On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 4:13 PM, Nick Dokos
<address@hidden> wrote:
John Hendy <
address@hidden> wrote:
> Tried this and it works well -- the output is definitely much better! One oddity -- the EPS
> generated is black and white whereas the typical output was in color... silly option I'm missing?
>
"monochrome" is default:
,----
| set terminal postscript eps enhanced 20
| Terminal type set to 'postscript'
| Options are 'eps enhanced defaultplex \
| leveldefault monochrome colortext \
| dashed dashlength 1.0 linewidth 1.0 butt \
| palfuncparam 2000,0.003 \
| "Helvetica" 20 '
`----
Say "help set terminal postcript" to gnuplot and it'll spew (among other things):
,----
| `default` sets all options to their defaults: `landscape`, `monochrome`,
| `dashed`, `dl 1.0`, `lw 1.0`, `defaultplex`, `noenhanced`, "Helvetica" and
| 14pt. Default size of a PostScript plot is 10 inches wide and 7 inches high.
| The option `color` enables color, while `monochrome` prefers black and white
| drawing elements. Further, `monochrome` uses gray `palette` but it does not
| change color of objects specified with an explicit `colorspec`.
| `solid` draws all plots with solid lines, overriding any dashed patterns.
| `dashlength` or `dl` scales the length of the dashed-line segments by <DL>,
| which is a floating-point number greater than zero.
| `linewidth` or `lw` scales all linewidths by <LW>.
`----
HTH,
Nick