NAME
plot - translate GNU metafiles to other graphics
formats
SYNOPSIS
plot [ options ] [ files ]
DESCRIPTION
plot translates files in GNU metafile format to other
graphics formats, or displays them on an X Window System display.
GNU metafile format is a device-independent format for the storage
of graphic data. It is the default output format of the programs
graph(1),
pic2plot(1),
tek2plot(1),
and plotfont(1),
and is further documented in plot(5),
since it is an enhanced version of the traditional plot(5)
format found on non-GNU systems. It can also be produced by the GNU
libplot 2-D graphics export library (see plot(3)).
The output format is specified with the -T option. The
possible output formats and display types are the same as those
supported by graph(1),
plotfont(1),
pic2plot(1),
and tek2plot(1).
If an output file is produced, it is written to standard output.
Options and file names may be interspersed on the command line,
but the options are processed before the file names are read. If
-- is seen, it is interpreted as the end of the options. If
no file names are specified, or the file name - is
encountered, the standard input is read.
OPTIONS
General Options
- -T type
-
- --output-format type
- Select type as the output format. It may be "X", "png",
"pnm", "gif", "svg", "ai", "ps", "cgm", "fig", "pcl", "hpgl",
"regis", "tek", or "meta" (the default). These refer respectively
to the X Window System, PNG (Portable Network Graphics) format,
portable anymap format (PBM/PGM/PPM), a pseudo-GIF format that does
not use LZW encoding, the new XML-based Scalable Vector Graphics
format, the format used by Adobe Illustrator, Postscript or
Encapsulated Postscript (EPS) that can be edited with idraw(1),
CGM format (by default, confirming to the WebCGM profile), the
format used by the xfig(1)
drawing editor, the Hewlett-Packard PCL 5 printer language, the
Hewlett-Packard Graphics Language, ReGIS graphics format (which can
be displayed by the dxterm(1)
terminal emulator or by a VT330 or VT340 terminal), Tektronix
format (which can be displayed by the xterm(1)
terminal emulator), and device-independent GNU metafile format
itself. Unless type is "X", an output file is produced and
written to standard output.
- Omitting the -T option is equivalent to specifying -T
meta. Translating from metafile format to itself is
occasionally useful, since there are two versions of metafile
format (see the -O option below).
- A listing of the fonts available in any specified output format
may be obtained with the --help-fonts option (see below). If
a requested font is unavailable, a default font will be
substituted. The default font is "Helvetica" for "X", "svg", "ai",
"ps", "cgm", and "fig", "Univers" for "pcl", and "HersheySerif" for
"png", "pnm", "gif", "hpgl", "regis", "tek", and "meta".
- -p n
-
- --page-number n
- Output only page number n, within the metafile or
sequence of metafiles that is being translated.
- Metafiles may consist of one or more pages, numbered beginning
with 1. Also, each page may contain multiple `frames'. plot -T
X, plot -T regis, and plot -T tek, which plot in
real time, will separate successive frames by screen erasures.
plot -T png, plot -T pnm, plot -T gif, plot
-T svg, plot -T ai, plot -T ps, plot -T
cgm, plot -T fig, plot -T pcl, and plot -T
hpgl, which do not plot in real time, will output only the last
frame of any multi-frame page.
- The default behavior, if -p is not used, is to output
all pages. For example, plot -T X displays each page in its
own X window. If the -T png, -T pnm, -T gif,
-T ai, or -T fig option is used, the default behavior
is to output only the first nonempty page, since files in those
output formats contain only a single page of graphics.
- Metafiles produced by graph(1)
and plotfont(1)
contain only a single page (page #1), which consists of two frames:
an empty frame to clear the display, and a second frame that
contains the graphics.
- -s
-
- --merge-pages
- Merge all displayed pages into a single page, and also merge
all `frames'.
- This option is useful when merging together single-page plots
from different sources. For example, it can be used to merge
together plots obtained from separate invocations of graph(1).
- --bitmap-size bitmap_size
- Set the size of the graphics display in which the plot will be
drawn, in terms of pixels, to be bitmap_size. The default is
"570x570". This is relevant only to plot -T X, plot -T
png, plot -T pnm, and plot -T gif, all of which
produce bitmaps. If you choose a rectangular (non-square) window
size, the fonts in the plot will be scaled anisotropically, i.e.,
by different factors in the horizontal and vertical directions. For
plot -T X, this requires an X11R6 display. Any font that
cannot be scaled in this way will be replaced by a default scalable
font, such as the vector font "HersheySerif".
