Dear Allin

I found that if I edit the gnuplot commands of plot "gf1"
by replacing
   set encoding utf8
with
   set encoding default

then the Chinese characters on the x-axis can be shown correctly (under
windows XP).

I also tried that in gretl under ubuntu 8.10. However, it does not work.
But if I directly press "run" botton in the gnuplot command window of "gf1",
the ALL chinese characters including those in title, x-axis are now shown
correctly.

Yi-Nung Yang

2010/6/23 yinung at Gmail <yinung.cycu(a)gmail.com>

> Dear Allin
>
> I've just downloaded the CVS for windows minutes ago and testes it by
> runnung the same script as before.
>
> I found the issue (Chinese characters are not shown correctly for names of
> months on the x-axis) remains there. It seems nothing changes on the gf1
> plot.
>
> Please let me know how I can help on testing or debugging.
>
> Many thanks
>
> Yi-Nung Yang
>
>
> <script>
> open djclose
> smpl 1988/01/04 1989/12/29
> gf1 <- gnuplot djclose --time-series --output=display --with-lines
> gf1.show
> </script>
>
> 2010/6/23 Allin Cottrell <cottrell(a)wfu.edu>
>
>
>> On Mon, 21 Jun 2010, yinung at Gmail wrote:
>>
>> > Thanks for your quick response.
>> > Attached please find the plt file which is generated by the following
>> script
>> > under zh_TW environment of the gretl...
>>
>> Sorry for the delay in responding but I think this issue (that is,
>> short names of months on the x-axis of gretl plots may be
>> corrupted in locales that use multibyte characters) is now fixed
>> in CVS and the various gretl snapshots. Please let me know if
>> there's still a problem.
>>
>> Allin Cottrell
>> _______________________________________________
>> Gretl-users mailing list
>> Gretl-users(a)lists.wfu.edu
>> http://lists.wfu.edu/mailman/listinfo/gretl-users
>>
>
>
Dear Allin

I found that if I edit the gnuplot commands of plot "gf1"
by replacing
   set encoding utf8
with
   set encoding default

then the Chinese characters on the x-axis can be shown correctly (under windows XP).

I also tried that in gretl under ubuntu 8.10. However, it does not work.
But if I directly press "run" botton in the gnuplot command window of "gf1", the ALL chinese characters including those in title, x-axis are now shown correctly. 

Yi-Nung Yang

2010/6/23 yinung at Gmail <yinung.c...@gmail.com>
Dear Allin

I've just downloaded the CVS for windows minutes ago and testes it by runnung the same script as before.

I found the issue (Chinese characters are not shown correctly for names of months on the x-axis) remains there. It seems nothing changes on the gf1 plot.

Please let me know how I can help on testing or debugging.

Many thanks

Yi-Nung Yang


<script>
open djclose
smpl 1988/01/04 1989/12/29
gf1 <- gnuplot djclose --time-series --output=display --with-lines
gf1.show
</script>

2010/6/23 Allin Cottrell <cottr...@wfu.edu>


On Mon, 21 Jun 2010, yinung at Gmail wrote:

> Thanks for your quick response.
> Attached please find the plt file which is generated by the following script
> under zh_TW environment of the gretl...

Sorry for the delay in responding but I think this issue (that is,
short names of months on the x-axis of gretl plots may be
corrupted in locales that use multibyte characters) is now fixed
in CVS and the various gretl snapshots. Please let me know if
there's still a problem.

Allin Cottrell
_______________________________________________
Gretl-users mailing list
gretl-us...@lists.wfu.edu
http://lists.wfu.edu/mailman/listinfo/gretl-users


Reply via email to