Provided by: xgraph_12.1-17_amd64 bug

NAME

       xgraph - Draw a graph on an X11 Display

SYNOPSIS

       xgraph [ options ] [[-geometry |=]WxH+X+Y ] [ -display host:display.screen ] [ file ... ]

DESCRIPTION

       The xgraph program draws a graph on an X display given data read from either data files or
       from standard input if no files are specified.  It can display up to 64  independent  data
       sets  using different colors and/or line styles for each set.  It annotates the graph with
       a title,  axis labels,  grid lines or tick marks, grid labels, and a  legend.   There  are
       options to control the appearance of most components of the graph.

       The  input  format  is  similar to graph(1G) but differs slightly.  The data consists of a
       number of data sets.  Data sets are separated by a blank line.  A new  data  set  is  also
       assumed at the start of each input file.  A data set consists of an ordered list of points
       of the form "{directive} X Y".  The directive is  either  "draw"  or  "move"  and  can  be
       omitted.   If the directive is "draw", a line will be drawn between the previous point and
       the current point (if a line graph is chosen).  Specifying a "move" directive tells xgraph
       not to draw a line between the points.  If the directive is omitted, "draw" is assumed for
       all points in a data set except the first point  where  "move"  is  assumed.   The  "move"
       directive  is  used  most  often to allow discontinuous data in a data set.  The name of a
       data set can be specified by enclosing the name in double quotes on a line  by  itself  in
       the  body  of  the  data  set.   The  trailing double quote is optional.  Overall graphing
       options for the graph can be specified  in  data  files  by  writing  lines  of  the  form
       "<option>:  <value>".   The  option  names  are  the  same  as those used for specifying X
       resources (see below). The option and value must be separated by at least one  space.   An
       example input file with three data sets is shown below.  Note that set three is not named,
       set two has discontinuous data, and the title of the graph is specified near  the  top  of
       the file.

       TitleText: Sample Data
       0.5 7.8
       1.0 6.2
       "set one
       1.5 8.9

       "set two"
       -3.4 1.4e-3
       -2.0 1.9e-2
       move -1.0 2.0e-2
       -0.65 2.2e-4

       2.2 12.8
       2.4 -3.3
       2.6 -32.2
       2.8 -10.3

       After  xgraph  has  read the data,  it will create a new window to graphically display the
       data.  The interface used to specify the size and location of this window depends  on  the
       window  manager currently in use.  Refer to the reference manual of the window manager for
       details.

       Once the window has been opened,  all of the  data  sets  will  be  displayed  graphically
       (subject  to  the  options explained below) with a legend in the upper right corner of the
       screen.  To zoom in on a portion of the graph,  depress a mouse button in the  window  and
       sweep  out  a  region.  xgraph will then open a new window looking at just that portion of
       the graph.  xgraph also presents three control buttons in the upper left  corner  of  each
       window: Close, Hardcopy, and About.  Windows are closed by depressing a mouse button while
       the mouse cursor is inside the Close button.  Typing EOF  (control-D)  in  a  window  also
       closes  that  window.  Depressing a mouse button while the mouse cursor is in the Hardcopy
       button causes a dialog to appear asking about hard copy (printout) options.  These options
       are described below:

       Output Device
              Specifies  the  type  of  the  output  device (e.g. "HPGL", "Postscript", etc).  An
              output device is chosen by depressing the  mouse  inside  its  name.   The  default
              values of other fields will change when you select a different output device.

       Disposition
              Specifies  whether  the output should go directly to a device or to a file.  Again,
              the default values of  other  fields  will  change  when  you  select  a  different
              disposition.

       File or Device Name
              If the disposition is "To Device",  this field specifies the device name.  A device
              name is the same as  the  name  given  for  the  -P  command  of  lpr(1).   If  the
              disposition is "To File",  this field specifies the name of the output file.

       Maximum Dimension
              This specifies the maximum size of the plot on the hard copy device in centimeters.
              xgraph takes in account the aspect ratio of the plot on the screen and  will  scale
              the  plot  so  that  the  longer side of the plot is no more than the value of this
              parameter.  If the device supports it,  the plot may also be rotated  on  the  page
              based on the value of the maximum dimension.

       Include in Document
              If selected, this option causes xgraph to produce hard copy output that is suitable
              for inclusion in other larger documents.  As  an  example,   when  this  option  is
              selected the Postscript output produced by xgraph will have a bounding box suitable
              for use with psfig.

