Oh!
Scott you're very kind to take your time helping me with the notebook... 
thanks a lot. I'll take a careful look and report back if I find problems.
Best,
Ferran.

On Tuesday, November 8, 2016 at 1:22:20 PM UTC+1, Scott T wrote:
>
> You can break down the plot command into chunks and then call plot on 
> those chunks to build up a plot from several pieces. In this way, you can 
> make individual plots with multiple series. Then you can combine them 
> according to your desired layout.
>
> This isn't the best place to post a full example so I put a notebook up 
> for you to have a look at here: 
> https://gist.github.com/swt30/54701d09cfa479dab78a5bc2fa857fd7
>
> Cheers,
> Scott
>
> On Tuesday, 8 November 2016 09:20:39 UTC, Ferran Mazzanti wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm gathering interest in Plots.jl in order to make complex plotting 
>> structures. Just as an example, I have a set of data (called y) and some 
>> operations performed on it, stored in arrays of obvious names y2, logy, 
>> expy etc...
>>
>> I have managed to create something that displays one curve per plot
>>
>> lay = @layout [  a{0.4w} grid(2,2) ]
>> plot(
>> [y y2 sqrty logy expy],
>> layout = lay,
>> grid   = [true false false false false],
>> title = ["y" "y^2" "sqrt(y)" "log(y)" 
>> "exp(y)"],titleloc="center",titlefont=font(12),
>> xlims = [(0,12)  (0,10) (0,20) (0,20) (0,12) ],
>> )
>>
>> which puts one curve in each plot. What would be the needed modifications 
>> here in order to
>> plot y and cosy in the first plot, and sqrty and siny on the second plot?
>>
>> Thanks for your help,
>>
>> Ferran.
>>
>

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