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Re: using gnuplot 4.2
From: |
LUK ShunTim |
Subject: |
Re: using gnuplot 4.2 |
Date: |
Fri, 27 Jul 2007 17:29:49 +0800 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla-Thunderbird 2.0.0.4 (X11/20070622) |
Ares wrote:
> 2007/7/27, LUK ShunTim <address@hidden>:
>> Ares wrote:
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> I am a new (happy) GNU/Linux user. I have kubuntu 7.04 installed with
>>> octave 2.9
>>>
>>> by default kubuntu package manager installs gnuplot version 4.0. now I
>>> found on octave help that octave can use gnuplot 4.2 to show images
>>> and plot data on top of such images (that is what I need) using
>>> gnuplot.
>>>
>>> My problem is: how can I tell octave to use gnuplot 4.2 instead of 4.0?
>>>
>>> I tried removing gnuplot 4.0 but (of course) octave does not find
>>> gnuplot anymore.
>>>
>>> thanks in advance for your help. Regards
>>>
>> Did you install gnuplot 4.2 via a deb package? If it's the case, the
>> easiest way is probably the debian alternatives mechanism. Try "man
>> update-alternatives" to see how to do it or install galternatives for a
>> GUI to do the same.
>>
>> For standalone install, you can try setting the binary search path so
>> that octave finds gnuplot 4.2 first. You may have to copy/rename the
>> binary to gnuplot if it's called gnuplot-4.2 or something.
>>
>> For bash,
>>
>> export PATH=/path/to/your/gnuplot/binary/dir:$PATH
>>
>> Regards,
>> ST
>> --
>>
>>
>
> as I said I am quite new to Linux, so I do not really understand all
> you are saying...
>
> anyway, I searched for gnuplot bin files and there are two of them,
> /usr/bin/gnuplot and /usr/local/bin/gnuplot, the first corresponds to
> gnuplot 4.0 and the second to 4.2. If I simply type gnuplot, it opens
> gnuplot 4.2, so this should already be prior to 4.0 (and octave should
> use this instead?)
In this case, gnuplot 4.2 should be found first. I don't think octave
hard-coded the path. Perhaps more knowledgeable users can confirm.
Just to be sure, what does "echo $PATH" show? Is /usr/local/bin in front
of /usr/bin?
>
> I also tried galternatives (don't have time to do it by command line!)
> and gnuplot is not there at all!
I guess your gnuplot 4.2 is not installed via dpkg or apt.
>
> I think that the problem is "how to tell octave to use 4.2 version of
> gnuplot"? and also, how to tell which version of gnuplot octave is
> using? and is it true that octave is supposed to call gnuplot 4.2 to
> show images (and plot on top of them)?
>
> If I use imshow, octave keeps on using image magick...
Because somehow octave failed to find gnuplot 4.2 and hence it tries
other viewers. See "help imshow".
>
> Regards,
Regards,
ST
--
- using gnuplot 4.2, Ares, 2007/07/26
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, LUK ShunTim, 2007/07/26
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, Ares, 2007/07/27
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2,
LUK ShunTim <=
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, Ares, 2007/07/27
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, LUK ShunTim, 2007/07/27
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, Ares, 2007/07/27
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, Søren Hauberg, 2007/07/27
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, Ares, 2007/07/27
- Message not available
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, Ares, 2007/07/27
- Re: using gnuplot 4.2, Søren Hauberg, 2007/07/27