Lab::Moose::Plot - Frontend to PDL::Graphics::Gnuplot
version 3.653
use PDL; use Lab::Moose::Plot; # use default terminal 'qt' my $plot = Lab::Moose::Plot->new(); # simple 2-D plot my $x = sequence(10); my $y = 2 * $x; $plot->plot( plot_options => {title => 'linear function'}, curve_options => {legend => '2 * x'}, data => [$x, $y] ); # pm3d plot my $z = sin(rvals(300, 300) / 10); my $x = xvals($z); my $y = yvals($z); $plot->splot( plot_options => { title => 'a pm3d plot', pm3d => 1, view => 'map', surface => 0, palette => "model RGB defined ( 0 'red', 1 'yellow', 2 'white' )", }, data => [$x, $y, $z], ); # use a different terminal with default plot options my $plot = Lab::Moose::Plot( terminal => 'svg', terminal_options => {output => 'file.svg', enhanced => 0}, plot_options => {pm3d => 1, view => 'map', surface => 0} );
This is a small wrapper around PDL::Graphics::Gnuplot with the aim to make it accessible with our hash-based calling convention.
See the documentation of PDL::Graphics::Gnuplot for the allowed values of terminal-, plot- and curve-options.
my $plot = Lab::Moose::Plot->new( terminal => $terminal, terminal_options => \%terminal_options, plot_options => \%plot_options, curve_options => \%curve_options, );
Construct a new plotting backend. All arguments are optional. The default for terminal is 'qt'. For the 'qt' and 'x11' terminals, terminal_options defaults to {persist => 1, raise => 0 }. The default for plot_options and curve_options is the empty hash.
terminal
terminal_options
{persist => 1, raise => 0 }
plot_options
curve_options
$plot->plot( plot_options => \%plot_options, curve_options => \%curve_options, data => [$x, $y, $z], );
Call PDL::Graphics::Gnuplot's plot function. The data array can contain either PDLs ore 1D arrad refs. The required number of elements in the array depends on the used plotting style.
splot and replot call PDL::Graphics::Gnuplot's splot and replot functions. Otherwise they behave like plot.
This software is copyright (c) 2018 by the Lab::Measurement team; in detail:
Copyright 2016 Simon Reinhardt 2017 Andreas K. Huettel, Simon Reinhardt 2018 Simon Reinhardt
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
To install Lab::Measurement, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Lab::Measurement
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Lab::Measurement
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.