Plotchart::polarCoordinates w radmax

       ::Plotchart::polarToPixel w rad phi

       ::Plotchart::pixelToCoords w x y

       ::Plotchart::pixelToIndex w x y

       ::Plotchart::determineScale xmin xmax inverted

       ::Plotchart::determineScaleFromList values inverted

       ::Plotchart::plotconfig charttype component property value

       ::Plotchart::plotstyle subcmd style args

       ::Plotchart::createTargetDiagram w limits scale

       $target plot series xvalues yvalues

       ::Plotchart::createPerformanceProfile w max

       $performance plot series_and_data_pairs

       ::Plotchart::plotmethod charttype methodname plotproc

       ::Plotchart::plotpack w dir args

       $anyplot bindplot event command args

       $anyplot bindlast series event command

_________________________________________________________________

DESCRIPTION

       Plotchart  is  a Tcl-only package that focuses on the easy creation of xy-plots, barcharts
       and other common types of graphical presentations.  The emphasis is on ease of use, rather
       than  flexibility.  The procedures that create a plot use the entire canvas window, making
       the layout of the plot completely automatic.

       This results in the creation of an xy-plot in, say, ten lines of code:

                  package require Plotchart

                  canvas .c -background white -width 400 -height 200
                  pack   .c -fill both

                  #
                  # Create the plot with its x- and y-axes
                  #
                  set s [::Plotchart::createXYPlot .c {0.0 100.0 10.0} {0.0 100.0 20.0}]

                  foreach {x y} {0.0 32.0 10.0 50.0 25.0 60.0 78.0 11.0 } {
                      $s plot series1 $x $y
                  }

                  $s title "Data series"

       A drawback of the package might be that it does not do any  data  management.  So  if  the
       canvas  that  holds  the  plot  is  to  be  resized,  the whole plot must be redrawn.  The
       advantage, though, is that it offers a number of plot and chart types:

       •      XY-plots like the one shown above with any number of data series.

       •      Stripcharts,  a  kind  of  XY-plots  where  the   horizontal   axis   is   adjusted
              automatically. The result is a kind of sliding window on the data series.

       •      Polar plots, where the coordinates are polar instead of cartesian.

       •      Histograms, for plotting statistical information.

       •      Isometric plots, where the scale of the coordinates in the two directions is always
              the same, i.e. a circle in world coordinates appears as a circle on the screen.

              You can zoom in and out, as well as pan with these plots (Note: this works best  if
              no  axes  are drawn, the zooming and panning routines do not distinguish the axes),
              using the mouse buttons with the control key and the arrow keys  with  the  control
              key.

       •      Piecharts, with automatic scaling to indicate the proportions.

       •      Barcharts,  with  either  vertical or horizontal bars, stacked bars or bars side by
              side.

       •      Timecharts, where bars indicate a time period and  milestones  or  other  important
              moments in time are represented by triangles.

       •      3D plots (both for displaying surfaces and 3D bars)

       With  version  1.5  a  new  command  has been introduced: plotconfig, which can be used to
       configure the plot options for particular types of plots  and  charts  (cf.  CONFIGURATION
       OPTIONS)  With  version  1.8.3  several  new  features  were  introduced, which allow more
       interactivity (cf. INTERACTIVE USE)

PLOT CREATION COMMANDS

       You create the plot or chart with one single command and then fill the plot with data:

       ::Plotchart::createXYPlot w xaxis yaxis args
              Create a new xy-plot (configuration type: xyplot).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the x-axis, in
                     this  order.   For  an inverted axis, where the maximum appears on the left-
                     hand side, use: maximum, minimum and a negative stepsize.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this  order.  For an inverted axis, where the maximum appears at the bottom,
                     use: maximum, minimum and a negative stepsize.

              list args (in)
                     Zero or more options that influence the appearance of the plot:

                     •      -xlabels {labels}: Custom labels for the x-axis. If  the  labels  are
                            numeric,  they are positioned according to the given scale, otherwise
                            they are positioned with equal  distance,  based  on  the  number  of
                            labels.  Note:  this only works if the stepsize of the xaxis argument
                            is the empty string.

                     •      -ylabels {labels}: Similarly, custom labels for the y-axis.

                     •      -box {measures}: See ARRANGING MULTIPLE PLOTS IN A CANVAS-axesbox {measures}: See ARRANGING MULTIPLE PLOTS IN A CANVAS

       ::Plotchart::createStripchart w xaxis yaxis
              Create a new strip chart (configuration type: stripchart). The only difference to a
              regular  XY  plot  is  that  the  x-axis will be automatically adjusted when the x-
              coordinate of a new point exceeds the maximum.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the x-axis, in
                     this  order.  Note that an inverted x-axis is not supported for this type of
                     plot.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this  order.  For an inverted axis, where the maximum appears at the bottom,
                     use: maximum, minimum and a negative stepsize.

       ::Plotchart::createTXPlot w timeaxis xaxis
              Create  a  new  time-x-plot  (configuration  type:  txplot).  The  horizontal  axis
              represents the date/time of the data and the vertical axis the values themselves.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list timeaxis (in)
                     A  3-element  list  containing the minimum and maximum date/time to be shown
                     and the stepsize (in days) for the time-axis, in this order.  Note  that  an
                     inverted time-axis is not supported.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A  3-element  list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the vertical
                     axis, in this order.  For an inverted axis, where the maximum appears at the
                     bottom, use: maximum, minimum and a negative stepsize.

       ::Plotchart::createXLogYPlot w xaxis yaxis
              Create  a new xy-plot where the y-axis has a logarithmic scale (configuration type:
              xlogyplot).

              The data should be given as for a linear scale, as the  logarithmic  transformation
              is taken of internally.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the x-axis, in
                     this order.  For an inverted axis, where the maximum appears  on  the  left-
                     hand side, use: maximum, minimum and a negative stepsize.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A  2-element  list  containing  minimum  and maximum for the y-axis, in this
                     order.  Note that an inverted logarithmic axis is not supported.

       ::Plotchart::createLogXYPlot w xaxis yaxis
              Create a new xy-plot where the x-axis has a logarithmic scale (configuration  type:
              logxyplot).

              The  data  should be given as for a linear scale, as the logarithmic transformation
              is taken of internally.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A 2-element list containing minimum and maximum  for  the  x-axis,  in  this
                     order.  Note that an inverted logarithmic axis is not supported.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this order.  For an inverted axis, where the maximum appears  on  the  left-
                     hand side, use: maximum, minimum and a negative stepsize.

       ::Plotchart::createLogXLogYPlot w xaxis yaxis
              Create  a new xy-plot where both the x-axis and the y-axis have a logarithmic scale
              (configuration type: logxlogyplot).

              The data should be given as for a linear scale, as the  logarithmic  transformation
              is taken of internally.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A  2-element  list  containing  minimum  and maximum for the x-axis, in this
                     order.  Note that an inverted logarithmic axis is not supported.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 2-element list containing minimum and maximum  for  the  y-axis,  in  this
                     order.  Note that an inverted logarithmic axis is not supported.

       ::Plotchart::createPolarPlot w radius_data
              Create a new polar plot (configuration type: polarplot).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list radius_data (in)
                     A 2-element list containing maximum radius and stepsize for the radial axis,
                     in this order.

       ::Plotchart::createWindrose w radius_data sectors
              Create a new windrose diagram. The diagram will consist of  concentric  circles  as
              defined  by  the radius_data argument and a number of sectors (given by the sectors
              argument). The sectors are drawn in the "nautical" convention, that is:  the  first
              is  located  at  the  positive  y-axis,  the  second is to the right and so on in a
              clockwise direction.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the diagram

              list radius_data (in)
                     A 2-element list, the first element is the maximum radius, the second is the
                     step to be used for the circles.

              int sectors
                     Number of sectors to use (defaults to 16).

       ::Plotchart::createIsometricPlot w xaxis yaxis stepsize
              Create  a new isometric plot, where the vertical and the horizontal coordinates are
              scaled so that a  circle  will  truly  appear  as  a  circle  (configuration  type:
              isometric).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A  2-element  list  containing  minimum, and maximum for the x-axis, in this
                     order.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 2-element list containing minimum, and maximum for  the  y-axis,  in  this
                     order.

              float|noaxes stepsize (in)
                     Either  the  stepsize  used by both axes or the keyword noaxes to signal the
                     plot that it should use the full area of the widget, to not draw any of  the
                     axes.

       ::Plotchart::createHistogram w xaxis yaxis
              Create a new histogram (configuration type: histogram).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the x-axis, in
                     this order.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this order.

       ::Plotchart::create3DPlot w xaxis yaxis zaxis
              Create a new 3D plot.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the x-axis, in
                     this order.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this order.

              list zaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the z-axis, in
                     this order.

       ::Plotchart::create3DRibbonPlot w yaxis zaxis
              Create a new 3D ribbon plot. It is a simplification of the full 3D plot and  allows
              for the drawing of a ribbon only (the x-axis is dropped).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this order.

              list zaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the z-axis, in
                     this order.

       ::Plotchart::createPiechart w
              Create a new piechart (configuration type: piechart).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

       ::Plotchart::createSpiralPie w
              Create  a  new  "spiral  pie"  (configuration  type: spiralpie), a variation on the
              ordinary piechart. The value is used to scale the radius, rather than the angle. By
              default the data are sorted.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

       ::Plotchart::createRadialchart w names scale style
              Create  a  new  radial chart (the data are drawn as a line connecting the spokes of
              the diagram) (configuration type: radialchart).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list names (in)
                     Names for the spokes.

              float scale (in)
                     Scale value to determine the position of the data along the spokes.

              string style (in)
                     Style of the chart (optional). One of:

                     •      lines - the default: draw the data as independent polylines.

                     •      cumulative  -  draw  the  data  as  polylines  where  the  data   are
                            accumulated.

                     •      filled  -  draw  the  data  as  filled  polygons  where  the data are
                            accumulated

       ::Plotchart::createBarchart w xlabels yaxis noseries
              Create a new barchart  with  vertical  bars  (configuration  type:  vertbars).  The
              horizontal  axis  will  display  the  labels contained in the argument xlabels. The
              number of series given by noseries determines both the width of the bars,  and  the
              way the series will be drawn.

              If  the  keyword  stacked  was specified the series will be drawn stacked on top of
              each other. Otherwise each series that is drawn will be drawn shifted to the right.

              The number of series determines the width of the bars, so that there  is  space  of
              that  number  of  bars. If you use a floating-point number, like 2.2, instead of an
              integer, like 2, a small gap between the sets of bars will be  drawn  -  the  width
              depends on the fractional part.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xlabels (in)
                     List of labels for the x-axis. Its length also determines the number of bars
                     that will be plotted per series.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this order.

              int|stacked noseries (in)
                     The  number  of  data series that will be plotted. This has to be an integer
                     number greater than zero (if stacked is not used).

       ::Plotchart::createHorizontalBarchart w xaxis ylabel noseries
              Create a new barchart with horizontal bars  (configuration  type:  horizbars).  The
              vertical axis will display the labels contained in the argument ylabels. The number
              of series given by noseries determines both the width of the bars, and the way  the
              series will be drawn.

              If  the keyword stacked was specified the series will be drawn stacked from left to
              right. Otherwise each series that is drawn will be drawn shifted upward.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the x-axis, in
                     this order.

              list ylabels (in)
                     List of labels for the y-axis. Its length also determines the number of bars
                     that will be plotted per series.

              int|stacked noseries (in)
                     The number of data series that will be plotted. This has to  be  an  integer
                     number greater than zero (if stacked is not used).

