A graph widget written in pure Tcl/Tk.
This is a package which provides a widget to plot data in x-y format for scientific applications. It sets reasonable defaults to display most datasets without the need for individual settings. Ukaž was designed to be easy to use and borrows most of the syntax from the popular gnuplot package [http://www.gnuplot.info], slightly adapted to be more Tcl friendly.
The simplest usage looks like this:
package require ukaz
pack [ukaz::graph .g] -expand yes -fill both
set data {1 4.5 2 7.3 3 1.2 4 6.5}
.g plot $data
This displays a resizable plot of the data, which is expected as a list of alternating x-y coordinates. The range of the axis, the number and placement of the the tic marks and the plot style is automatically chosen. The data can be zoomed in by dragging the left mouse button over the canvas, and zoomed out by clicking the right mouse button.
The style of the plot can be adjusted by passing more options to the plot command, and by setting global options using either gnuplot-style commands or Tcl-style configure commands:
package require ukaz
pack [ukaz::graph .g] -expand yes -fill both
set data {1 4.5 2 7.3 3 1.2 4 6.5}
.g plot $data with points pointtype filled-squares color "#A0FFA0"
.g set log y
This displays the same data with light-green squares on a logarithmic y-axis.
Datafiles can be displayed by the /using/ modifier as in gnuplot:
.g plot "somedata.dat" using 1:2 with lines lc blue
.g plot "somedata.dat" using {1:($2/$4)}
This reads the file "somedata.dat" and plots the second column versus the first with a blue line. In addition, it plots the ratio of the 2nd to the 4th column with points.
The graph widget sends virtual events when the user zooms the data or clicks into the plot. This enables simple interactive data dialogs. In addition, special widget-like objects, controls, can be added to the graph. The first implemented one is the /dragline/. This is a horizontal or vertical line, which displays a variable in the graph, e.g. a threshold, and can be dragged by the user.
dragline d -orient horizontal -variable v
set v 0
.g addcontrol d
-
Plotchart Data management, automatic scaling
-
Gnuplot much simpler, not easy to embed, many terminals
...
* More gnuplot-like set methods (set xrange, xtics, xlabel ...)
* More examples
* Data transformation for lists
* Legend