       Title Font Family
              This field specifies the name of a font  to  use  when  drawing  the  graph  title.
              Suitable  defaults  are initially chosen for any given hard copy device.  The value
              of this field is hardware specific -- refer to  the  device  reference  manual  for
              details.

       Title Font Size
              This  field  specifies  the  desired  size of the title fonts in points (1/72 of an
              inch).  If the device supports scalable fonts,  the font will  be  scaled  to  this
              size.

       Axis Font Family and Axis Font Size
              These  fields  are  like  Title Font Family and Title Font Size except they specify
              values for the font xgraph uses to draw axis labels, and legend descriptions.

       Control Buttons
              After specifying the parameters for the plot,  the "Ok"  button  causes  xgraph  to
              produce  a  hard  copy.   Pressing  the  "Cancel"  button  will abort the hard copy
              operation.   Depressing  the  About  button  causes  Xgraph  to  display  a  window
              containing  the  version  of  the program and an electronic mailing address for the
              author for comments and suggestions.

       xgraph accepts a large number of options most of which can  be  specified  either  on  the
       command  line,  in  the  user's  .Xdefaults  or  .Xresources  file,  or  in the data files
       themselves.  A list of these options is given below.  The command line option is specified
       first  with its X default or data file name (if any) in parenthesis afterward.  The format
       of the option in the X defaults file is  "program.option:  value"  where  program  is  the
       program   name  (xgraph)  and  the  option  name  is  the  one  specified  below.   Option
       specifications in the data file are similar to the X defaults  file  specification  except
       the program name is omitted.

       -geometry WxH+X+Y or =WxH+X+Y (Geometry)
              Specifies the initial size and location of the xgraph window.

       -<digit> <name>
              These  options specify the data set name for the corresponding data set.  The digit
              should be in the range '0' to '63'.  This name will be used in the legend.

       -bar (BarGraph)
              Specifies that vertical bars should be drawn from the data points to a  base  point
              which can be specified with -brb.  Usually,  the -nl flag is used with this option.
              The point itself is located at the center of the bar.

       -bof (BarGraph)
              Offset the bars for additional datasets by the specified amount.

       -device <name>
              Set the output device for xgraph. The default is 'X'; other valid devices are 'ps',
              'hpgl', 'idraw' and tgif.

       -o <filename> -O <filename>
              Set  the  output  file  name for postscript, hpgl and idraw devices.  Files created
              with -O can be used other documents, and files generated with  -o  can  be  printed
              directly.

       -P<printername>
              Set  the  printer name for postscript or hpgl devices. This and the -o or -O option
              are mutually exclusive.

       -stk   Stack elements coming from different datasets, instead of plotting  them  from  the
              same baseline. Datasets must match exactly.

       -fitx  Translate  and  scale  the x data from all datasets to fit [0..1].  -fity Translate
              and scale the y data from all datasets to fit [0..1].

       -scale <factor>
              Output scale factor for postscript, hpgl and idraw devices. The default is 1.0, and
              0.5 will generate a 50% reduced plot.

       -fmtx <printf-format> -fmty <printf-format>
              Use the format specified to generate the legends for the x or y axis.

       -bb (BoundBox)
              Draw  a  bounding box around the data region.  This is very useful if you prefer to
              see tick marks rather than grid lines (see -tk).

       -bd <color> (Border)
              This specifies the border color of the xgraph window.

       -bg <color> (Background)
              Background color of the xgraph window.

       -brb <base> (BarBase)
              This specifies the base for a bar graph.  By default,  the base is zero.

       -brw <width> (BarWidth)
              This specifies the width of bars in a bar graph.  The amount is  specified  in  the
              user's units.  By default,  a bar one pixel wide is drawn.

       -bw <size> (BorderSize)
              Border width (in pixels) of the xgraph window.

       -db (Debug)
              Causes  xgraph  to  run  in synchronous mode and prints out the values of all known
              defaults.

       -fg <color> (Foreground)
              Foreground color.  This color is used to draw all text and the normal grid lines in
              the window.

       -gw (GridSize)
              Width,  in pixels,  of normal grid lines.

       -gs (GridStyle)
              Line style pattern of normal grid lines.

       -lf <fontname> (LabelFont)
              Label  font.   All  axis  labels and grid labels are drawn using this font.  A font
              name may be specified exactly (e.g. "9x15"  or  "-*-courier-bold-r-normal-*-140-*")
              or  in  an  abbreviated form: <family>-<size>.  The family is the family name (like
              helvetica) and the size is the font size in points (like 12).  The default for this
              parameter is "helvetica-12".