       ::Plotchart::create3DBarchart w yaxis nobars
              Create  a  new  barchart  with  3D  vertical bars (configuration type: 3dbars). The
              horizontal axis will display the labels per bar. The number of bars given by nobars
              determines  the  position  and the width of the bars. The colours can be varied per
              bar. (This type of chart was inspired by the  Wiki  page  on  3D  bars  by  Richard
              Suchenwirth.)

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this order.

              int nobars (in)
                     The number of bars that will be plotted.

       ::Plotchart::create3DRibbonChart w names yaxis zaxis
              Create a new "ribbon chart" (configuration type: 3dribbon). This is a  chart  where
              the  data  series  are  represented  as ribbons in a three-dimensional axis system.
              Along the x-axis  (which  is  "into"  the  screen)  the  names  are  plotted,  each
              representing a single series. The first plot command draws the furthest series, the
              second draws the series in front of that and so on.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              widget w (in)
                     Names of the series, plotted as labels along the x-axis

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and  stepsize  for  the  y-axis
                     (drawn horizontally!), in this order.

              list zaxis (in)
                     A  3-element  list  containing  minimum, maximum and stepsize for the z-axis
                     (drawn vertically), in this order.

              int nobars (in)
                     The number of bars that will be plotted.

       ::Plotchart::createBoxplot w xdata ydata orientation
              Create  a  new  boxplot  with  horizontal  or  vertical  boxes   (box-and-whiskers)
              (configuration  type:  boxplot).  Depending  on the orientation the x- or y-axis is
              drawn with labels. The boxes are  drawn  based  on  the  raw  data  (see  the  plot
              subcommand for this type of plot).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list xdata (in)
                     This is either a 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for
                     the x-axis, in this order (when orientation is horizontal),  or  a  list  of
                     labels  for  the  x-axis  (when  orientation is vertical). The length of the
                     label list also determines the number of boxes  that  can  be  plotted.  The
                     labels are also used in the plot subcommand.

              list ydata (in)
                     This is either a 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for
                     the y-axis, in this order (when orientation  is  vertical),  or  a  list  of
                     labels  for  the  y-axis (when orientation is horizontal). The length of the
                     label list also determines the number of boxes  that  can  be  plotted.  The
                     labels are also used in the plot subcommand.

              string orientation (in)
                     If  given,  "horizontal"  or  "vertical"  determines  the orientation of the
                     boxes.  This  optional  value  (default:  horizontal)  also  determines  the
                     interpretation of the xdata and ydata arguments.

       ::Plotchart::createTimechart w time_begin time_end args
              Create  a  new timechart (configuration type: timechart).  The time axis (= x-axis)
              goes from time_begin to time_end, and the vertical spacing  is  determined  by  the
              number of items to plot.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              string time_begin (in)
                     The  start time given in a form that is recognised by the clock scan command
                     (e.g. "1 january 2004").

              string time_end (in)
                     The end time given in a form that is recognised by the  clock  scan  command
                     (e.g. "1 january 2004").

              arguments args (in)
                     The remaining arguments can be:

                     •      The  expected/maximum  number  of items. This determines the vertical
                            spacing. (If given, it must be the first argument after "time_end"

                     •      The keyword -barheight and the number of pixels per bar. This  is  an
                            alternative method to determine the vertical spacing.

                     •      The  keyword -ylabelwidth and the number of pixels to reserve for the
                            labels at the y-axis.

       ::Plotchart::createGanttchart w time_begin time_end args
              Create a new Gantt chart (configuration type: ganttchart).  The  time  axis  (=  x-
              axis)  goes  from time_begin to time_end, and the vertical spacing is determined by
              the number of items to plot.  Via the specific commands you can then add tasks  and
              connections between the tasks.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              string time_begin (in)
                     The  start time given in a form that is recognised by the clock scan command
                     (e.g. "1 january 2004").

              string time_end (in)
                     The end time given in a form that is recognised by the  clock  scan  command
                     (e.g. "1 january 2004").

              arguments args (in)
                     The remaining arguments can be:

                     •      The  expected/maximum  number  of items. This determines the vertical
                            spacing. (If given this way, it must  be  the  first  argument  after
                            "time_end")

                     •      The  expected/maximum  width  of  the  descriptive  text  (roughly in
                            characters, for the actual space reserved for the text, it is assumed
                            that a character is about ten pixels wide). Defaults to 20. (If given
                            this way, it must be the second argument after "time_end").

                     •      The keyword -barheight and the number of pixels per bar. This  is  an
                            alternative method to determine the vertical spacing.

                     •      The  keyword -ylabelwidth and the number of pixels to reserve for the
                            labels at the y-axis.

       ::Plotchart::createRightAxis w_or_plot yaxis
              Create a plot command that  will  use  a  right  axis  instead  of  the  left  axis
              (configuration  type:  inherited  from  the  existing plot). The canvas widget must
              already contain an ordinary plot, as the horizontal axis and other  properties  are
              reused.  Preferably  use the plot command, as with multiple plots in a canvas (also
              when redefining an existing plot!), the wrong geometry might be used.

              To plot data using the right axis, use this new command, to  plot  data  using  the
              left axis, use the original plot command.

              widget w_or_plot (in)
                     Name  of  the existing canvas widget to hold the plot or preferably the plot
                     command for the plot with the left axis.

              list yaxis (in)
                     A 3-element list containing minimum, maximum and stepsize for the y-axis, in
                     this order.

       ::Plotchart::createTableChart w columns ?widths?
              Create  a  command  to  draw a table. You can use a variety of commands to draw the
              actual rows of the table, but the number of columns is fixed.   (See  TABLE  CHARTS
              for an example)

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the canvas widget to hold the table.

              list columns (in)
                     The  headers  of the columns in the table. The number of elements determines
                     the number of columns.

              list widths (in)
                     If given, either a single value, the width in pixels for all columns or  for
                     each  column the width of that column. If not given, the table is spread out
                     over the width of the canvas (minus the margins).

PLOT METHODS

       Each of the creation commands explained in the last section returns  the  name  of  a  new
       object command that can be used to manipulate the plot or chart. The subcommands available
       to a chart command depend on the type of the chart.

       General subcommands for all types of charts. \$anyplot is  the  command  returned  by  the
       creation command:

       $anyplot title text position
              Specify the title of the whole chart.

              string text (in)
                     The text of the title to be drawn.

              string position (in)
                     The  position  of  the  title. The default position is "center", but you can
                     alternatively use "left" or  "right".  You  can  use  multiple  titles  with
                     different positions.

       $anyplot subtitle text
              Specify the subtitle of the whole chart.

              string text (in)
                     The text of the subtitle to be drawn.

       $anyplot canvas
              Return  the name of the canvas (or the alias if you use more than one plot within a
              canvas). Use this value for the coordinate transformations.

       $anyplot saveplot filename args
              Draws the plot into a file, using PostScript.

              string filename (in)
                     Contain the path name of the file to write the plot to.

              list args (in)
                     If the standard PostScript output is used, the  option  -plotregion  can  be
                     specifed  to save the whole plot (value: bbox) regardless of what is visible
                     in the window.  The default (value: window) is to only plot the visible part
                     of the plot.

                     Optionally you can specify the option -format "some picture format" to store
                     the plot in a different file than a PostScript file. This,  however,  relies
                     on the Img package to do the actual job.

                     Note:  Because  the window holding the plot must be fully visible before Img
                     can successfully grab it, it is raised first.  On some systems, for instance
                     Linux  with KDE, raising a window is not done automatically, but instead you
                     need to click on the window in  the  task  bar.  Similar  things  happen  on
                     Windows XP.

                     There  seems  to  be something wrong under some circumstances, so instead of
                     waiting for the visibility of the window, the  procedure  simply  waits  two
                     seconds. It is not ideal, but it seems to work better.

       $anyplot xtext text
              Specify  the title of the (horizontal) x-axis, for those plots that have a straight
              x-axis.

              string text (in)
                     The text of the x-axis label to be drawn.

       $anyplot ytext text
              Specify the title of the (horizontal) y-axis, for those plots that have a  straight
              y-axis.

              string text (in)
                     The text of the y-axis label to be drawn.

       $anyplot vtext text
              Draw a vertical label to the y-axis. Note: this requires Tk 8.6 or later, for older
              versions it does nothing.

              string text (in)
                     Text to drawn to the y-axis

       $anyplot xsubtext text
              Specify the subtext of the  (horizontal)  x-axis,  for  those  plots  that  have  a
              straight x-axis. This text is drawn below the primary text.

              Since  this  involves positioning the primary text and setting margins, you need to
              set the option "usesubtext" for the bottom axis  via  the  plotstyle  command.  The
              relevant options are: usesubtext, subtextcolor and subtextfont.

              string text (in)
                     The secondary text of the x-axis label to be drawn.

       $anyplot ysubtext text
              Specify  the subtext of the (vertical) y-axis, for those plots that have a straight
              y-axis. This text is drawn below the primary text, for both axes on  the  left  and
              the right.

              Since  this  involves positioning the primary text and setting margins, you need to
              set the option "usesubtext" for the left or right axis via the  plotstyle  command.
              The relevant options are: usesubtext, subtextcolor and subtextfont.

              string text (in)
                     The secondary text of the y-axis label to be drawn.

       $anyplot vsubtext text
              Specify  the subtext of the (vertical) y-axis, for those plots that have a straight
              y-axis. This text is drawn to the right of the primary text, for both axes  on  the
              left and the right.

              Since  this  involves positioning the primary text and setting margins, you need to
              set the option "usesubtext" for the left or right axis via the  plotstyle  command.
              The  relevant  options  are: usevsubtext, vsubtextcolor and vsubtextfont. (Note the
              "v" to distinguish this option from the text at the top of a vertical axis that  is
              drawn via $anyplot ytext or $anyplot ysubtext.)

              string text (in)
                     The secondary (vertical) text of the y-axis label to be drawn.

       $anyplot xconfig -option value ...
              Set one or more configuration parameters for the x-axis.  The following options are
              supported:

              format fmt
                     The format for the numbers along the axis.

              ticklength length
                     The length of the tickmarks (in pixels).

              ticklines boolean
                     Whether to draw ticklines (true) or not (false).

              scale scale_data
                     New scale data for the axis,  i.e.  a  3-element  list  containing  minimum,
                     maximum and stepsize for the axis, in this order.

                     Beware: Setting this option will clear all data from the plot.

       $anyplot yconfig -option value ...
              Set  one  or  more configuration parameters for the y-axis. This method accepts the
              same options and values as the method xconfig.

       $anyplot background part colour_or_image dir ?brightness?
              Set the background of a part of the plot

              string part
                     Which part of the plot: "axes" for the axes area and "plot"  for  the  inner
                     part.   The  interpretation  depends  on  the  type  of  plot.  Two  further
                     possibilities are:

                     •      image, in which case a predefined image is loaded into the background
                            of the plot.

                     •      gradient,  in  which  case  the  background  is coloured in different
                            shades  of  the  given  colour.  The  "dir"  argument  specifies  the
                            direction in which the colour gets whiter.

              string colour_or_image
                     Colour for that part or the name of the image if "part" is "image"

              string dir
                     The  direction  of  the gradient. One of: top-down, bottom-up, left-right or
                     right-left.

              string brightness
                     Indicates whether the colour  should  become  brighter  (bright)  or  darker
                     (dark). Defaults to bright

       $anyplot xticklines colour ?dash?
              Draw vertical ticklines at each tick location

              string colour
                     Colour  of  the  lines.  Specifying an empty colour ("") removes them again.
                     Defaults to "black"

              string dash
                     Optional argument to specify the dash pattern for  the  lines.  Defaults  to
                     "lines"  Possible  values:  lines,  dots1,  dots2, dots3, dots4, dots5.  The
                     actual effect depends on the platform.

