NAME

Chart::Gnuplot - Plot graph using Gnuplot on the fly

SYNOPSIS

use Chart::Gnuplot;

# Data
my @x = (-10 .. 10);
my @y = (0 .. 20);

# Create chart object and specify the properties of the chart
my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(
    output => "fig/simple.png",
    title  => "Simple testing",
    xlabel => "My x-axis label",
    ylabel => "My y-axis label",
    ....
);

# Create dataset object and specify the properties of the dataset
my $dataSet = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    xdata => \@x,
    ydata => \@y,
    title => "Plotting a line from Perl arrays",
    style => "linespoints",
    ....
);

# Plot the data set on the chart
$chart->plot2d($dataSet);

##################################################

# Plot many data sets on a single chart
$chart->plot2d($dataSet1, $dataSet2, ...);

DESCRIPTION

This module is to plot graphs uning GNUPLOT on the fly. In order to use this module, gnuplot need to be installed. If image format other than PS, PDF and EPS is required to generate, the convert program of ImageMagick is also needed.

To plot chart using Chart::Gnuplot, a chart object and at least one dataset object are needed to be created. Information about the chart such as output file, chart title, axes labels and so on is specified in the chart object. Dataset object contains information about the dataset to be plotted, including source of the data points, dataset label, color used to plot and more.

After chart object and dataset object(s) are created, the chart can be plotted using the plot2d, plot3d or multiplot method of the chart object, e.g.

# $chart is the chart object
$chart->plot2d($dataSet1, $dataSet2, ...);

To illustate the feature of Chart::Gnuplot, the best way is to show by examples.

CHART OBJECT

The chart object can be initiated by the c<new> method. Properties of the chart may be specified optionally when the object is initiated:

my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(%options);

Chart Options

output

Output file of the graph. By default, the image format is detected automatically by the extension of the filename. However, it can also be changed manually by using the format conversion methods such as convert and png (see sessions below).

The supported image formats are:

bmp  : Microsoft Windows bitmap
epdf : Encapsulated Portable Document Format
epi  : Encapsulated PostScript Interchange format
eps  : Encapsulated PostScript
gif  : Graphics Interchange Format
jpg  : Joint Photographic Experts Group JFIF format
pdf  : Portable Document Format
png  : Portable Network Graphics
ppm  : Portable Pixmap Format
ps   : PostScript file
psd  : Adobe Photoshop bitmap file
xpm  : X Windows system pixmap

title

Title of the chart. E.g.,

title => "Chart title"

Properties (like position, font size and so on) of the chart title can be specified in hash. E.g.,

    title => {
        text  => "Chart title",
        font  => "arial, 20",
        color => "blue",
		.....
    }

xlabel

Label of the x-axis.

ylabel

Label of the y-axis.

x2label

Label of the secondary x-axis (displayed on the top of the graph).

y2label

Label of the secondary y-axis (displayed on the right of the graph).

zlabel

Label of the z-axis in 3D plots.

xrange

Range of the x-axis in the plot.

yrange

Range of the y-axis in the plot.

x2range

Range of the secondary x-axis in the plot.

y2range

Range of the secondary y-axis in the plot.

zrange

Range of the z-axis in the 3D plot.

xtics

The tics and tic label of the x-axis.

ytics

The tics and tic label of the y-axis.

x2tics

The tics and tic label of the x2-axis.

y2tics

The tics and tic label of the y2-axis.

timeaxis

Specify the axes of which the tic labels are date/time string. Possible values are combinations of "x", "y", "x2", and "y2" joined by ",". E.g.

timeaxis => "x, y2"

means that the x-axis and y2-axis are data/time axes.

grid

Grid lines.

orient

Orientation of the image. Possible values are "lanscape" and "portrait".

imagesize

Size (length and height) of the image relative to the default.

size

Size of the chart relative to the image

gnuplot

The path of Gnuplot installed. This option is useful if you have multiple versions of Gnuplot installed.

terminal

The terminal that Gnuplot use. The default terminal is "postscript". This attribute is not recommended to be changed unless you are familiar with the Gnuplot syntax. Please test carefully before using this in production code.

