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ploticus(1)(15-JAN-2008 ploticus(1)(15-JAN-2008ge.PLtploticus.sourceforge.net)

Name
       ploticus

Synopsis
       ploticus	 -prefab prefabname   parm=value ..  [-options]
	.. OR ..
       ploticus scriptfile  [-options]

Description
       ploticus is the primary component of the	 'ploticus' data display pack‐
       age

       ploticus is a program that produces plots and  charts  from  data,  and
       produces	 results  that	can  be viewed on web pages, paper, slides, or
       interactively on the screen.  Standard types of plots may be done using
	prefab	plot  templates , or a user-developed  script file may be sup‐
       plied for greater flexibility and customization.	 ploticus may be  exe‐
       cuted from the command line or  as a CGI program.

       For  complete  online  docs  and downloads see  http://ploticus.source‐
       forge.net

Where to find examples
       See the various	prefab examples	 .  A large number of  script examples
       are also available.  Some  usage examples are also shown below.

Command line arguments
       Command	line  arguments may generally be given in any order.  If there
       are arguments that you want to always have in effect,  you  can	invoke
       them  from  a  config file.  Many settings can also be made dynamically
       from scripts via	 proc settings or  proc page.	Processing  occurs  in
       this  order:  first the config file is read; then command line args are
       processed (left to right);  then	  proc	page  and/or   proc  settings.
       Later settings override earlier ones.

Basic command line options
       -prefab prefabname

	      Produce  a plot using a  prefab plot template.  prefabname iden‐
	      tifies the template, eg.	cron or vbars.	 Necessary  parameters
	      are supplied on the command line using the form parm=value.

       scriptfile
       -f scriptfile

	      names  a	 script	 file  that  will  be  interpreted  to produce
	      results.	Alternatively, -stdin may be  used  to	indicate  that
	      script will be available on standard input.

       variable=value

	      Declares	the  named  variable  and  sets it to the given value.
	      This is a convenient way to  pass	 information  to  prefabs  and
	      scripts.	Variable names are case-sensitive.
	      Example: CUTDATE=10-31-98
	      sets the variable CUTDATE to 10-31-98.

       -o outfile | stdout

	      Specify  a  filename  where the result will be written.  No pro‐
	      cessing is applied to this name.. so the ending should be appro‐
	      priate  for  the	selected  output  format, eg. use .png for PNG
	      files.  If -o stdout is used, result will be  sent  to  standard
	      output.  If -o is not specified, a  default output filename will
	      be used.
	      Example: -o fp001.png

       -dir dirname

	      Set ploticus' working directory to dirname.  If used, this argu‐
	      ment  should be specified leftmost on the command line, since it
	      affects evaluation of other args.

Result format options
       (Availability depends on your ploticus configuration/build)

       -png PNG image

       -gif pseudo-GIF image

       -jpeg JPEG image

       -svg or -svgz  SVG graphic.  See also SVG / XML options below.

       -swf  SWF (flash) result.

       -wbmp WBMP image

       -eps EPS (encapsulated PostScript)

       -ps paginated PostScript to stdout

       -x11 display on X11 screen

       -drawdump filename produce no visible graphic; save a generic represen‐
       tation  of the graphic result to a file.	 By using -drawdump and -draw‐
       dumpa you can easily  overlay or combine results	 from  separate	 pagi‐
       nated  runs.   The  drawdump  file can be rendered later in any desired
       format, using this command: paginated -prefab draw dumpfile=filename or
       by  using   proc drawcommands.  Drawdump capability is available in all
       builds. (2.30+)

       -drawdumpa filename same as -drawdump but result is appended to file.

Clickable image maps and mouseover options
       -csmap

	      produce a	 client-side clickable imagemap to  accompany  a  png,
	      gif,  or	jpeg.	These can be used for hyperlinks, and also for
	      providing pop-up text labels that appear when the	 mouse	passes
	      over  a  region.	By default, client-side map content is written
	      to stdout.

       -csmapdemo

	      Same as -csmap but all mapped  regions  are  shown  outlined  in
	      green,  and a complete HTML chunk is produced which involves the
	      output image name.

       -mapfile filename | stdout | stderr

	      explicitly name the output file containing the  map  info.   The
	      name may also be set in  proc page.  If a name is not specified,
	      client-side image map info will be written to  stdout;  For  SVG
	      this  parameter  is not needed, since image map info is embedded
	      in the SVG file.

       -map

	      produce a	 server-side clickable imagemap file  to  accompany  a
	      png, gif, jpeg, or SVG.  Note: server-side maps are deprecated.