       $anyplot yticklines colour ?dash?
              Draw horizontal ticklines at each tick location

              string colour
                     Colour of the lines. Specifying an empty  colour  ("")  removes  them  again
                     Defaults to "black"

              string dash
                     Optional  argument  to  specify  the dash pattern for the lines. Defaults to
                     "lines" Possible values: lines, dots1,  dots2,  dots3,  dots4,  dots5.   The
                     actual effect depends on the platform.

       $anyplot legend series text ?spacing?
              Add  an  entry to the legend. The series determines which graphical symbol is to be
              used. (As a side effect the legend is actually drawn.)

              string series
                     Name of the data series. This determines the colour  of  the  line  and  the
                     symbol (if any) that will be drawn.

              string text
                     Text to be drawn next to the line/symbol.

              integer spacing
                     Optional  argument  to  specify the vertical spacing between the entries (in
                     pixels).  (Note that this spacing will be reused later.)

       $anyplot removefromlegend series
              Remove an entry for a series from the legend and redraw it.

              string series
                     Name of the data series to be removed.

       $anyplot legendconfig -option value ...
              Set one or more options for the legend. The legend is drawn  as  a  rectangle  with
              text and graphics inside.

              background colour
                     Set  the colour of the background (the default colour is white).  Set to the
                     empty string for a transparant legend.

              border colour
                     Set the colour of the border (the default colour is black). Set to the empty
                     string if you do not want a border.

              canvas c
                     Draw  the legend in a different canvas widget. This gives you the freedom to
                     position the legend outside the actual plot.

              font font
                     Set the font used to draw the text next to the symbol.

              legendtype
                     Override the type of the legend, that is pre-defined for the current type of
                     plot. May be one of: rectangle or line.

              position corner
                     Set  the position of the legend. May be one of: top-left, top-right, bottom-
                     left or bottom-right. (Default value is top-right.)

       $anyplot balloon x y text dir
              Add balloon text to the plot (except for 3D plots). The arrow  will  point  to  the
              given  x-  and  y-coordinates. For xy-graphs and such, the coordinates are directly
              related to the axes; for vertical barcharts the x-coordinate  is  measured  as  the
              number of bars minus 1 and similar for horizontal barcharts.

              float x
                     X-coordinate of the point that the arrow of the balloon will point to.

              float y
                     Y-coordinate of the point that the arrow of the balloon will point to.

              string text
                     Text to be drawn in the balloon.

              string dir
                     Direction  of the arrow, one of: north, north-east, east, south-east, south,
                     south-west, west or north-west.

       $anyplot balloonconfig args
              Configure the balloon text for the plot. The new settings will be used for the next
              balloon text.

              font fontname
                     Font to be used for the text

              justify left|center|right
                     Way to justify multiline text

              textcolour colour
                     Colour for the text (synonym: textcolor)

              background colour
                     Background colour for the balloon

              outline colour
                     Colour of the outline of the balloon

              margin value
                     Margin around the text (in pixels)

              rimwidth value
                     Width of the outline of the balloon (in pixels)

              arrowsize value
                     Length factor for the arrow (in pixels)

       $anyplot plaintext x y text dir
              Add  plain  text  to  the plot (except for 3D plots). The text is positioned at the
              given x- and y-coordinates. For xy-graphs and such, the  coordinates  are  directly
              related  to  the  axes;  for vertical barcharts the x-coordinate is measured as the
              number of bars minus 1 and similar for horizontal barcharts.

              float x
                     X-coordinate of the text position

              float y
                     Y-coordinate of the text position

              string text
                     Text to be drawn.

              string dir
                     Anchor for the text, one of: north,  north-east,  east,  south-east,  south,
                     south-west, west or north-west.

       $anyplot plaintextconfig args
              Configure the plain text annotation for the plot. The new settings will be used for
              the next plain text.

              font fontname
                     Font to be used for the text

              justify left|center|right
                     Way to justify multiline text

              textcolour colour
                     Colour for the text (synonym: textcolor)

       $anyplot object itemtype series args
              Draw a canvas item  in  the  plot  where  the  coordinates  are  scaled  using  the
              coordinate  system  of  the plot. In addition to the standard canvas types, it also
              supports circles, dots and crosses.

              Note: Currently implemented for xy-plots, (vertical and horizontal) barcharts,  and
              piecharts.

              Note:  To  add  an  entry  in the legend for the object, you can use the dataconfig
              subcommand with a type "rectangle". This will cause a rectangle to be shown.

              string itemtype (in)
                     Name of a standard canvas item or "circle", "dot" or "cross"

              string series (in)
                     The data series it belongs to, used for setting the default drawing options

              list args (in)
                     List of coordinates and drawing options

       $anyplot deletedata
              Remove the lines, symbols and other graphical object  associated  with  the  actual
              data from the plot.

              Note: Currently implemented for xy-plots only

              Note:  The  existing  options for data series and the legend entry are kept as they
              were.

              Note: Currently there are side effects if the canvas contains more than one plot.

       Note: The commands xconfig and yconfig are currently implemented  only  for  XY-plots  and
       only the option -format has any effect.

       For xy plots, stripcharts, histograms and time-x-plots:

       $xyplot plot series xcrd ycrd
              Add a data point to the plot.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the new point belongs to.

              float xcrd (in)
                     X-coordinate  of  the  new  point.  (For  time-x  plots  this  must be valid
                     date/time that can be read with the clock scan command).

              float ycrd (in)
                     Y-coordinate of the new point.

       For xy plots there is the additional command plotlist, which  is  useful  for  plotting  a
       large amount of data:

       $xyplot plotlist series xlist ylist every
              Draw  a  series  of  data  as a whole. If symbols are asked for, draw them only for
              every Nth data point.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the new point belongs to.

              float xlist (in)
                     List of X-coordinates for the data series.

              float ycrd (in)
                     List of Y-coordinates for the data series.

              int every (in)
                     Optional argument stating how often a symbol (if any) should be  drawn.   If
                     left out, use a simple heuristic: N = sqrt(number of data points).

       Note on histograms:

       For histograms the x-coordinate that is given is interpreted to be the x-coordinate of the
       right side of the bar (or line segment). The first bar starts at the y-axis on  the  left.
       To  completely  fill  the  range  of  the  x-axis, you should draw a bar at the maximum x-
       coordinate.

       For histograms you can also use the plotcumulative command:

       $histogram plotcumulative series xcrd ycrd

       The arguments mean exactly the same as for the plot command, but the data are  accumulated
       to the previous values.

       For xy plots:

       $xyplot trend series xcrd ycrd
              Draw or update a trend line using the data given sofar.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the trend line belongs to.

              float xcrd (in)
                     X-coordinate of the new data point

              float ycrd (in)
                     Y-coordinate of the new data point

       $xyplot rchart series xcrd ycrd
              Draw  data  in  the  same  way  as  the  plot method, but with two lines added that
              indicate the expected range (+/- 3*standard deviation) of the data.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the data point belongs to.

              float xcrd (in)
                     X-coordinate of the new data point

              float ycrd (in)
                     Y-coordinate of the new data point

       $xyplot interval series xcrd ymin ymax ?ycentr?
              Add a vertical error interval to the plot. The interval is drawn from ymin to ymax.
              If the ycentr argument is given, a symbol is drawn at that position.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the interval belongs to.

              float xcrd (in)
                     X-coordinate of the interval

              float ymin (in)
                     Minimum y-coordinate of the interval.

              float ymax (in)
                     Maximum y-coordinate of the interval.

              float ycentr (in)
                     Y-coordinate to draw the symbol at (optional)

       $xyplot box-and-whiskers series xcrd ycrd
              Draw  a  box  and  whiskers  in the plot. If the argument xcrd is a list of several
              values and the argument ycrd is a single value, a horizontal box is drawn with  the
              quartiles determined from the list of values contained in xcrd.

              If,  instead,  the argument ycrd contains a list of several values and the argument
              xcrd a single value, then a vertical box is drawn and the quartiles are  determined
              from ycrd. (There must be exactly one list of several values. Otherwise an error is
              reported.)

              The option -boxwidth to the dataconfig command determines the width (or height)  of
              the box (default: 10 pixels).

              The  option -whiskers to the dataconfig command determines whether the whiskers are
              drawn to the extreme values (value: extremes), to 1.5 times the interquartile range
              (value:  IQR  or  iqr),  or  not  at  all  (value:  none).   If  the value is 'IQR'
              (uppercase), then also extreme values will be shown (from 1.5 to 3 times the IQR as
              dots,  above  3  times  IQR as stars). If the value is 'iqr' (lowercase) no extreme
              values will be shown (default value: IQR).

              The option -whiskerwidth to the dataconfig command determines the thickness of  the
              line that draws the whiskers (default: 1 pixel).

              The  option  -mediancolour  to  the dataconfig command determines the colour of the
              line used to draw the median within the box (default: same as -colour).

              The option -medianwidth to the dataconfig command determines the thickness  of  the
              line that draws the median within the box (default: 1 pixel).

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the box-and-whiskers belongs to.

              float xcrd (in)
                     X-coordinate of the box or a list of values.

              float ymin (in)
                     Y-coordinate of the box or a list of values.

       The  box  ends  at  the 1st and 3rd quartile, while the whiskers by default are plotted to
       span 1.5 IQR (interquartile range) from the 1st and 3rd quartile.

       $xyplot vector series xcrd ycrd ucmp vcmp
              Draw a vector in the plot. The vector can be given as either cartesian  coordinates
              or  as  length/angle, where the angle is in degrees and is interpreted according to
              the mathematical convention or the nautical.  (See the vectorconfig subcommand)

              string series (in)
                     Name of the series the vector belongs  to.  Determines  the  appearance  and
                     interpretation.

              float xcrd (in)
                     X-coordinate of the point where the arrow appears

              float ycrd (in)
                     Y-coordinate of the point where the arrow appears

              float ucmp (in)
                     X-component or the length of the vector

              float ycentr (in)
                     Y-component or the angle of the vector

       $xyplot vectorconfig series -option value ...
              ] Set the vector drawing options for a particular series

              string series (in)
                     Name of the series the vector belongs to.

              The options can be one of the following:

              colour The colour of the arrow (default: black; synonym: color)

              scale value
                     The  scale  factor  used to convert the length of the arrow into a number of
                     pixels (default: 1.0)

              centred onoff
                     Logical value indicating that the xy-coordinates are to be used as the start
                     of the arrow or as the centre (default: 0; synonym: centered)

              type keyword
                     Interpretation  of  the  vector components. Can be "cartesian" (default), in
                     which case the x- and  y-components  are  expected,  "polar"  (the  angle  0
                     coincides  with  the positive x-axis, 90 coincides with the positive y-axis)
                     or "nautical" (0 is "north" and 90 is "east").

       $xyplot dot series xcrd ycrd value
              Draw a dot in the plot. The size and colour is determined by the value and  by  the
              options set for the series it belongs to.  (See the dotconfig subcommand)

              string series (in)
                     Name of the series the dot belongs to. Determines size and colour

              float xcrd (in)
                     X-coordinate of the point where the arrow appears

              float ycrd (in)
                     Y-coordinate of the point where the arrow appears

              float value (in)
                     Value determining size and colour

       $xyplot dotconfig series -option value ...
              ] Set the dot drawing options for a particular series

              string series (in)
                     Name of the series the dot belongs to.

