ASCII plotting on the command line terminal with eplot

If you want to plot something on the terminal in ASCII you can use “eplot”. eplot itself is a Ruby script that acts as a frontend for gnuplot. eplot can be downloaded from the project’s GitHub page. It makes it easier to pipe numbers into gnuplot, which can otherwise be a bit of a hassle. It also has a dumb terminal mode which allows us to plot using ASCII. Plotting like this provides a way to quickly check data files without requiring any x windowing system, which might not be available when logging in remotely over the terminal....

August 8, 2018 · Simon

Cool code: plotting columns from many data files with Grace

Grace a.k.a. xmgrace is a really useful tool for plotting histograms from tabular data files. Its power comes from the command line control and being scriptable. Yes, there are other options which are sometimes more suitable for specific situations (e.g. GNUplot, Matplotlib/PyLab), but for quick, basic plotting I usually find myself relying on xmgrace. Here is an example of a single line command to plot two columns from each of a large number of data files:...

November 27, 2014 · Simon