Result sizing options
       -scale sx[,sy]

	      Scale  the  final	 result.  If one value is given, the result is
	      scaled by this amount in both x and y.  If two values are given,
	      scaling  in  x  and  scaling  in y may be done independently.  A
	      scale value of less than 1.0 reduces the size; an scale value of
	      greater than 1.0 enlarges.  Scaling is done relative to the ori‐
	      gin (0,0) which is at the lower left.
	      Example: -scale 0.7

       -pagesize width,height

	      Sets the pre-crop size of the result image for GIF/PNG/JPEG,  or
	      sets the display window size when drawing to X11.	 On other out‐
	      put devices this option does nothing.  width and height  are  in
	       absolute units.	0,0 is the lower left corner.  If -pagesize is
	      not specified, the default size will be 8" x 8".	 Size  is  set
	      before  any  drawing takes place and is unaffected by the -scale
	      option.

	      When  rendering  PNG/GIF/JPEG  images,  this  option  determines
	      amount  of  internal  memory  allocation	for  accommodating the
	      image.  The result can never be bigger than this size,  and  any
	      drawing  outsize	the  bounds  will  not	be visible.  To create
	      PNG/GIF/JPEG images larger than 8" x 8",	this  option  MUST  be
	      specified to set a bigger size.  Cropping options (below) can be
	      used along with -pagesize as long as they result	in  a  smaller
	      rectangle	 than the pagesize; they take effect after all drawing
	      has been completed.

	      -pagesize has no effect with EPS or paginated PostScript results
	      (the  PostScript BoundingBox will be determined by the extent of
	      the graphic).

	      Example: -pagesize 7,3

       -tightcrop

	      For image or EPS output, crop the result tightly to  the	extent
	      of  the  design.	Normally a small margin is allowed on all four
	      sides.  This option sometimes crops a bit too tight; if  so  try
	      -croprel.

       -crop x1,y1,x2,y2

	      Crop  image  or  EPS  result  to	the box specified by x1,y1 and
	      x2,y2, in	 absolute units.

	      Note that there may be no spaces in the  coordinates  specifica‐
	      tion.   Cropping	takes  place after design is rendered and does
	      not affect coordinate locations.
	      Example: -crop 1.2,0.8,4.4,5.2

       -croprel left,bottom,right,top

	      Crop image or EPS result tightly to the  extent  of  the	design
	      (like  -tightcrop),  but	then  adjust  the  cropping outward or
	      inward on one or more sides.  left is the amount to  adjust  the
	      left side, in  absolute units.  Similarly for bottom, right, and
	      top.  Positive values always adjust outward from	center;	 nega‐
	      tive  values adjust inward (tighter).  There may be no spaces in
	      the left,bottom,right,top specification.	Cropping  takes	 place
	      after  design  is	 rendered and does not affect coordinate loca‐
	      tions.
	      Example: -croprel 0,-0.1,0,0.1

       -pixsize width,height

	      If specified,  result  PNG/GIF/JPG  image	 will  be  created  at
	      exactly this width and height in pixels.	Does not interact with
	      scaling or cropping... user is  responsible  for	ensuring  that
	      content  fits  appropriately  into  the specified size.  User is
	      also responsible for setting -pagesize appropriately for	larger
	      images.  New in 2.40

Graphics environment options
       -font font

	      sets the overall font to font.  See  fonts for more info.

       -textsize pointsize

	      sets  the	 overall  default textsize to pointsize.  All embedded
	      size specifications will be rendered relative to this.

       -linewidth w

	      sets the overall default linewidth  to  w.   All	embedded  line
	      width  specifications  will  be  rendered relative to this.  See
	      linedetails(pli) for more on line width.

       -color  color

	      sets the overall default text and line drawing color to color.

       -backcolor  color

	      sets the background color to color.

       -cm

	      Use centimeters as your absolute units, instead of  inches.   On
	      the  command  line this must appear to the left of any arguments
	      dealing with absolute unit values, such as -pagesize.   Centime‐
	      ter  absolute  units  can also be set via	 proc settings.	 If cm
	      will always be the desired absolute units, the preferred way  to
	      achieve this is by using units: cm in a  ploticus config file.

       -inches

	      Use inches as your absolute units.  This is the default.

       -outlabel label

	      Set  the	label  or title for the output.	 For X11 this sets the
	      window title;  for  PostScript  and  SVG	it  sets  the  %%Title
	      attribute.