              The options can be one of the following:

              colour The  colour  of  the dot if no scaling is used or the value exceeds the last
                     limit of the classes.

              scale value
                     The scale factor used to convert the value into the radius  of  the  dot  in
                     pixels (default: 1.0)

              radius value
                     The  default  radius  of  the dots, used if there is no scaling by value (in
                     pixels; default: 3)

              scalebyvalue onoff
                     Determines whether the dots all have the same size or a  size  depending  on
                     the given value (default: on).

              outline onoff
                     Draw a black circle around the dot or not (default: on)

              classes list
                     Set the limits and the corresponding colours. For instance:

                         $xyplot series1 -classes {0 blue 1 green} -colour red

                     will cause a blue dot to be drawn for values smaller than 0, a green dot for
                     values larger/equal 0 but lower than 1 and a red dot for values larger/equal
                     1.

              3deffect onoff
                     Show a highlight in the dots, to mimick a 3D effect (default: off)

                     If  there  is  no  list  of  classes for the particular series, the dots are
                     scaled by the value.

                     You can combine the colouring by value and the scaling by value by setting a
                     list of classes and setting the scalebyvalue option on.

       $xyplot contourlines xcrd ycrd values ?classes?
              Draw  contour  lines  for  the values given on the grid. The grid is defined by the
              xcrd and ycrd arguments. The xcrd argument (resp. ycrd) is expected to be a matrix,
              implemented  as a list of lists which gives the x-coordinates (resp. y-coordinates)
              of the grid cell corners.  The function values are given  at  these  corners.   The
              number  of  rows in xvec (resp. yvec) is ny and each row contains nx values so that
              the total number of values in xvec (resp. yvec) is nx * ny.  The classes  determine
              which  contour  lines  are  drawn. If a value on one of the corners is missing, the
              contour lines in that cell will not be drawn.

              Entries in the legend are drawn via the legendisolines subcommand.

              list xcrd (in)
                     List of lists, each value is an x-coordinate for a grid cell corner

              list ycrd (in)
                     List of lists, each value is an y-coordinate for a grid cell corner

              list values (in)
                     List of lists, each value is the value at a grid cell corner

              list classes (in)
                     List of class values or a list of lists of two elements (each inner list the
                     class value and the colour to be used). If empty or missing, the classes are
                     determined automatically.

                     Note: The class values must enclose the whole range of  values.   Note:  The
                     xcrd  argument  is generally made of nypoints identical rows, while each row
                     of ycrd is made with one single value.

       $xyplot contourlinesfunctionvalues xvec yvec valuesmat ?classes?
              Draw contour lines for the values given on the grid. The grid  is  defined  by  the
              xvec  and yvec arguments. Here, xvec (resp. yvec) is a list of x-coordinates (resp.
              y-coordinates). The number of values in xvec (resp. yvec) is the number  of  points
              in  the  x-coordinate (resp. y-coordinate).  The function values are given at these
              corners. The classes determine which contour lines are drawn. If a value on one  of
              the corners is missing, the contour lines in that cell will not be drawn.

              Entries in the legend are drawn via the legendisolines subcommand.

              list xcrd (in)
                     List of x-coordinates in increasing order.

              list ycrd (in)
                     List y-coordinates in increasing order.

              list valuesmat (in)
                     List  of  lists,  each  value is the value at a grid cell corner.  The total
                     number of values is valuesmat is nx * ny.

              list classes (in)
                     List of class values or a list of lists of two elements (each inner list the
                     class value and the colour to be used). If empty or missing, the classes are
                     determined automatically.

                     Note: The class values must enclose the whole range of values.

       $xyplot contourfill xcrd ycrd values ?classes?
              Draw filled contours for the values given on the grid. (The use of this  method  is
              identical to the "contourlines" method).

              Entries in the legend are drawn via the legendshades subcommand.

       $xyplot contourbox xcrd ycrd values ?classes?
              Draw  the cells as filled quadrangles. The colour is determined from the average of
              the values on all four corners.

              Entries in the legend are drawn via the legendshades subcommand.

       $xyplot colorMap colours
              Set the colours to be used with the contour  methods.  The  argument  is  either  a
              predefined  colourmap  (grey/gray,  jet,  hot  or  cool) or a list of colours. When
              selecting the colours for actually drawing the contours, the given colours will  be
              interpolated (based on the HLS scheme).

              list colours (in)
                     List of colour names or colour values or one of the predefined maps:

                     •      grey or gray: gray colours from dark to light

                     •      jet: rainbow colours

                     •      hot: colours from yellow via red to darkred

                     •      cool: colours from cyan via blue to magenta

       $xyplot legendisolines values classes
              Add  the  contour  classes  to the legend as coloured lines. The text indicates the
              values.

              list values (in)
                     The list of values as used for the actual drawing.  This  argument  is  used
                     only if the list of classes is empty.

              list values (in)
                     The list of classes as used for the actual drawing.

       $xyplot legendshades values classes
              Add  the  contour  classes to the legend as coloured rectangles. The text indicates
              the values.

              list values (in)
                     The list of values as used for the actual drawing.  This  argument  is  used
                     only if the list of classes is empty.

              list values (in)
                     The list of classes as used for the actual drawing.

       $xyplot grid xcrd ycrd
              Draw the grid cells as lines connecting the (valid) grid points.

              list xcrd (in)
                     List of lists, each value is an x-coordinate for a grid cell corner

              list ycrd (in)
                     List of lists, each value is an y-coordinate for a grid cell corner

       $xyplot xband ymin ymax
              Draw  a light grey band in the plot, ranging over the full x-axis. This can be used
              to indicate a "typical" range for the data.

              float ymin (in)
                     Lower bound for the band

              float ymax (in)
                     Upper bound for the band

       $xyplot yband xmin xmax
              Draw a light grey band in the plot, ranging over the full y-axis. This can be  used
              to indicate a "typical" range for the data.

              float xmin (in)
                     Lower bound for the band

              float xmax (in)
                     Upper bound for the band

       $xyplot labeldot x y text orient
              Draw  a  label and a symbol in the plot. The label will appear near the symbol. The
              label will be drawn in grey, so as not to be too conspicuous.

              You can configure the appearance of the  symbol  by  using  the  data  series  name
              "labeldot": $w dataconfig labeldot -colour red -type symbol -symbol dot

              float x (in)
                     X-coordinate of the symbol to be drawn

              float y (in)
                     Y-coordinate of the symbol to be drawn

              string text (in)
                     Text for the label

              string orient (in)
                     Optional  orientation (one of w, e, n, s) defining the position of the label
                     with respect to the symbol. It defaults to w (so the label appears  left  of
                     the symbol).

       For polar plots:

       $polarplot plot series radius angle
              Add a data point to the polar plot.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the new point belongs to.

              float radius (in)
                     Radial coordinate of the new point.

              float angle (in)
                     Angular coordinate of the new point (in degrees).

       For wind rose diagrams:

       $windrose plot data colour
              Draw  the  data  contained in the data argument. The data are added to the existing
              spokes towards the outer circle.

              list data (in)
                     List of data (the length should correspond to the number of sectors)

              string colour
                     Colour in which the new segments will be drawn

       For 3D plots:

       $plot3d plotfunc function
              Plot a function defined over two variables x and y.  The resolution  is  determined
              by the set grid sizes (see the method gridsize for more information).

              string function (in)
                     Name  of  the  procedure  that  calculates the z-value for the given x and y
                     coordinates. The procedure has to accept two float  arguments  (x  is  first
                     argument, y is second) and return a floating-point value.

       $plot3d plotfuncont function contours
              Plot  a  function  defined  over  two variables x and y using the contour levels in
              contours to colour the surface.  The resolution is determined by the set grid sizes
              (see the method gridsize for more information).

              string function (in)
                     Name  of  the  procedure  that  calculates the z-value for the given x and y
                     coordinates. The procedure has to accept two float  arguments  (x  is  first
                     argument, y is second) and return a floating-point value.

              list contours (in)
                     List  of  values  in  ascending order that represent the contour levels (the
                     boundaries between the colours in the contour map).

       $plot3d gridsize nxcells nycells
              Set the grid size in the two directions. Together they determine how many  polygons
              will be drawn for a function plot.

              int nxcells (in)
                     Number  of  grid  cells  in x direction. Has to be an integer number greater
                     than zero.

              int nycells (in)
                     Number of grid cells in y direction. Has to be  an  integer  number  greater
                     than zero.

       $plot3d plotdata data
              Plot a matrix of data.

              list data (in)
                     The  data to be plotted. The data has to be provided as a nested list with 2
                     levels. The outer list contains rows, drawn in y-direction, and each row  is
                     a list whose elements are drawn in x-direction, for the columns. Example:

                         set data {
                         {1.0 2.0 3.0}
                         {4.0 5.0 6.0}
                         }

       $plot3d colours fill border
              Configure the colours to use for polygon borders and inner area.

              color fill (in)
                     The colour to use for filling the polygons.

              color border (in)
                     The colour to use for the border of the polygons.

       $plot3d ribbon yzpairs
              Plot  a  ribbon  based  on  the pairs of yz-coordinates. The colours for the ribbon
              itself and the edge are taken from the colours option.

              list yzpairs (in)
                     List of pairs of yz-coordinates

       For 3D ribbon plots:

       $plot3d plot yzpairs
              Plot a ribbon based on the pairs of yz-coordinates.  The  colours  for  the  ribbon
              itself and the edge are taken from the colours option.

              list yzpairs (in)
                     List of pairs of yz-coordinates

       For xy plots, stripcharts, histograms and polar plots:

       $xyplot dataconfig series -option value ...
              Set  the  value for one or more options regarding the drawing of data of a specific
              series.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series whose configuration we are changing.

       The following options are allowed:

              colour c

              color c
                     The colour to be used when drawing the data series.

              type enum
                     The drawing mode chosen for the series.  This can be one of line, symbol, or
                     both.

              symbol enum
                     What  kind  of  symbol to draw. The value of this option is ignored when the
                     drawing mode line was chosen. This can be one of  plus,  cross,  circle,  up
                     (triangle  pointing up), down (triangle pointing down), dot (filled circle),
                     upfilled or downfilled (filled triangles).

              radius integer
                     The size of the radius of the symbol. The total width of the symbol will  be
                     2 times the radius size. The default radius is 4.

              width integer
                     The  width  of  the  line (if drawn) or the width of the polygon outline (if
                     -filled).

              filled enum
                     Whether to fill the area above or below the data line or not. Can be one of:
                     no, up or down (SPECIAL EFFECTS)

              fillcolour colour
                     Colour to use when filling the area associated with the data line.

              style enum
                     The style to be used for histograms:

                     •      filled: Fill the area under the data points with bars (default)

                     •      spike:  Draw  vertical  lines from the y-axis (lower boundary) to the
                            data point

                     •      symbol: Draw a symbol at the data point

                     •      plateau: Draw a horizontal line at the height of the data point

                     •      stair: Draw a continuous stair-like line connecting the data points

       For piecharts and spiral pies:

       $pie plot data
              Fill a piechart.

              list data (in)
                     A list of pairs (labels and values). The values determine the relative  size
                     of the circle segments. The labels are drawn beside the circle.

       $pie colours colour1 colour2 ...
              Set the colours to be used.

              color colour1 (in)
                     The first colour.

              color colour2 (in)
                     The second colour, and so on.

       $pie explode segment
              Explode  a segment (that is: move one segment out of the circle). If the segment is
              indicated as "auto", then you can click on a segment. This will be exploded instead
              of any previously exploded segment.

              int segment
                     The segment to be exploded or "auto" if you want to do this interactively.

       For radial charts:

       $radial plot data colour thickness
              Draw a new line in the radial chart

              list data (in)
                     A  list of data (one for each spoke). The values determine the distance from
                     the centre of the line connecting the spokes.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour for the line.

              int thickness (in)
                     An optional argument for the thickness of the line.

       $pie colours colour1 colour2 ...
              Set the colours to be used.

              color colour1 (in)
                     The first colour.

              color colour2 (in)
                     The second colour, and so on.