- The environment variable BITMAPSIZE can equally well be used to specify
the window size. For backward compatibility, the X resource
Xplot.geometry may be used instead.
- --emulate-color option
- If option is yes, replace each color in the
output by an appropriate shade of gray. This is seldom useful,
except when using plot -T pcl to prepare output for a PCL 5
device. (Many monochrome PCL 5 devices, such as monochrome
LaserJets, do a poor job of emulating color on their own.) You may
equally well request color emulation by setting the environment
variable EMULATE_COLOR to "yes".
- --max-line-length max_line_length
- Set the maximum number of points that a polygonal line may
contain, before it is flushed out, to be max_line_length. If
this flushing occurs, the polygonal line will be split into two or
more sub-lines, though the splitting should not be noticeable. The
default value of max_line_length is 500.
- The reason for splitting long polygonal lines is that some
display devices (e.g., old Postscript printers and pen HP-GL
plotters) have limited buffer sizes. The environment variable
MAX_LINE_LENGTH can also be used to
specify the maximum line length.
- --page-size pagesize
- Set the size of the page on which the plot will be positioned.
This is relevant only to plot -T svg, plot -T ai,
plot -T ps, plot -T cgm, plot -T fig, plot
-T pcl, and plot -T hpgl. The default is "letter", which
means an 8.5 inch by 11 inch page. Any ISO page size in the range
"a0"..."a4" or ANSI page size in the range "a"..."e" may be
specified ("letter" is an alias for "a" and "tabloid" is an alias
for "b"). "legal" and "ledger" are recognized page sizes also. The
environment variable PAGESIZE can
equally well be used to specify the page size.
- The graphics display in which the plot is drawn will, by
default, be a square region that occupies nearly the full width of
the specified page. An alternative size for the graphics display
can be specified. For example, the page size could be specified as
"letter,xsize=4in,ysize=6in", or "a4,xsize=5.0cm,ysize=100mm". For
all of the above except plot -T hpgl, the graphics display
will, by default, be centered on the page. For all of the above
except plot -T svg and plot -T cgm, the graphics
display may be repositioned manually, by specifying the location of
its lower left corner, relative to the lower left corner of the
page. For example, the page size could be specified as
"letter,xorigin=2in,yorigin=3in", or
"a4,xorigin=0.5cm,yorigin=0.5cm". It is also possible to specify an
offset vector. For example, the page size could be specified as
"letter,xoffset=1in", or "letter,xoffset=1in,yoffset=1.2in", or
"a4,yoffset=-1cm". In SVG format and WebCGM format it is possible
to specify the size of the graphics display, but not its position.
- --rotation angle
- Rotate the graphics display by angle degrees. Recognized
values are "0", "90", "180", and "270". "no" and "yes" are
equivalent to "0" and "90", respectively. The environment variable
ROTATION can also be used to specify
a rotation angle.
Parameter Initialization Options
The following options set
the initial values of drawing parameters. However, all of these may
be overridden by directives in a metafile. In fact, these options
are useful primarily when plotting old metafiles in the traditional
(pre-GNU) plot(5)
format, which did not support such directives.
- --bg-color name
- Set the color initially used for the background to be
name. This is relevant only to plot -T X, plot -T
png, plot -T pnm, plot -T gif, plot -T
svg, plot -T cgm, and plot -T regis. An
unrecognized name sets the color to the default, which is "white".
The environment variable BG_COLOR can
equally well be used to specify the background color.
- If the -T png or -T gif option is used, a
transparent PNG file or a transparent pseudo-GIF, respectively, may
be produced by setting the TRANSPARENT_COLOR environment variable to the
name of the background color. If the -T svg or -T cgm
option is used, an output file without a background may be produced
by setting the background color to "none".
- -f size
-
- --font-size size
- Set the size of the font initially used for rendering text, as
a fraction of the width of the graphics display, to be size.
The default is 0.0525.
- -F name
-
- --font-name name
- Set the font initially used for text to be name. Font
names are case-insensitive. If the specified font is not available,
the default font will be used. Which fonts are available, and the
default font, depend on which -T option is specified (see
above). A list of available fonts can be obtained with the
--help-fonts option (see below).
