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figure
From: |
Maitland Bottoms |
Subject: |
figure |
Date: |
Tue, 9 Mar 1999 11:56:30 -0500 (EST) |
Hi,
I just figured this out myself...
First, explicitly set two variables:
gnuplot_has_frames=1;
gnuplot_has_multiplot=1;
Then, have at it...
figure(0);
multiplot (1,3);
title('500');
mplot(abs(sc(500,:)));
title('501');
mplot(abs(sc(501,:)));
title('502');
mplot(abs(sc(502,:)));
(I happen to have a matrix sc I wanted to view cuts through. Your data
will likely be a little different.)
My guess is that the default definitions of gnuplot_has_frames and
gnuplot_has_multiplot are conservative, and that there is no
auto-magic to set them when you are running octave and gnuplot.
That's what ~/.octaverc is for, I guess.
-Maitland
>>>>> "Joerg" == Joerg Schreiber <address@hidden> writes:
Joerg> Hi I am just trying to change from matlab to octave.
Joerg> I just tried:
Joerg> octave:15> figure (2)
Joerg> error: figure: gnuplot doesn't appear to support this
Joerg> What's going wrong? Can this be a problem of x11 / X11 ?
Joerg> regards, joerg
- figure, Joerg Schreiber, 1999/03/09
- Re: figure, Joao Cardoso, 1999/03/09
- figure,
Maitland Bottoms <=