       For vertical barcharts:

       $barchart plot series ydata colour ?dir? ?brightness?
              Add a data series to a barchart.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the series the values belong to.

              list ydata (in)
                     A list of values, one for each x-axis label.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the bars.

              string dir (in)
                     If given, "top-down" or "bottom-up", to indicate the direction in which  the
                     colour changes.  (If not given, a uniform colour is used).

              string brightness (in)
                     If  given,  "bright"  or  "dark"  (defaulting  to "bright"). The colour will
                     change to respectively white or black, depending on the direction.

       $barchart config -option value ...
              Set options for drawing the bars.

              showvalues boolean
                     Whether to show the values or not (above the bars)

              valuefont newfont
                     Name of the font to use for the values

              valuecolour colour
                     Colour for the values

              valueformat format
                     Format string to use for formatting the values

       For horizontal barcharts:

       $barchart plot series xdata colour ?dir? ?brightness?
              Add a data series to a barchart.

              string series (in)
                     Name of the series the values belong to.

              list xdata (in)
                     A list of values, one for each y-axis label.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the bars.

              string dir (in)
                     If given, "left-right" or "right-left", to indicate the direction  in  which
                     the colour changes.  (If not given, a uniform colour is used).

              string brightness (in)
                     If  given,  "bright"  or  "dark"  (defaulting  to "bright"). The colour will
                     change to respectively white or black, depending on the direction.

       $barchart config -option value ...
              Set options for drawing the bars.

              showvalues boolean
                     Whether to show the values or not (to the right of the bars)

              valuefont newfont
                     Name of the font to use for the values

              valuecolour colour
                     Colour for the values

              valueformat format
                     Format string to use for formatting the values

       For 3D barcharts:

       $barchart plot label yvalue colour
              Add the next bar to the barchart.

              string label (in)
                     The label to be shown below the column.

              float yvalue (in)
                     The value that determines the height of the column

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the column.

       $barchart config -option value ...
              Set one or more configuration parameters. The following options are supported:

              usebackground boolean
                     Whether to draw walls to the left and to the back of the columns or not

              useticklines boolean
                     Whether to draw ticklines on the walls or not

              showvalues boolean
                     Whether to show the values or not

              labelfont newfont
                     Name of the font to use for labels

              labelcolour colour
                     Colour for the labels

              valuefont newfont
                     Name of the font to use for the values

              valuecolour colour
                     Colour for the values

       For 3D ribbon charts:

       $ribbon line xypairs colour
              Plot the given xy-pairs as a ribbon in the chart

              list xypairs (in)
                     The pairs of x/y values to be drawn (the series is drawn as a whole)

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the ribbon.

       $ribbon area xypairs colour
              Plot the given xy-pairs as a ribbon with a filled area in front. The effect is that
              of a box with the data as its upper surface.

              list xypairs (in)
                     The pairs of x/y values to be drawn (the series is drawn as a whole)

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the ribbon/area.

       For boxplots:

       $boxplot plot series label values
              Add  a box-and-whisker to the plot. The dataconfig command can be used to customize
              the box-and-whisker (see the box-and-whiskers command for the xyplot for details).

              string series (in)
                     Name of the data series the box belongs to

              string label (in)
                     The label along the x- or y-axis to which the data belong

              list values (in)
                     List of raw values,  the  extent  of  the  box  and  the  whiskers  will  be
                     determined from this list.

       For timecharts:

       $timechart period text time_begin time_end colour
              Add a time period to the chart.

              string text (in)
                     The text describing the period.

              string time_begin (in)
                     Start time of the period.

              string time_end (in)
                     Stop time of the period.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the bar (defaults to black).

       $timechart milestone text time colour
              Add a milestone (represented as an point-down triangle) to the chart.

              string text (in)
                     The text describing the milestone.

              string time (in)
                     Time at which the milestone must be positioned.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the triangle (defaults to black).

       $timechart vertline text time
              Add a vertical line (to indicate the start of the month for instance) to the chart.

              string text (in)
                     The  text  appearing  at  the  top  (an  abbreviation  of  the date/time for
                     instance).

              string time (in)
                     Time at which the line must be positioned.

       $timechart hscroll scrollbar
              Connect a horizontal scrollbar to the chart. See also the section on scrolling.

              widget scrollbar (in)
                     The horizontal scrollbar that is to be connected to the chart

       $timechart vscroll scrollbar
              Connect a vertical scrollbar to the chart. See also the section on scrolling.

              widget scrollbar (in)
                     The vertical scrollbar that is to be connected to the chart

       For Gantt charts:

       $ganttchart task text time_begin time_end completed
              Add a task with its period and level of completion to the chart. Returns a list  of
              canvas items that can be used for further manipulations, like connecting two tasks.

              string text (in)
                     The text describing the task.

              string time_begin (in)
                     Start time of the task.

              string time_end (in)
                     Stop time of the task.

              float completed (in)
                     The percentage of the task that is completed.

       $ganttchart milestone text time colour
              Add a milestone (represented as an point-down triangle) to the chart.

              string text (in)
                     The text describing the milestone.

              string time (in)
                     Time at which the milestone must be positioned.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the triangle (defaults to black).

       $ganttchart vertline text time
              Add a vertical line (to indicate the start of the month for instance) to the chart.

              string text (in)
                     The  text  appearing  at  the  top  (an  abbreviation  of  the date/time for
                     instance).

              string time (in)
                     Time at which the line must be positioned.

       $ganttchart connect from to
              Add an arrow that connects the from task with the to task.

              list from (in)
                     The list of items returned by the "task" command that  represents  the  task
                     from which the arrow starts.

              string text (in)
                     The text summarising the tasks

              list args (in)
                     One  or  more  tasks  (the  lists  returned by the "task" command). They are
                     shifted down to make room for the summary.

              list to (in)
                     The list of items returned by the "task" command that represents the task at
                     which the arrow ends.

       $ganttchart summary text args
              Add a summary item that spans all the tasks listed. The graphical representation is
              a thick bar running from the leftmost task to the rightmost.

              Use this command before connecting the tasks, as the arrow  would  not  be  shifted
              down!

              string text (in)
                     The text summarising the tasks

              list args (in)
                     One  or  more  tasks  (the  lists  returned by the "task" command). They are
                     shifted down to make room for the summary.

       $ganttchart color keyword newcolor
              Set the colour of a part of the Gantt chart. These colours hold for  all  items  of
              that type.

              string keyword (in)
                     The keyword indicates which part of the Gantt chart to change:

                     •      description - the colour of the descriptive text

                     •      completed  -  the colour of the filled bar representing the completed
                            part of a task

                     •      left - the colour for the part that is not yet completed

                     •      odd - the background colour for the odd entries

                     •      even - the background colour for the even entries

                     •      summary - the colour for the summary text

                     •      summarybar - the colour for the bar for a summary

              string newcolor (in)
                     The new colour for the chosen items.

       $ganttchart font keyword newfont
              Set the font of a part of the Gantt chart. These fonts hold for all items  of  that
              type.

              string keyword (in)
                     The keyword indicates which part of the Gantt chart to change:

                     •      description - the font used for descriptive text

                     •      summary - the font used for summaries

                     •      scale - the font used for the time scale

              string newfont (in)
                     The new font for the chosen items.

       $ganttchart hscroll scrollbar
              Connect a horizontal scrollbar to the chart. See also the section on scrolling.

              widget scrollbar (in)
                     The horizontal scrollbar that is to be connected to the chart

       $ganttchart vscroll scrollbar
              Connect a vertical scrollbar to the chart. See also the section on scrolling.

              widget scrollbar (in)
                     The vertical scrollbar that is to be connected to the chart

       For isometric plots (to be extended):

       $isoplot plot rectangle x1 y1 x2 y2 colour
              Plot the outlines of a rectangle.

              float x1 (in)
                     Minimum x coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.

              float y1 (in)
                     Minimum y coordinate of the rectangle.

              float x2 (in)
                     Maximum x coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.

              float y2 (in)
                     Maximum y coordinate of the rectangle.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the rectangle.

       $isoplot plot filled-rectangle x1 y1 x2 y2 colour
              Plot a rectangle filled with the given colour.

              float x1 (in)
                     Minimum x coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.

              float y1 (in)
                     Minimum y coordinate of the rectangle.

              float x2 (in)
                     Maximum x coordinate of the rectangle to be drawn.

              float y2 (in)
                     Maximum y coordinate of the rectangle.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the rectangle.

       $isoplot plot circle xc yc radius colour
              Plot the outline of a circle.

              float xc (in)
                     X coordinate of the circle's centre.

              float yc (in)
                     Y coordinate of the circle's centre.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the circle.

       $isoplot plot filled-circle xc yc radius colour
              Plot a circle filled with the given colour.

              float xc (in)
                     X coordinate of the circle's centre.

              float yc (in)
                     Y coordinate of the circle's centre.

              color colour (in)
                     The colour of the circle.

       For tables you can use the following subcommands:

       $table row items
              Draw  a  single  row  of  items.  The  appearance  of  the  items can be controlled
              explicitly via the format command.

              list items (in)
                     List of text items to be drawn, one per column

       $table separator
              Draw a horizontal line to separate two rows

       $table formatcommand procname
              Set the procedure that controls the formatting  of  items.  By  default  items  are
              simply drawn as centered text.

              string procname (in)
                     Name of the procedure to be used. Its signature is:

                     proc procname {table widget row column value} {...}

                     Use the cellconfigure subcommand to set the attributes per cell.

       $table cellconfigure args
              Set the attributes for the next cell(s) to be drawn.

              list args (in)
                     Key-value  pairs: -background sets the background colour of the cells, -cell
                     sets the foreground colour, -font sets  the  text  font,  -anchor  sets  the
                     position  of  the  text  within the cell and -justify controls the layout of
                     multiline text.

       There are a number of public procedures that may be useful  in  specific  situations:  Pro
       memorie.

COORDINATE TRANSFORMATIONS

       Besides  the  commands that deal with the plots and charts directly, there are a number of
       commands that can be used to convert world coordinates to pixels and  vice  versa.   These
       include:

       ::Plotchart::viewPort w pxmin pymin pxmax pymax
              Set   the   viewport   for   window   w.   Should   be  used  in  cooperation  with
              ::Plotchart::worldCoordinates.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the window (canvas widget) in question.

              float pxmin (in)
                     Left-most pixel coordinate.

              float pymin (in)
                     Top-most pixel coordinate (remember: the vertical  pixel  coordinate  starts
                     with 0 at the top!).

              float pxmax (in)
                     Right-most pixel coordinate.

              float pymax (in)
                     Bottom-most pixel coordinate.

       ::Plotchart::worldCoordinates w xmin ymin xmax ymax
              Set  the  extreme world coordinates for window w. The world coordinates need not be
              in ascending order (i.e. xmin can be larger than xmax, so that a reversal of the x-
              axis is achieved).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the window (canvas widget) in question.

              float xmin (in)
                     X-coordinate to be mapped to left side of viewport.

              float ymin (in)
                     Y-coordinate to be mapped to bottom of viewport.

              float xmax (in)
                     X-coordinate to be mapped to right side of viewport.

              float ymax (in)
                     Y-coordinate to be mapped to top side of viewport.

       ::Plotchart::world3DCoordinates w xmin ymin zmin xmax ymax zmax
              Set  the  extreme  three-dimensional  world  coordinates  for  window  w. The world
              coordinates need not be in ascending order (i.e. xmin can be larger than  xmax,  so
              that a reversal of the x-axis is achieved).

