El 20/11/15 a las 12:43, Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti escribió:
> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza wrote:
>
>> El 20/11/15 a las 12:18, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza escribió:
>>> I looked at your examples in the wiki. The "slow easy way" works OK.
>>> But in the "fast easy way" I only obtain
On Fri, 20 Nov 2015, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza wrote:
> El 20/11/15 a las 12:18, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza escribió:
>> I looked at your examples in the wiki. The "slow easy way" works OK. But in
>> the "fast easy way" I only obtain the .plt file. I miss a way to run
>> gnuplot from inside gretl and
El 20/11/15 a las 12:18, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza escribió:
> I looked at your examples in the wiki. The "slow easy way" works OK.
> But in the "fast easy way" I only obtain the .plt file. I miss a way
> to run gnuplot from inside gretl and put the .tex files in the correct
> place.
>
> My script
El 18/11/15 a las 20:15, Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti escribió:
>
> Of course we all know that we can use gretl for producing pretty graphs.
> Then, you can save them in some format (eg pdf) and include them in
> your documents: slides, article, PhD thesis, whatever. We all do that.
>
> However, if
On Fri, 20 Nov 2015, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza wrote:
> El 20/11/15 a las 12:43, Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti escribió:
>> On Fri, 20 Nov 2015, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza wrote:
>>
>>> El 20/11/15 a las 12:18, Ignacio Diaz-Emparanza escribió:
I looked at your examples in the wiki. The "slow easy way"
On Wed, 18 Nov 2015, Cristián Arturo Ducoing Ruiz wrote:
> Thank you so much Jack,
>
> I'm using PDF to insert graphs in LaTeX. Which is the advantage of TikZ?
Up to a point, it's a matter of taste: TikZ builds on pgf, which makes
your figure more "TeX-ish" and it integrates better with the
Thank you so much Jack,
I'm using PDF to insert graphs in LaTeX. Which is the advantage of TikZ?
Regards
2015-11-18 20:15 GMT+01:00 Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti
:
>
> Of course we all know that we can use gretl for producing pretty graphs.
> Then, you can save them in some format (eg pdf) and
Of course we all know that we can use gretl for producing pretty graphs.
Then, you can save them in some format (eg pdf) and include them in your
documents: slides, article, PhD thesis, whatever. We all do that.
However, if you need to customise them, the choice of the TikZ format may
be