Capacity setting options
       These options (new with version 2.10) allow capacities to be raised for
       accomodation of very large data sets, or	 lowered  to  minimize	memory
       usage.  The defaults in this section are defined in pl.h.

       -maxrows nrows

	      Set  the	capacity  for  data  rows  to nrows.  Default nrows is
	      10,000.  Ploticus will allocate one pointer for each row.

       -maxfields nfields

	      Set the capacity for data fields to nfields.  Default nfields is
	      200,000.	Ploticus will allocate one pointer for each field.

       -maxproclines nlines

	      Set  the	capacity  for script lines for active procs to nlines.
	      Default nlines is 5000.  Active procs are the current proc,  all
	      #saved  procs,  and all proc getdata procs that contain embedded
	      data.  Ploticus will allocate one pointer for each line in  each
	      active proc.

       -maxvector ncells

	      Set  the	capacity  for  the  data  plotting  vector  to ncells.
	      Default ncells is 100,000.  The data plotting vector is an array
	      which  holds  plottable  values  for situations where the values
	      must be sorted or pre-screened for bad  values.	Ploticus  will
	      allocate one double value for each cell.

       -maxdrawpoints n

	      Use  this	 if  you need to render a polygon having more than 500
	      points in PNG/GIF/JPEG, X11, or SWF, or any continuous line hav‐
	      ing more than 500 points in SWF.

       Note:  raising the maximum number of categories may be done using  proc
       categories from within the script.

       -cpulimit #Include nbsp2 s

	      Set unix resource limit on cpu time to s seconds.	 Default is 30
	      seconds.	New in 2.40

SVG / XML options:
       -svg_tagparms string

	      This allows arbitrary text to be inserted into the opening <svg>
	      tag.
	      Example: -svg_tagparms 'height="10cm" width="15cm"'

       -omit_xml_declaration

	      By default the first line of the SVG result will be the XML dec‐
	      laration	<?xml .. > .  Use this option to suppress the XML dec‐
	      laration line if the SVG result is to be embedded into a	larger
	      XML document.

       -xml_encoding method

	      Set  the	XML  character encoding method.	 This encoding will be
	      indicated	 in  the  XML  declaration  line.   The	  default   is
	      iso-8859-1  which	 provides Latin and Western European character
	      sets.  For Unicode fonts this should be set to utf-8  (for  more
	      discussion see the Unicode section in  fonts ).

       -tag

	      Causes  a	 suitable  HTML	 <EMBED> tag to be written to standard
	      output.

       -zlevel n

	      This may be used to set the compression level to n for SVGZ out‐
	      put  (0  -  9  where  9  is highest level of compression and the
	      default).

Interactive (workstation) use options
       -winloc x,y

	      Control where on the screen the upper-left  corner  of  the  X11
	      display window will be placed.  x and y are in pixels.  Example:
	      -winloc 200 0

       -v command
       -viewer command

	      After generating results in the specified format,	 execute  com‐
	      mand  in	order  to view the results on your screen.  The output
	      file will automatically be included in the command.   For	 exam‐
	      ple,  if	a  GIF	file  is being generated you might use this to
	      invoke the xv utility: -viewer xv.  If PostScript is being  gen‐
	      erated you could use something like this to invoke the ghostview
	      utility: -viewer "gv -magstep -1".  The given  command  must  be
	      available	 on  your  system and locatable in your command search
	      path.  This option may not be used with -o stdout.

       -noshell

	      If specified, ploticus is prohibited from issuing any shell com‐
	      mands.   This is a security feature useful for example when run‐
	      ning a script that was sent to you by an unknown party.  New  in
	      2.31

Paper orientation options
       -landscape

	      For  paginated  postscript,  set	paper orientation to landscape
	      (oblong).

       -portrait

	      For paginated postscript, set paper orientation to portrait.

       -posteroffset x,y

	      Allows production of large-size  posters	made  up  of  multiple
	      standard sheets of paper butted together.	 May be used only with
	      paginated PostScript, and should be used in combination with the
	      -scale  and  -textsize  options.	 x,y  is the point within your
	      result (in  absolute units ) that is to be placed at  the	 lower
	      left  corner  of	the page.  For further discussion of this, see
	       posters	.

Development and debugging options
       -debug

	      Debug mode.  Causes dianostic information to be written  to  the
	      diagnostic  stream  (stderr  by  default,	 see -diagfile below).
	      Highly recommended if you are experiencing difficulty.  Best  to
	      use  -debug  as  the  first  (leftmost)  argument so that it can
	      report on all arguments gotten.  Another effect of debug mode is
	      that any temporary files are not removed upon termination.

