- gnuplot Cookbook
- Lee Phillips
- 446字
- 2021-08-20 15:42:53
Using two different y-axes
Sometimes our curves can or should not share the same y-axis. Gnuplot handles this with its tics commands, which we cover in greater detail in Chapter 4, Controlling your Tics. The following figure is a plot of two functions covering very different ranges; if the two curves were plotted against the same y-axis, one would be too small to see:

How to do it…
The following simple three-line script will create the previous figure:
set y2tics -100, 10 set ytics nomirror plot sin(1/x) axis x1y1,100*cos(x) axis x1y2
Tip
You can download the example code files for all Packt books you have purchased from your account at http://www.packtpub.com. If you purchased this book elsewhere, you can visit http://www.packtpub.com/support and register to have the files e-mailed directly to you.
How it works…
Gnuplot can have two different y-axes and two different x-axes. In order to define a second y-axis, use the y2tics
command; the first parameter is the starting value at the bottom of the graph, and the second is the interval between tics on the axis. The command set ytics nomirror
tells gnuplot to use a different axis on the right-hand side, rather than simply mirroring the left-hand y-axis. The final plot command is similar to the ones we've seen before, with the addition of the "axis" commands; these tell gnuplot which set of axes to use for which curve.
There's more…
One of our functions, sin(1/x)
, oscillates infinitely quickly near x = 0. Experiment with issuing the command set samples N
before the plot
command to see how more information is plotted near the singularity at the origin if you use larger values of N
.
You can have two x-axes as well (but be careful, this can often lead to plots that are difficult to understand). The following script is used to set the ranges of the two x axes to be different:
set x2tics -20 2 set xtics nomirror set xrange [-10:10] set x2range [-20:0] plot sin(1/x) axis x1y1, 100*cos(x-1) axis x2y2
The previous script creates a plot that sets different scales on the top and bottom axes as well as on left and right axes; it uses the axis command in the last line to specify against which axes the curves are plotted.
One problem with the graphs in this recipe is that, although there is a legend generated automatically to show which curve is a plot of which function, there is nothing to show us which curve is plotted against which axis. In Chapter 2, Annotating with Labels and Legends, you will see how to put informative labels and arrows on your plots to address this.
- 在你身邊為你設計Ⅲ:騰訊服務設計思維與實戰
- MySQL從入門到精通(第3版)
- R數據科學實戰:工具詳解與案例分析(鮮讀版)
- Neural Network Programming with TensorFlow
- Hadoop 3.x大數據開發實戰
- 數據庫原理與應用(Oracle版)
- 數據庫技術及應用教程
- “互聯網+”時代立體化計算機組
- 數據庫技術實用教程
- Augmented Reality using Appcelerator Titanium Starter
- MySQL技術內幕:SQL編程
- 利用Python進行數據分析(原書第2版)
- Learning Ansible
- 深入理解Flink:實時大數據處理實踐
- 大數據用戶行為畫像分析實操指南