Terminal is not necessarily related to the output image format. You may convert the image format by the convert() method.

Chart Methods

new

my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(%options);

Constructor of the chart object. If no option is specified, default values would be used. See "Chart Options" for available options.

set

General set methods for arbitrary number of options.

$chart->set(%options);

plot2d

$chart->plot2d(@dataSets);

Plot the data sets in a 2D chart. Each dataset is represented by a dataset object.

plot3d

$chert->plot3d(@dataSets);

Plot the data sets in a 3D chart. Each dataset is represented by a dataset object. It is not yet completed. Only basic features are supported.

multiplot

$chert->multiplot(@charts);

Plot multiple charts in a single image file.

add

Add a dataset to a chart without plotting it out immediately. Used with multiplot.

convert

$chart->convert($imageFmt);

Convert the image format to $imageFmt. See "Chart Options" for supported image formats.

png

$chart->png;

Change the image format to PNG.

gif

$chart->gif;

Change the image format to GIF.

jpg

$chart->jpg;

Change the image format to JPEG.

ps

$chart->ps;

Change the image format to postscript.

pdf

$chart->pdf

Change the image format to PDF.

command

$chart->command($gnuplotCommand);

Add a gnuplot command. This method is useful for the Gnuplot features that have not yet implemented.

DATASET OBJECT

The dataset object can be initiated by the new method. Properties of the dataset may be specified optionally when the object is initiated:

my $dataset = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(%options);

Dataset Options

xdata

The x values of the data points.

xdata => \@x

If xdata is omitted but ydata is defined, the integer index starting from 0 would be used for xdata.

ydata

The y values of the data points.

ydata => \@y

points

Data point matrix of the format [[x1,y1], [x2,y2], [x3,y3], ...]

points => \@points

datafile

Input data file

datafile => $file

The data files are assumed to be space-separated, with each row corresponding to one data point. Lines beginning with "#" are considered as comments and would be ignored. Other formats are not supported at this moment.

func

Mathematical function to be plotted. E.g.

func => "sin(x)*x**3"

Supported functions:

abs(x)       : absolute value
acos(x)      : inverse cosine
acosh(x)     : inverse hyperbolic cosine
arg(x)       : complex argument
asin(x)      : inverse sine
asinh(x)     : inverse hyperbolic sine
atan(x)      : inverse tangent
atanh(x)     : inverse hyperbolic tangent
besj0(x)     : zeroth order Bessel function of the first kind
besj1(x)     : first order Bessel function of the first kind
besy0(x)     : zeroth order Bessel function of the second kind
besy1(x)     : first order Bessel function of the second kind
ceil(x)      : ceiling function
cos(x)       : cosine
cosh(x)      : hyperbolic cosine
erf(x)       : error function
erfc(x)      : complementary error function
exp(x)       : expontial function
floor(x)     : floor function
gamma(x)     : gamma function
ibeta(a,b,x) : incomplete beta function
inverf(x)    : inverse error function
igamma(a,x)  : incomplete gamma function
imag(x)      : imaginary part
invnorm(x)   : inverse normal distribution function
int(x)       : integer part
lambertw(x)  : Lambert W function
lgamma(x)    : log gamma function
log(x)       : natural logarithm
log10(x)     : common logarithm
norm(x)      : normal distribution function
rand(x)      : pseudo random number
real(x)      : real part
sgn(x)       : sign function
sin(x)       : sine
sinh(x)      : hyperbolic sine
sqrt(x)      : square root
tan(x)       : tangent
tanh(x)      : hyperbolic tangent

Please see the Gnuplot manual for updated information.

Supported mathematical constants:

pi : the circular constant 3.14159...