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the window (canvas widget) in question.

              float xmin (in)
                     X-coordinate to be mapped to front side of the 3D viewport.

              float ymin (in)
                     Y-coordinate to be mapped to left side of the viewport.

              float zmin (in)
                     Z-coordinate to be mapped to bottom of viewport.

              float xmax (in)
                     X-coordinate to be mapped to back side of viewport.

              float ymax (in)
                     Y-coordinate to be mapped to right side of viewport.

              float zmax (in)
                     Z-coordinate to be mapped to top side of viewport.

       ::Plotchart::coordsToPixel w x y
              Return a list of pixel coordinates valid for the given window.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the canvas alias (as returned by [\$anyplot canvas]) in question.

              float x (in)
                     X-coordinate to be mapped.

              float y (in)
                     Y-coordinate to be mapped.

       ::Plotchart::coords3DToPixel w x y z
              Return a list of pixel coordinates valid for the given window.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the canvas alias (as returned by [\$anyplot canvas]) in question.

              float x (in)
                     X-coordinate to be mapped.

              float y (in)
                     Y-coordinate to be mapped.

              float y (in)
                     Z-coordinate to be mapped.

       ::Plotchart::polarCoordinates w radmax
              Set the extreme polar coordinates for window w. The angle always runs from 0 to 360
              degrees and the radius starts at 0. Hence you only need to give the maximum radius.
              Note:  If  the viewport is not square, this procedure will not adjust the extremes,
              so that would result in an elliptical plot. The creation routine for a  polar  plot
              always determines a square viewport.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the canvas alias (as returned by [\$anyplot canvas]) in question.

              float radmax (in)
                     Maximum radius.

       ::Plotchart::polarToPixel w rad phi
              Wrapper   for  a  call  to  ::Plotchart::coordsToPixel,  which  assumes  the  world
              coordinates and viewport are set appropriately. Converts polar coordinates to pixel
              coordinates.    Note:  To  be  useful  it  should  be  accompanied  by  a  matching
              ::Plotchart::worldCoordinates procedure. This is automatically taken care of in the
              creation routine for polar plots.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the canvas alias (as returned by [\$anyplot canvas]) in question.

              float rad (in)
                     Radius of the point.

              float phi (in)
                     Angle to the positive x-axis.

       ::Plotchart::pixelToCoords w x y
              Return a list of world coordinates valid for the given window.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the canvas alias (as returned by [\$anyplot canvas]) in question.

              float x (in)
                     X-pixel to be mapped.

              float y (in)
                     Y-pixel to be mapped.

       ::Plotchart::pixelToIndex w x y
              Return the index of the pie segment containing the pixel coordinates (x,y)

              widget w (in)
                     Name  of  the  canvas alias (as returned by [\$anyplot canvas]) in question,
                     holding a piechart.

              float x (in)
                     X-pixel to be mapped.

              float y (in)
                     Y-pixel to be mapped.

       Furthermore there is a routine to determine "pretty" numbers for use with an axis:

       ::Plotchart::determineScale xmin xmax inverted
              Determine "pretty" numbers from the given range and return a  list  containing  the
              minimum, maximum and stepsize that can be used for a (linear) axis.

              float xmin (in)
                     Rough minimum value for the scaling

              float xmax (in)
                     Rough maximum value for the scaling.

              boolean inverted (in)
                     Optional  argument:  if 1, then the returned list produces an inverted axis.
                     Defaults to 0 (the axis will be from minimum to maximum)

       ::Plotchart::determineScaleFromList values inverted
              Determine "pretty" numbers from  the  given  list  of  values  and  return  a  list
              containing the minimum, maximum and stepsize that can be used for a (linear) axis.

              float values (in)
                     List  of  values  that  will  be examined. May contain missing values (empty
                     strings)

              boolean inverted (in)
                     Optional argument: if 1, then the returned list produces an  inverted  axis.
                     Defaults to 0 (the axis will be from minimum to maximum)

MISSING VALUES

       Often  data  that  need to be plotted contain gaps - in a series of measurement data, they
       can occur because the equipment failed, a sample was not collected correctly or  for  many
       other  reasons.  The Plotchart handles these gaps by assuming that one or both coordinates
       of such data points are an empty string:

                  #
                  # Create the plot with its x- and y-axes
                  #
                  set s [::Plotchart::createXYPlot .c {0.0 100.0 10.0} {0.0 100.0 20.0}]

                  foreach {x y} {0.0 32.0 10.0 {} 25.0 60.0 78.0 11.0 } {
                      $s plot series1 $x $y
                  }

       The effect varies according to the type of plot:

       •      For xy-plots, radial plots and strip charts the missing data point causes a gap  in
              the line through the points.

       •      For barchats, missing values are treated as if a value of zero was given.

       •      For  time charts and Gantt charts missing values cause errors - there is no use for
              them there.

OTHER OUTPUT FORMATS

       Besides output to the canvas on screen, the module is capable, via canvas  postscript,  of
       producing  PostScript  files.  One may wonder whether it is possible to extend this set of
       output formats and the answer is "yes". This section tries to sum up the aspects of  using
       this module for another sort of output.

       One way you can create output files in a different format, is by examining the contents of
       the canvas after everything has been drawn and render that contents  in  the  right  form.
       This  is probably the easiest way, as it involves nothing more than the re-creation of all
       the elements in the plot that are already there.

       The drawback of that method is that you need to have a display, which is  not  always  the
       case if you run a CGI server or something like that.

       An  alternative is to emulate the canvas command. For this to work, you need to know which
       canvas subcommands are used and what for. Obviously, the  create  subcommand  is  used  to
       create  the  lines,  texts  and  other items. But also the raise and lower subcommands are
       used, because with these the module  can  influence  the  drawing  order  -  important  to
       simulate  a  clipping  rectangle around the axes. (The routine DrawMask is responsible for
       this - if the output format supports proper clipping areas, then a  redefinition  of  this
       routine might just solve this).

       Furthermore,  the  module  uses the cget subcommand to find out the sizes of the canvas. A
       more mundane aspect of this is that the module currently  assumes  that  the  text  is  14
       pixels  high  and  that  80  pixels  in  width  suffice for the axis' labels. No "hook" is
       provided to customise this.

       In summary:

       •      Emulate the create subcommand to create all the items in the correct format

       •      Emulate the cget subcommand for the options -width and -height to allow the correct
              calculation of the rectangle's position and size

       •      Solve  the  problem  of  raising  and  lowering the items so that they are properly
              clipped, for instance by redefining the routine DrawMask.

       •      Take care of the currently fixed text size properties

SPECIAL EFFECTS

       As an example of some special effects you can achieve, here is the code for a  plot  where
       the area below the data line varies in colour:

              canvas .c  -background white -width 400 -height 200
              pack .c -fill both

              set s [::Plotchart::createXYPlot .c {0.0 100.0 10.0} {0.0 100.0 20.0}]

              $s background gradient green top-down

              $s dataconfig series1 -filled up -fillcolour white

              $s plot series1  0.0 20.0
              $s plot series1 10.0 20.0
              $s plot series1 30.0 50.0
              $s plot series1 35.0 45.0
              $s plot series1 45.0 25.0
              $s plot series1 75.0 55.0
              $s plot series1 100.0 55.0

              $s plaintext 30.0 60.0 "Peak" south

       The  trick  is  to fill the background with a colour that changes from green at the top to
       white at the bottom. Then the area above the data line is filled  with  a  white  polygon.
       Thus the green shading varies with the height of the line.

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT

       In this version there are a lot of things that still need to be implemented:

       •      More  robust  handling  of  incorrect calls (right now the procedures may fail when
              called incorrectly):

              •      The axis drawing routines can not handle inverse axes right now.

              •      If the user provides an invalid date/time string, the routines simply  throw
                     an error.

RESIZING

       Plotchart  has  not  been  designed to create plots and charts that keep track of the data
       that are put in. This means that if an application needs to allow the user to  resize  the
       window holding the plot or chart, it must take care to redraw the complete plot.

       The code below is a simple example of how to do that:

              package require Plotchart

              grid [canvas .c -background white] -sticky news
              grid columnconfigure . 0 -weight 1
              grid rowconfigure . 0 -weight 1

              bind .c <Configure> {doResize}

              proc doPlot {} {
                  #
                  # Clean up the contents (see also the note below!)
                  #
                  .c delete all

                  #
                  # (Re)draw the bar chart
                  #
                  set p [::Plotchart::createBarchart .c {x y z} {0 100 10} 3]
                  $p plot R {10 30 40} red
                  $p plot G {30 40 60} green
              }

              proc doResize {} {
                  global redo

                  #
                  # To avoid redrawing the plot many times during resizing,
                  # cancel the callback, until the last one is left.
                  #
                  if { [info exists redo] } {
                      after cancel $redo
                  }

                  set redo [after 50 doPlot]
              }
       Please  note:  The  code above will work fine for barcharts and many other types of plots,
       but as Plotchart keeps some private information for xy plots,  more  is  needed  in  these
       cases. This actually requires a command "destroyPlot" to take care of such details. A next
       version of Plotchart may have that.

       Alternatively, you can use the xyplot package which is built on  top  of  Plotchart.  This
       package supports zooming in and zooming out, as well as resizing the plot as a whole. Here
       is a small demonstration program:

              # xyplot_demo.tcl --
              #     Demonstration of the xyplot package
              #

              package require xyplot

              set xydata1 {}
              set xydata2 {}
              set xydata3 {}
              set xydata4 {}
              for { set i 0 } { $i < 1024 } { incr i } {
                  lappend xydata1 [expr {$i-1000}] [expr {$i * sin($i/4096.0*3.1415*2) * (sin($i/256.0*3.1415*2))}]
                  lappend xydata2 [expr {$i-1000}] [expr {$i * sin($i/4096.0*3.1415*2) * (sin($i/256.0*3.1415*2) + 0.25 * sin($i/256.0*3.1415*6))}]
                  lappend xydata3 [expr {$i-1000}] [expr {$i * sin($i/4096.0*3.1415*2) * (sin($i/256.0*3.1415*2) + 0.25 * sin($i/256.0*3.1415*6) + 0.0625 * sin($i/256.0*3.1415*10))}]
                  lappend xydata4 [expr {$i-1000}] [expr {$i * sin($i/4096.0*3.1415*2) * (sin($i/256.0*3.1415*2) + 0.25 * sin($i/256.0*3.1415*6) + 0.0625 * sin($i/256.0*3.1415*10) + 0.015625 * sin($i/256.0*3.1415*14))}]
              }

              set xyp [xyplot .xyp -xformat "%5.0f" -yformat "%5.0f" -title "XY plot testing" -background gray90]
              pack $xyp -fill both -expand true

              set s1 [$xyp add_data sf1 $xydata1 -legend "Serie 1 data" -color red]
              set s2 [$xyp add_data sf2 $xydata2 -legend "Serie 2 data" -color green]
              set s3 [$xyp add_data sf3 $xydata3 -legend "Serie 3 data" -color blue]
              set s4 [$xyp add_data sf4 $xydata4 -legend "Serie 4 data" -color orange]

              set xyp2 [xyplot .xyp2 -xticks 8 -yticks 4 -yformat %.2f -xformat %.0f]
              pack $xyp2 -fill both -expand true

              set s1 [$xyp2 add_data sf1 $xydata1]
              set s2 [$xyp2 add_data sf2 $xydata2]
              set s3 [$xyp2 add_data sf3 $xydata3]
              set s4 [$xyp2 add_data sf4 $xydata4]

       Zooming in is done by selecting a rectangle with the left mouse  button  pressed.  Zooming
       out  is  done  by  pressing the right mouse button. If you resize the window, the canvases
       inside are resized too. If you zoom in, you can scroll the plot via  the  scrollbars  that
       are automatically attached.

ZOOMING IN

       As  the  Plotchart  package  does not keep track of the data itself, rescaling an existing
       plot - for instance when zooming in - would have to be done by  redefining  the  plot  and
       redrawing  the  data.  However,  the  canvas widget offers a way out by scaling and moving
       items, so that zooming in becomes a bit simpler.

