Hi -- I've managed to get this working OK with Windows.

You need to stick the gnuplot executable in the same directory as the
gstat executable and bobs you're uncle.  make sure the gnuplot
executable is called wgnuplot.exe

Let me know if this works.

Nick


> 
> The short answer is: use gstat/gnuplot on some unix/linux machine.
> 
> The long answer is: MS-Windows platforms don't support the use of
> pipes, the mechanism gstat uses to call gnuplot normally. Although
> the gnuplot FAQ (http://www.ucc.ie/gnuplot/gnuplot-faq.html)
> mentions that pgnuplot can do this, I never got it working, so I 
> don't distribute Win32 binaries with this feature.
> 
> If you're capable of experimenting with this, then I'm willing to
> suggest the changes you'd have to make to the gstat source. I would
> be glad if we could get this resolved.
> --
> Edzer
> 
> Michael Bock wrote:
> > 
> > Dear gstat users,
> > 
> > starting to work with geostatistics and gstat causes many questions, but
> > the most important one to me is, how to use gstat and gnuplot 3.7 in the
> > right way. Every time I choose 'show plot' in gstat the gnuplot window
> > starts with a 'gnuplot pause' message, while the gstat window isn't
> > available. If I press the O.K. button, the gnuplot window dissappears
> > and I'm back in gstat. This does not make sense!
> > How can I configure gstat/gnuplot, so I can use both windows coexisting.
> 

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