Supported arithmetic operators:

addition           : +
division           : /
exponentiation     : **
factorial          : !
modulo             : %
multiplication     : *
subtraction        : -, e.g., 1-2
unary minus        : -, e.g., -1

Supported logical operations:

and                      : &&
complement               : ~
equality                 : ==
greater than             : >
greater than or equal to : >=
inequality               : !=
less than                : <
less than or equal to    : <= 
negation                 : !
or                       : ||
if ... than else ...     : ?:, e.g., a ? b : c

title

Title of the dataset (shown in the legend).

style

The plotting style for the dataset. Some common options include

lines        : join adjacent points by straight lines
points       : mark each points by a symbol
linespoints  : both "lines" and "points"
dots         : dot each points. Useful for large datasets
impluses     : draw a vertical line from the x-axis to each point
steps        : join adjacent points by steps
boxes        : draw a centered box from the x-axis to each point
xerrorbars   : "dots" with horizontal error bars
yerrorbars   : "dots" with vertical error bars
xyerrorbars  : both "xerrorbars" and "yerrorbars"
xerrorlines  : "linespoints" with horizontal error bars
yerrorlines  : "linespoints" with vertical error bars
xyerrorlines : both "xerrorlines" and "yerrorlines"

color

Color of the dataset in the plot. Can be a named color ot RBG (#RRGGBB) value. The supported color names can be found in the file doc/colors.txt in the distribution. E.g.

color => "#99ccff"
#or
color => "dark-red"

width

Line width used in the plot.

linetype

Line type.

pointtype

Point type.

pointsize

Point size of the plot.

axes

Axes used in the plot. Possible values are "x1y1", "x1y2", "x2y1" and "x2y2".

timefmt

Time format of the input data.

smooth

The smooth method used in plotting data points. Supported methods include cubic splines (csplines), Bezier curve (bezier) and other. Please see Gnuplot manual for details.

Dataset Methods

new

my $dataset = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(%options);

Constructor of the dataset object. If no option is specified, default values would be used. See "Dataset Options" for available options.

EXAMPLES

Some simple examples are shown below. Many more come with the distribution.

1. Plot a mathematical expression
my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(
    output => "expression.png"
);

my $dataSet = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    func => "sin(x)"
);

$chart->plot2d($dataSet);
2. Plot from two Perl arrays, one for the x-axis data and the other the y-axis.
my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(
    output => "arrays.png"
);

my $dataSet = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    xdata => \@x,
    ydata => \@y,
);

$chart->plot2d($dataSet);
3. Plot x-y pairs
# Data
my @xy = (
    [1.1, -3],
    [1.2, -2],
    [3.5,  0],
    ...
);

my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(
    output => "points.png"
);

my $dataSet = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    points => \@xy
);

$chart->plot2d($dataSet);
4. Plot data from a data file
my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(
    output => "file.png"
);

my $dataSet = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    file => "in.dat"
);

$chart->plot2d($dataSet);
5. Describe the plots
# Chart object
my $chart = Chart::Gnuplot->new(
    output => "trigonometric.gif",
    title  => "Three basic trigonometric functions",
    xlabel => "angle in radian",
    ylabel => "function value"
);

# Data set objects
my $sine = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    func  => "sin(x)",
    title => "sine function"
);
my $cosine = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    func  => "cos(x)",
    title => "cosine function"
);
my $tangent = Chart::Gnuplot::DataSet->new(
    func  => "tan(x)",
    title => "tangent function"
);

$chart->plot2d($sine, $cosine, $tangent);

FUTURE PLAN

1. Improve the manual.
2. Add more control to the 3D plots.
3. Add more control to the legend.
4. Add curve fitting method.
5. Add method to copy Chart and DataSet objects.
6. Add more plotting styles.
7. Improve the testsuite.

REQUIREMENTS

File::Copy, File::Temp

TEST ENVIRONMENT

This version is tested against Gnuplot 4.2 patchlevel 0 and patchlevel 2 in Linux.

SEE ALSO

Gnuplot official website http://www.gnuplot.info

Chart::Graph::Gnuplot

AUTHOR

Ka-Wai Mak <kwmak@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2008 Ka-Wai Mak. All rights reserved.

LICENSE

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.