       Whether zooming is indeed useful, depends on the type of plot. Currently it is defined for
       XY-plots  only.  The method is called "rescale" and simply redraws the axes and scales and
       moves the data items so that they conform to the  new  axes.  The  drawback  is  that  any
       symbols  are  scaled by the same amount. The rescale method works best for plots that only
       have lines, not symbols.

       The method works very simply:

                 $p rescale {newxmin newxmax newxstep} {newymin newymax newystep}

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS

       The commands plotconfig and plotstyle can be used to set all manner of options. The syntax
       is:

       ::Plotchart::plotconfig charttype component property value
              Set  a new value for the property of a component in a particular chart or plot type
              or query its current value. Changed properties only have effect for the consecutive
              plots, not for the ones already created. Each argument is optional.

              Note: The plotstyle command offers a more flexible way to control the configuration
              options.

              string charttype (in)
                     The type of chart or plot (see the configuration type that is mentioned  for
                     each  create  command).  If  not  given  or  empty, a list of chart types is
                     returned. If it is given, the properties for that particular type are used.

              string component (in)
                     The component of the plot/chart: leftaxis, rightaxis, background, margin and
                     so  on.  If  not  given or empty, a list of components is returned. If it is
                     given, the properties for that particular component will  be  set  for  that
                     particular type of chart.

              string property (in)
                     The property of the component of the plot/chart: textcolor, thickness of the
                     axis line, etc. If not given or empty, a list of properties is returned.  If
                     it  is given, that particular property for that particular component will be
                     set for that particular type of chart.

              string value (in)
                     The new value for the property. If empty, the current value is returned.  If
                     the value is "default", the default value will be restored.

                     Note, that in some cases an empty value is useful. Use "none" in this case -
                     it can be useful for colours and for formats.

       ::Plotchart::plotstyle subcmd style args
              Manipulate the style in which subsequent plots will be drawn. The default style  is
              "default", but you can define and load any number of other styles.

              string subcmd (in)
                     The subcommand to be executed:

                     •      configure  -  this subcommand allows you to set the options per chart
                            type.  It takes the same options as the plotconfig command.

                     •      current - return the current style

                     •      load - make the given style the active style for subsequent plots and
                            charts

                     •      names - return the list of currently defined styles

              string style (in)
                     The name of the plot style to manipulate

              list args (in)
                     The new options for the style - see the plotconfig command for details

       Below is a detailed list of the components and properties:

       •      Axes come in a wide variety:

              •      leftaxis,  rightaxis,  topaxis,  bottomaxis for the plots with a rectangular
                     shape.

              •      xaxis, yaxis and zaxis are used for the 3D plots

              •      axis, this represents the radial and tangential axes of a polar plot

              All axes have the following properties:

              •      color - the colour of the line and the tickmarks

              •      thickness - the width of the line of the axis itself, not the tickmarks

              •      ticklength - the length of the tickmarks in  pixels.  A  positive  value  is
                     outward, a negative value is inward.

              •      font - the font for the labels and the text at the axis

              •      format  - the format for rendering the (numerical) labels. For the time axis
                     it is the format for a date and time.

              •      textcolor - the colour for the labels and the text.

              •      labeloffset - space (in pixels) between the tickmark and the actual label

              •      minorticks - number of minor tickmarks between the major tickmarks

              •      shownumbers - show the numbers/labels or not.

              •      showaxle - show the axis line or not.

       •      The margin is important for the layout. Currently only the rectangular plots  allow
              the margins to be set: left, right, top and bottom.  The values are in pixels.

       •      The  text  component  is meant for any text appearing via the plaintext subcommand.
              The properties are: textcolor, font and anchor (positioning of the text relative to
              the given coordinates).

       •      The  background  has  two  properties: outercolor, the colour outside of the actual
              plot, and innercolor, the colour inside the plot. (Note: only "outercolor" has  now
              been implemented).

       •      The  mask  has  one property only: draw. If set to 1, the default, white rectangles
              are drawn to mimick the effects of clipping - excess data are made  invisible  this
              way.   Otherwise  these  rectangles  are  not  drawn. This is useful to control the
              layout more tightly, for instance with multiple plots in one canvas.

       •      The title component has the same properties  as  the  text  component  (but  it  is
              independent  of  that component). It also has a background property: If not set (or
              set to the empty string) this is  the  same  as  the  outercolor  property  of  the
              background component, otherwise it is a separate colour.

       •      The  legend  has three properties: background, border and position.  See the legend
              subcommand for the meaning.

       •      The bar components is used for all barchart-like plots and  has  three  properties:
              barwidth  (relative  width  of  the  bars in relation to the items along the axis),
              innermargin (the relative width of the gaps between bars or groups of bars) and the
              outline colour.

       •      The  labels component is used to describe the appearance of the labels of piecharts
              and "spiral" piecharts. The properties are:

              •      textcolor - colour of the label text

              •      font - font to be used for the label text

              •      placement - out of the circle or in the circle

              •      sorted - the data are sorted in ascending order first

              •      shownumbers - the labels are combined with  the  numbers  according  to  the
                     format

              •      format  -  the format to be used (defaults to: "%s (%g)") if the numbers are
                     to shown. The format command gets the label first, then the number)

              •      formatright - if given, the  format  to  be  used  for  labels  and  numbers
                     appearing to the right of the pie. The format command gets the number first,
                     then the label. (Defaults to "")

       •      The slice component has properties to control the appearance of the sections in the
              pie diagram:

              •      outline - the colour of the line around the slices (default: black)

              •      outlinewidth - width of the line around the slices (default: 1 pixel)

              •      startangle - the angle w.r.t. positive x-axis where the first slice starts

              •      direction  -  the direction in which to draw the slices (default: +, that is
                     clockwise)

       •      The table charts use the general components title and margin and further  more  the
              specific components header, oddrow, evenrow, cell and frame:

              •      header,  oddrow  and  evenrow  have the properties: background, font, color,
                     height and anchor with obvious meanings.

              •      The cell component defines in addition leftspace,  rightspace  and  topspace
                     for  fine-grained  control of the spacing inside the cell. These are not set
                     via the cellconfigure subcommand however.

              •      Finally the frame component uses color, outerwidth (for  the  width  of  the
                     line  surrounding  the  whole  table) and innerwidth (for the width of lines
                     separating columns and rows).

       See the examples in plotdemos7.tcl for its use.

SCROLLING FOR TIMECHARTS AND GANTT CHARTS

       For two types of plots automatic scrolling management has been implemented: timecharts and
       Gantt  charts.  The subcommands hscroll and vscroll associate (existing) scrollbars to the
       plot, in much the same way as for text and canvas widgets.

       Once the association is made, the scrollbars are automatically updated if:

       •      You add an item with a period wider than the current one.

       •      You add a vertical line for a time beyond the current bounds.

       •      You add an extra item beyond the number that was used to create the chart.

       For instance:

              package require Plotchart

              canvas .c -width 400 -height 200
              scrollbar .y -orient vertical
              scrollbar .x -orient horizontal

              grid .c .y -sticky news
              grid .x    -sticky news

              source plotchart.tcl

              set s [::Plotchart::createTimechart .c "1 january 2004"  "31 december 2004" 4]

              $s period "Spring" "1 march 2004" "1 june 2004" green
              $s period "Summer" "1 june 2004" "1 september 2004" yellow
              $s vertline "1 jan" "1 january 2004"
              $s vertline "1 apr" "1 april 2004"
              $s vertline "1 jul" "1 july 2004"
              $s vertline "1 oct" "1 october 2004"
              $s vertline "1 jan" "1 january 2005"
              $s vertline "1 apr" "1 april 2005"
              $s vertline "1 jul" "1 july 2005"
              $s milestone "Longest day" "21 july 2004"
              $s milestone "Longest day 2" "21 july 2004"
              $s milestone "Longest day 3" "21 july 2004"
              $s milestone "Longest day 4" "21 july 2004"
              $s milestone "Longest day 5" "21 july 2004"
              $s milestone "Longest day 6" "21 july 2004"
              $s title "Seasons (northern hemisphere)"

              $s vscroll .y
              $s hscroll .x

       The original extent of the chart is from 1 january 2004 to 31 december 2004.  But  because
       of  the  addition  of  vertical  lines  in  2005  and more items than was specified at the
       creation of the chart, both the horizontal and the vertical scrollbar will be enabled.

SPECIALISED PLOTS

       Most of the plot and chart types described above have a fairly general use and you  simply
       prepares  the  data to be plotted yourself. This section describes several plot types that
       are more specialised, in the sense that they have specific purposes and you pass raw  data
       that are then processed in the plotting routines.

       Currently there are the following types:

       •      Target  diagrams  are  used to assess the capacity of numerical models to reproduce
              measurement data. They are described in detail in:

              Jason K. Joliff et al.
                  Summary diagrams for coupled hydrodynamic-ecosystem model skill assessment
                  Journal of Marine Systems 76 (2009) 64-82
                  DOI: 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2008.05.014

       •      Performance profiles are used for comparing the performance of numerical methods or
              implementations thereof with each other. For more information:

              Desmond Higham and Nicholas Higham
                  Matlab Guide
                  SIAM, 2005, Philadephia

       Most  of the general methods for XY-plots work for these plots as well, but their creation
       and the methods to plot the data are very specific.

       ::Plotchart::createTargetDiagram w limits scale
              Create a new target diagram with circles indicating  specific  limits.  The  x-axis
              represents the unbiased "root-mean-square difference" (typically varying between -1
              and 1) and the y-axis represents the normalised bias.

              Data points closer to the origin represent better results than data points  further
              away.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              list limits (in)
                     List  of  radii for the circles that represent the limits (for instance: 0.5
                     and 0.7)

              double scale (in)
                     Scale for the axes - defaults to 1, but if the model results are a poor fit,
                     then that may be too small a value. Both axes are scaled in the same way.

       $target plot series xvalues yvalues
              The  plot  method  takes  two  series  of  data  of  the same length, the first one
              representing the model results, the second one represent the measurements or,  more
              general, the data that need to be reproduced.

              string series (in)
                     Name  of  the  series (it will be plotted as a symbol that is configured via
                     the  $target  dataconfig  command  (see  the  XY-plot  equivalent   for   an
                     explanation)

              list xvalues (in)
                     List of model results (missing values are represented as empty strings)

              list yvalues (in)
                     List  of  measured  values (missing values are represented as empty strings;
                     only if both the x and the y values are given,  is  the  pair  used  in  the
                     computations)

       ::Plotchart::createPerformanceProfile w max
              Create a diagram to show the performance of various numerical methods (or solvers).
              The idea is to first run these methods on a  set  of  problems  and  measure  their
              performance. The smaller the number the better. Then these methods are compared via
              a so-called performance profile: the data are scaled and  ordered,  such  that  the
              best method ends up highest.

              Because of the nature of the plot all data must be given at once.

              widget w (in)
                     Name of the existing canvas widget to hold the plot.

              float max (in)
                     Maximum  value  for  the x-axis (the x-axis is the scaled performance of the
                     series).

       $performance plot series_and_data_pairs
              Plot the data for each given method. The data are identified by the series name and
              the appearance is controlled via prior dataconfig subcommand.

              list series_and_data_pairs (in)
                     List of series names and data. All data must be given at once.

       The command plotmethod can be used to add new methods for a particular plot or chart type.
       It is intended to help you develop specialised graphical displays.

