On 22/03/16 17:03, Rob Myers wrote:
On 2016-03-22 09:53, Alan Sondheim wrote:
Have a question myself. There was a program for the Zaurus, Calculon,
which is an n-dimensional graphing program; it can handle apparently
any number of dim. - at least through 5. So there are 3-d slices of
whatever objects one is examining. The program disappeared along with
Zaurus - does anyone know of something that might do this, other than
say Mathematica or Matlab (which cost). It obviously runs incredibly
lean. Has anyone ported Calculon to other distributions? Etc.

I don't know about Calculon but there's:

SciLab - http://www.scilab.org/

LabPlot - https://edu.kde.org/applications/science/labplot/

Gnuplot - http://www.gnuplot.info/

Octave - https://www.gnu.org/software/octave/

R - https://www.r-project.org/

- Rob.

I don't really know anything about much of this, so bring low expectations to the following, but which might be useful as pointers perhaps.

Here's the results of querying the Arch User Repository with the term 'graphing':

aur/facette-bin 0.3.0-1
    Time series data visualization and graphing software
aur/pynmonanalyzer 1.0.2-2
    Python tool for reformatting and plotting/graphing NMON output
aur/pyxplot 0.9.2-3
Command-line graphing package with a simple interface that produces publication-quality output.
aur/tilp 1.17-3
    TI graphing calculator link/transfer program
aur/veusz-git 1.23.1+r2614.b00c508-1
A scientific plotting and graphing package, designed to create publication-ready Postscript or PDF output.
aur/veusz 1.23.2-1
A scientific plotting and graphing package, designed to create publication-ready Postscript or PDF output
aur/xgraph 12.1-6
    X-Windows application for interactive plotting and graphing

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