       -lnx (LogX)
              Specifies a logarithmic X axis.  Grid labels represent powers of ten.

       -lny (LogY)
              Specifies a logarithmic Y axis.  Grid labels represent powers of ten.

       -lw width (LineWidth)
              Specifies the width of the data lines in pixels.  The default is zero.

       -lx <xl,xh> (XLowLimit, XHighLimit)
              This  option limits the range of the X axis to the specified interval.  This (along
              with -ly) can be used to "zoom in" on  a  particularly  interesting  portion  of  a
              larger graph.

       -ly <yl,yh> (YLowLimit, YHighLimit)
              This option limits the range of the Y axis to the specified interval.

       -m (Markers)
              Mark  each  data  point  with  a  distinctive  marker.  There are eight distinctive
              markers used by xgraph.  These markers are assigned uniquely to each different line
              style on black and white machines and varies with each color on color machines.

       -M (StyleMarkers)
              Similar to -m but markers are assigned uniquely to each eight consecutive data sets
              (this corresponds to each different line style on color machines).

       -nl (NoLines)
              Turn off drawing lines.  When used with -m, -M, -p, or  -P  this  can  be  used  to
              produce  scatter  plots.   When used with -bar,  it can be used to produce standard
              bar graphs.

       -ng (NoLegend)
              Turn off drawing Legends. Can be used to increase the drawing area.

       -p (PixelMarkers)
              Marks each data point with a small marker (pixel sized).  This is usually used with
              the -nl option for scatter plots.

       -P (LargePixels)
              Similar to -p but marks each pixel with a large dot.

       -rv (ReverseVideo)
              Reverse  video.   On black and white displays,  this will invert the foreground and
              background colors.  The behaviour on color displays is undefined.

       -t <string> (TitleText)
              Title of the plot.  This string is centered at the top of the graph.

       -tf <fontname> (TitleFont)
              Title font.  This is the name of the font to use for the graph title.  A font  name
              may  be specified exactly (e.g. "9x15" or "-*-courier-bold-r-normal-*-140-*") or in
              an abbreviated  form:  <family>-<size>.   The  family  is  the  family  name  (like
              helvetica) and the size is the font size in points (like 12).  The default for this
              parameter is "helvetica-18".

       -tk (Ticks)
              This option causes xgraph to draw tick marks rather than full grid lines.  The  -bb
              option is also useful when viewing graphs with tick marks only.

       -tkax (Tick Axis)
              When tick marks are enabled, plot the axes.

       -x <unitname> (XUnitText)
              This is the unit name for the X axis.  Its default is "X".

       -y <unitname> (YUnitText)
              This is the unit name for the Y axis.  Its default is "Y".

       -zg <color> (ZeroColor)
              This is the color used to draw the zero grid line.

       -zw <width> (ZeroWidth)
              This is the width of the zero grid line in pixels.

       Some  options  can  only  be specified in the X defaults file or in the data files.  These
       options are described below:

       <digit>.Color
              Specifies the color for a data set.  Eight independent  colors  can  be  specified.
              Thus,   the digit should be between '0' and '7'.  If there are more than eight data
              sets,  the colors will repeat but with a new line style (see below).

       <digit>.Style
              Specifies the line style for a data set.  A string of ones and zeros specifies  the
              pattern  used  for the line style.  Eight independent line styles can be specified.
              Thus,  the digit should be between '0' and '7'.  If there are more than eight  data
              sets,  these styles will be reused.  On color workstations,  one line style is used
              for each of eight colors.  Thus,  64 unique data sets can be displayed.

       Device The default output form presented in  the  hard  copy  dialog  (i.e.  "Postscript",
              "HPGL", etc).

       Disposition
              The default setting of whether output goes directly to a device or to a file.  This
              must be one of the strings "To File" or "To Device".

       FileOrDev
              The default file name or device string in the hard copy dialog.

       ZeroWidth
              Width,  in pixels,  of the zero grid line.

       ZeroStyle
              Line style pattern of the zero grid line.

AUTHOR

       David Harrison University of California

BUGS

       - Zooming in on bar graphs doesn't work right.
       - There is no way to produce hard copy without running xgraph interactively.

                                          December, 1989                                XGRAPH(1)