So far I've been  unable to create anything with a time axis.  Perhaps I'm
looking in the wrong place.

One set of sample data, space delimited.   Converting to comma delimted
would be a simple SED command.  Two measuresments per interval  Letters are
just for human readability.

2013-04-08 13:21:00 DNS G 6.80, DNS X 8.15
2013-04-08 13:22:00 DNS G 9.30, DNS X 20.53
2013-04-08 13:23:00 DNS G 13.37, DNS X 12.24
2013-04-08 13:24:00 DNS G 15.26, DNS X 8.40




Respectfully,

Sherwood of Sherwood's Forests

Sherwood Botsford
Sherwood's Forests --  http://Sherwoods-Forests.com
780-848-2548
50042 Range Rd 31
Warburg, Alberta T0C 2T0



On 8 April 2013 11:44, Jeremy Sanders <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi -
>
>
> On 07/04/13 15:59, Sherwood Botsford wrote:
>
>  X coordinate is { MMM-YYYY | mm-dd-yy | hh:mm | dow hh:mm ...
>> X coordinate is Standard Unix time stamp (optional removal of Daylight
>> savings time)
>> X coordinate is days of week
>> X axis is modular time.  E.g. you have a bunch of data over multiple
>> weeks, and want to see if there is a correlation with time of day, so
>> you need the ability to strip out some of the coordinate.
>>
>
> Do you mean that you are unable to import the data in these formats? Are
> you using CSV format? I would have thought mm-dd-yy and hh:mm should work,
> but probably not the others. Can you provide some example data?
>
>
>  Major ticks can be weeks, months, years, days
>> Minor ticks can be hours, 2,3,4,6, 12 hours (even divisors)
>>
>> Similarly with shorter intervals
>>
>
> Do you mean that you can't get these intervals, or that you do get these
> intervals?
>
> Jeremy
>
>
>
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