Examples for ctioga
A few examples are often much more useful than a long explanation… I strongly suggest anyone who wishes to use ctioga to have a look at those !
These examples can also be thought of as a feature list of ctioga. Assuredly, you will find what you’re looking for browsing this pages.
These pages are meant as a somehow complementary approach to the tutorial written by JJ Fleck. You might want to first have a look at it, it might help you understand.
- basic examples
- curve styles
- axes-related style
- error bars
- filled curves
- labels
- histograms
- legends
- insets
- complex plots, such as grids, column plots or plots with different axes
- more complex plots: free-form and composite plots
- shortcuts, small reusable bits of a command-line
- using
ctiogafrom Tioga, where you can learn how to unleash the simplicity ofctiogafrom within Tioga itself - alternative outputs, for other formats than PDF
- dirty hacks, where you will learn to do things you really never should have tried to do in the first place.
Please note that all the pictures displayed on these pages are
generated automatically from the actual command lines displayed within
the pages, so there can be no discrepancy between what you type and
what you actually get (provided you have the most recent version of
ctioga).
For more detailed information, you should consider having a look at
the manual page of ctioga and
ctable.