Michael C Gilbert wrote:
>
> On Jul 29, 2011, at 12:52 PM, Eric Schulte wrote:
>
> > I would recommending using a gnuplot code block rather than a plot line,
> > and passing your data to the code block using a variable. Code blocks
> > give you much more direct access to gnuplot,
On Jul 29, 2011, at 3:52 PM, Eric Schulte wrote:
>> That means that, in the mean time, if you or anyone has an example of
>> how to configure this using the line: formatting, it would still be
>> useful to me and I would still be grateful. I just have something
>> small I need to produce tonight o
Michael C Gilbert writes:
>
> On Jul 29, 2011, at 12:52 PM, Eric Schulte wrote:
>
>> I would recommending using a gnuplot code block rather than a plot line,
>> and passing your data to the code block using a variable. Code blocks
>> give you much more direct access to gnuplot, wh
On Jul 29, 2011, at 12:52 PM, Eric Schulte wrote:
> I would recommending using a gnuplot code block rather than a plot line,
> and passing your data to the code block using a variable. Code blocks
> give you much more direct access to gnuplot, which I find generally
> makes gnupl
Hi Michael,
I would recommending using a gnuplot code block rather than a plot line,
and passing your data to the code block using a variable. Code blocks
give you much more direct access to gnuplot, which I find generally
makes gnuplot learning/debugging much easier.
see http://orgmode.org/manu
Hi —
There is a single line in the OM manual (currently on p32) which reads:
lineSpecify an entire line to be inserted in the Gnuplot
script.
I am trying to insert a couple of horizontal reference lines in a simple plot.
I have the plot working, but I need an example of thi