       ::Plotchart::plotmethod charttype methodname plotproc
              Adds a new method for the given plot or chart type. The method  is  implemented  by
              the  command  or  procedure  given  in the plotproc argument. The procedure will be
              called with two extra arguments, the name of the created plot and the canvas widget
              that contains (see the example below).

              string charttype (in)
                     The type of plot or chart that the new method should be added to.

              string methodname (in)
                     Name of the method to be used.

              string plotproc (in)
                     Name of the command or procedure that implements the method.

       Here is a trivial example of how to use this:

              #
              # The custom method "doodle" always adds the text "DOODLE"
              # to the plot
              #
              proc doodle {p w x y} {
                  $p plaintext $x $y "DOODLE"
              }
              ::Plotchart::plotmethod xyplot doodle doodle

              #
              # Use it
              pack [canvas .c]

              set p [::Plotchart::createXYPlot .c {0 100 10} {0 20 5}]

              $p doodle 40 10

TABLE CHARTS

       To show what you can do with table charts, here is a simple example that plots a number of
       random data. The colours depend on the range  that  the  data  belong  to.  For  this  the
       procedure setColor is used.

              package require Plotchart

              pack [canvas .c -bg white -height 300] -fill both -expand yes

              ::Plotchart::plotconfig table frame outerwidth 3
              ::Plotchart::plotconfig table frame color red

              set t [::Plotchart::createTableChart .c {"Column 1" "Column 2" "Column 3"} 80]

              proc setColor {table widget row col value} {
                  $table cellconfigure -background white -color black
                  if { $value < 2.0 } {
                      $table cellconfigure -background red -color white
                  }
                  if { $value > 6.0 } {
                      $table cellconfigure -background green
                  }

                  return [format "%6.3f" $value]
              }

              # Command must already exist ...
              $t formatcommand setColor

              $t title "Demonstration of table charts"
              $t separator

              for {set i 0} {$i < 9} {incr i} {
                  set row {}

                  for {set j 0} {$j < 3} {incr j} {
                      lappend row [expr {10.0 * rand()}]
                  }

                  if { $i == 3 } {
                      $t separator
                  }

                  $t row $row
              }

CONTROL DISPLAYS

       TODO

ARRANGING MULTIPLE PLOTS IN A CANVAS

       The command plotpack allows you to copy the contents of a plot into another canvas widget.
       This canvas widget does not act as a composite plot, but it can be saved as  a  PostScript
       file  for  instance: Note: the command simply takes a snapshot of the plots/charts as they
       are at that moment.

       ::Plotchart::plotpack w dir args
              Copy the contents of the plots/charts into another widget, in a manner  similar  to
              the pack geometry manager.

              widget w (in)
                     The name of the canvas widget to copy the plots/charts into

              string dir (in)
                     The direction of the arrangement - top, left, bottom or right

              list args (in)
                     List of plots/charts to be copied.

       For example:

                  set p1 [createXYPlot ...]
                  set p2 [createBarchart ...]

                  ... fill the plots ...

                  toplevel .t
                  pack [canvas .t.c2 -width ...]

                  #
                  # Copy the two plots above each other in the new canvas
                  #
                  plotpack .t.c2 top $p1 $p2

       A  different  method is to use the -box and -axesbox options when creating the plot. These
       control the area in the canvas where the plot or chart will be drawn.

       The -box option takes as its value a list of four numbers:

       •      X-coordinate of the upper-left corner of the area that will  contain  the  plot  or
              chart (simply a canvas coordinate)

       •      Y-coordinate of the upper-left corner

       •      Width of the area

       •      Height of the area

       Specifying  the  width  and  height makes it easier to reposition the area with respect to
       other plots.

       The -axesbox option is meant to make aligning the axes of a plot with those of other plots
       easier. The option takes a list of six arguments:

       •      Identification  of  the  plot  with  respect  to which it should be positioned (the
              command returned by the creation command).

       •      The anchor position that should be used (n, nw, ...)

       •      X-coordinate of the upper-left corner of the area that will  contain  the  plot  or
              chart. This coordinates is taken relative to the anchor position

       •      Y-coordinate of the upper-left corner

       •      Width of the axis area

       •      Height of the axis area

       With  this  option  the  area the axes occupy is first determined and the complete area is
       derived from the margins.

       For example:

                  set p2 [::Plotchart::createXYPlot .c {0 10 1} {-5 5 2.5} -axesbox [list $p1 ne 0 0 200 200]]

       will create a second plot whose left axis coincides with the right axis of plot "\$p1" and
       the  top  of  the axis is at the same heigt as well - because the axes are positioned at a
       point 0 pixels to the left and 0 pixels below the north-east corner.

INTERACTIVE USE

       Plotchart has several features for interactive use (cf. NOTES ON TAGS):

       •      The legend can be moved around by pressing mouse button 1 in the legend's  box  and
              keeping it down.

       •      You  can  use  the  bindplot and bindlast commands to define actions that are to be
              taken when the user clicks on an element of the plot or  chart.   (see  below,  see
              also the sample code in plotdemos12.tcl)

       •      Piecharts can show an "exploded" segment that you can select with mouse button 1.

       If  you  require  different forms of interaction, not covered by Plotchart itself, you can
       use the tags on the various canvas elements to define other bindings.

       The bindplot and bindlast are defined as follows:

       $anyplot bindplot event command args
              Register a command that will be run whenever the given event occurs in the plot.

              string event
                     The event that you want to bind the command to

              string command
                     Name of the command/procedure that you want to run. The following  arguments
                     are  prefixed:  the x- and y-coordinates of the point in the plot (the world
                     coordinates!), so that the procedure has the signature:

                         cmd $xworld $yworld $string1 $string2 $string3

                     assuming the argument "command" is: {cmd A B C}

       $anyplot bindlast series event command
              Register a command that will be run when the event occurs within the  neighbourhood
              of  the last point added to the given series. (You can use directly after inserting
              a data point. All such commands will remain active).

              string event
                     The event that you want to bind the command to

              list command
                     Name of the command/procedure that you want to run. The following  arguments
                     are  prefixed:  the x- and y-coordinates of the point in the plot (the world
                     coordinates!), so that the procedure has the signature:

                         cmd $xworld $yworld $string1 $string2 $string3

                     assuming the argument "command" is: {cmd A B C}

       Here is an example - show the values of the data points in an annotation (from the  sample
       code in plotdemos12.tcl):

              #
              # Procedure for showing an annotation
              #
              proc showAnnotation {xcoord ycoord plot w} {

                  $plot balloon $xcoord $ycoord "Data point: [format "%.3f, %.3f" $xcoord $ycoord]" north

                  after 2000 [list removeAnnotation $w]
              }

              #
              # Procedure for erase an annotation
              #
              proc removeAnnotation {w} {

                  # Use the tags to remove all annotations
                  $w delete BalloonText
                  $w delete BalloonFrame
              }

              #
              # Create a simple plot and a label
              #
              pack [canvas .c -bg white] [label .l -textvariable coords]

              set p [::Plotchart::createXYPlot .c {0 1000 200} {0 10 1}]

              $p dataconfig series1 -type both -symbol cross

              foreach x {1 2 5 10 20 50 100 200 500 1000} {
                  $p plot series1 $x [expr {log($x)}]

                  #
                  # Show the annotation for each data point
                  #
                  $p bindlast series1 <Enter> [list showAnnotation $p %W]
              }

NOTES ON TAGS

       The  implementation  of  Plotchart  relies  heavily  on  the  canvas's ability to identify
       graphical objects by tags and to change the drawing order of  the  objects.  This  section
       documents the tags that are used.

       (Note:  the  tags  are  not  always  used  consistently - see the notes appearing with the
       various tags. This section describes the current state.)

       General graphical objects:mask - Used to manipulate the  opaque  rectangles  that  ensure  data  outside  the
              viewport are not shown.

       •      topmask, horizmask, vertmask - specialised tags, used for scrollable plots.

       •      title - Used for title strings.

       •      BalloonText, BalloonFrame - Used to manipulate balloon text.

       •      PlainText - Used to manipulate ordinary text without any decoration.

       •      background  -  Tag used for gradient and image backgrounds (and for gradient-filled
              bars).

       •      xaxis, yaxis - Tags used for all objects related to horizontal  or  vertical  axes.
              (also:  both  for  numerical  axes  and  axes  with labels as in barcharts).  Note,
              however, that the text along the axes has no particular tag.

       •      raxis - Tag used for all objects related to a right axis.

       •      taxis - Tag used for all objects related to a time axis.

       •      axis3d - Tag used for 3D axes

       •      xtickline, ytickline - Tags used for ticklines.

       •      legend, legengb, legendobj - Tags used for  the  legend.  The  latter  is  used  to
              manipulate the legend as a whole.

       •      legend_series  -  Tag  used to control the appearance of the legend entry ("series"
              should be replaced by the series name).

       •      object   -   used   as   standard   tag   for   all   objects   drawn   with    the
              ::Plotchart::drawobject  procedure. Tags given at object creation time are added to
              this tag.

       XY-plots (all types of axes):data - The  general  tag  to  identify  graphical  objects  associated  with  data.
              data_seriesname  -  The  tag  specific  to  a  data  series ("seriesname" should be
              replaced).  band - The horizontal or vertical band drawn with the xband  otr  yband
              subcommands  have  this  tag  by  the actual name).  xtext - The text labelling the
              xaxis.  ytext - The text labelling hte yaxis  horizontically.   vtext  -  The  text
              labelling the yaxis vertically.

       Items such as labelled dots only have the "data" tag.

       Piecharts and spiral pies:segment_segmentnumber - The tag identifying the segment, the string "segmentnumber"
              should be replaced by the actual number. This tag is used to explode the segments.

       Barcharts:

       Barcharts use the same tags as xy-plots (but for gradient-filled bars the  data_seriesname
       is not used).

       Histograms and isometric plots:

       Currently the only tag used is "data".

       Time-charts:

       As  these  plots  are  scrollable,  several  tags  are  used  specific  to  the scrolling:
       vertscroll, horizscroll, below, lowest, above, timeline, tline.  Each item also has a  tag
       of  the form "item_number", where "number" is to be replaced by the actual sequence number
       of the item.

       Gantt charts:

       In addition to the tags described for  the  time-charts,  the  following  tags  are  used:
       description, completed, summary and summarybar.

       Radial charts and polar plots:

       Currently  the  radial  lines  indicating  the  grid  have  no tags. The graphical objects
       associated with data only have the "data" tag.

       Windroses:

       Only the tag data_number is currently used ("number" should be replaced  by  the  sequence
       number of the data, starting at 0.

       Contour and isoline plots:

       No tags are used.

       3D plots and 3D ribbon plots:

       No tags are used for the data objects, only for the axes.

       Charts decorated with 3D effects:

       The  following  tags  are  used  to identify various types of graphical objects: platform,
       background, d, u, ticklines.

       The text associated with the bars has no tags. The ribbon lines and  areas  have  no  tags
       either.

       Tables:

       Tags  used  are:  frame,  cellbg and celltext In addition: To implement multiple plots and
       charts in a single canvas, all items also get as a tag the plot/chart they belong to. This
       enables Plotchart to manipulate only those items.

TODO - SOME PRIVATE NOTES

       I have the following wishlist:

       •      Isometric plots - allow new items to be implemented easily.

       •      A general 3D viewer - emphasis on geometry, not a ray-tracer.

       •      Several improvements for boxplots:

              •      Height of the box scales with the logarithm of the number of points

              •      Marker line to indicate a "current" value

              •      Box drawn from quantiles

KEYWORDS

       3D  bars,  3D  surfaces,  bar  charts,  charts,  coordinate  transformations, coordinates,
       graphical presentation, isometric plots, pie charts, plotting, polar plots, strip  charts,
       tables, time charts, xy-plots

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2011 Arjen Markus <arjenmarkus@users.sourceforge.net>