       -ping

	      Write  the  ploticus  name and version number to standard output
	      and exit.	 versions 2.33+

       -echo [ diag | stdout]

	      Write ploticus script lines as they  are	executed.   Lines  are
	      written  to the diagnostic stream (standard error by default) or
	      standard output.	Lines are written  after  variables  and  most
	      script  directives,  including  flow-of-control  directives, are
	      evaluated.

       -showbad

	      Identify unplottable data, showing the value, and	 its  row  and
	      field.

       -diagfile filename | stderr | stdout

	      All  non-error  messages and output will be written to this file
	      (default is stderr).

       -errmsgpre tag

	      Allows developer to set the first portion of all ploticus	 error
	      messages to tag for purposes of presentation or identification.

       -errfile filename | stderr | stdout

	      All  error  messages  will  be  written to this file (default is
	      stderr).

       -help or -? or -version

	      Print version number, copyright info, web site address, etc.

Output file names
       The output file may be specified on  the	 command  line	using  the  -o
       option, or via Proc Page's outfilename attribute.  If so, the result is
       written to a file of that name.	-o stdout may also  be	used  to  send
       result to standard output.

       Otherwise,  if  your script filename has a "recognized extension" ( .p,
       .pl, .plo, .pls, .htm or .html ), the base part of the script file name
       is  used	 and  .png,  .gif, etc.	 is appended.  If your script filename
       doesn't have a recognized extension, the generic	 name  out.*  will  be
       used.

       X11  output is always displayed on the screen, and paginated PostScript
       is written to standard output unless -o is used.

       If page breaks (Proc Page) are encountered when rendering in any format
       other than paginated PostScript, special action is necessary since each
       page must go into a separate file.  A  Proc  Page  outfilename  may  be
       specified  for each page; otherwise a pn prefix will be attached to the
       beginning of each page's output file name to indicate page n.

       If a  clickmap is being generated, the result file is  named  similarly
       to the above.

Usage examples
       The following example uses the  scat prefab:

	      ploticus -prefab scat -png datafile=results.dat x=2 y=3

       The  following examples assume that you have a script file called line‐
       plot1.p.

	       ploticus -x lineplot1.p = view on X11 screen

	       ploticus -png lineplot1.p = create PNG image lineplot1.png

	       ploticus -gif lineplot1.p -o stdout = create GIF image on stan‐
	      dard output

	       ploticus	 -gif  lineplot1.p  -viewer  xv = produce GIF and view
	      using xv (assuming xv image viewer is available on your system).

	       ploticus -eps lineplot1.p = produce EPS file lineplot1.eps

	       ploticus -eps lineplot1.p -viewer gv =  produce	EPS  and  view
	      using  gv	 (that's  ghostview,  assuming it is available on your
	      system).

	       ploticus -eps lineplot1.p -o lineplot.eps =  produce  EPS  into
	      file lineplot.eps

	       ploticus	 -ps  lineplot1.p  | lp = produce paginated postscript
	      and send to unix lp print spooler.

	       ploticus -ps lineplot1.p -veiwer gv = produce  paginated	 post‐
	      script and view using ghostview.

Environment
       PLOTICUS_CONFIG

	      The  name of a  ploticus configuation file , for setting default
	      date notations, number notations, measurement units, etc.

       PLOTICUS_PREFABS

	      The path name of a directory where ploticus will look for	  pre‐
	      fab  scripts.  The "factory" prefabs are located in the ploticus
	      ./prefabs subdirectory.

       LC_CTYPE, LC_COLLATE, LANG

	      Locale support.  Thanks to  Oleg	Bartunov  oleg@sai.msu.su  for
	      contributing  this.   ploticus  must  be built with -DLOCALE for
	      this to work.

       TDH_ERRMODE

	      Control the disposition of error	messages.   Allowable  values:
	      stderr which is the default, and cgi which causes error messages
	      to be written to stdout with html formatting.

Bugs
       Ploticus has some stated	 limitations  (mostly  related	to  capacities
       that  you  may  run  into  if you're dealing with large data sets).  To
       report problems or get help see the  ploticus support page.

Author, Copyright, Licensing
       The primary author is  Stephen C. Grubb.	 Ploticus covered by the  Gen‐
       eral  Public  License  (GPL)... please see the  ploticus copyright page
       for more info.

See also
	http://ploticus.sourceforge.net

			ploticus(1)(15-JAN-2008	  PL ploticus.sourceforge.net)
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