- -W line_width
-
- --line-width line_width
- Set the initial width of lines, as a fraction of the width of
the display, to be line_width. A negative value means that a
default value should be used. This value is format-dependent. The
interpretation of zero line width is also format-dependent (in some
output formats, a zero-width line is the thinnest line that can be
drawn; in others, a zero-width line is invisible).
- --pen-color name
- Set the initial pen color to be name. An unrecognized
name sets the pen color to the default, which is
"black".
Options for Metafile Output
The following option is relevant only if the -T option is
omitted or if -T meta is used. In this case the output of
plot, like the input, will be in GNU graphics metafile
format.
- -O
-
- --portable-output
- Output the portable (human-readable) version of GNU metafile
format, rather than the binary version (the default). The format of
the binary version is machine-dependent.
Options for Backward Compatibility
By default, plot
assumes that its input file(s) are in either the binary version or
the portable version of GNU metafile format. You may specify that
the input is, instead, in the traditional Unix (pre-GNU) graphics
metafile format, which is documented in plot(5). The
traditional graphics metafile format was produced by pre-GNU
versions of graph(1).
- -h
-
- --high-byte-first-input
- Input file(s) are assumed to be in the binary, `high byte
first' version of traditional metafile format. This variant is
uncommon.
- -l
-
- --low-byte-first-input
- Input file(s) are assumed to be in the binary, `low byte first'
version of traditional metafile format. This variant is the most
common.
- -A
-
- --ascii-input
- Input file(s) are assumed to be in the ASCII (human-readable) variant of traditional metafile
format. On some older Unix systems, this variant was produced by
plottoa(1).
Informational Options
- --help
- Print a list of command-line options, and exit.
- --help-fonts
- Print a table of available fonts, and exit. The table will
depend on which output format is specified with the -T
option. plot -T X, plot -T svg, plot -T ai,
plot -T ps, plot -T cgm, and plot -T fig each
support the 35 standard Postscript fonts. plot -T svg,
plot -T pcl, and plot -T hpgl support the 45 standard
PCL 5 fonts, and the latter two support a number of Hewlett-Packard
vector fonts. All seven support a set of 22 Hershey vector fonts,
as do plot -T png, plot -T pnm, plot -T gif,
plot -T regis, and plot -T tek. plot without a
-T option in principle supports any of these fonts, since
its output must be translated to other formats by a further
invocation of plot.
- The plotfont(1)
utility may be used to obtain a character map of any supported
font.
- --list-fonts
- Like --help-fonts, but lists the fonts in a single
column to facilitate piping to other programs. If no output format
is specified with the -T option, the full set of supported
fonts is listed.
- --version
- Print the version number of plot and the plotting
utilities package, and exit.
ENVIRONMENT
The environment variables BITMAPSIZE, PAGESIZE, BG_COLOR, EMULATE_COLOR, MAX_LINE_LENGTH and ROTATION serve as backups for the options
--bitmap-size, --page-size, --bg-color,
--emulate-color, --max-line-length, and
--rotation, respectively. The remaining environment
variables are specific to individual output formats.
plot -T X, which pops up a window on an X Window System
display and draws graphics in it, checks the DISPLAY environment variable. Its value
determines the display that will be used.
plot -T png and plot -T gif, which produce output
in PNG format and pseudo-GIF format respectively, are affected by
the INTERLACE environment variable.
If its value is "yes", the output will be interlaced. Also, if the
TRANSPARENT_COLOR environment
variable is set to the name of a color, that color will be treated
as transparent in the output.
plot -T pnm, which produces output in portable anymap
(PBM/PGM/PPM) format, is affected by the PNM_PORTABLE environment variable. If its value
is "yes", the output will be in a human-readable format rather than
binary (the default).
plot -T cgm, which produces output in CGM (Computer
Graphics Metafile) format, is affected by the CGM_MAX_VERSION and CGM_ENCODING environment variables. By default,
it produces a binary-encoded version of CGM version 3 format. For
backward compatibility, the version number may be reduced by
setting CGM_MAX_VERSION to "2" or
"1". Irrespective of version, the output CGM file will use the
human-readable clear text encoding if CGM_ENCODING is set to "clear_text". However,
only binary-encoded CGM files conform to the WebCGM profile.
plot -T pcl, which produces PCL 5 output for
Hewlett-Packard printers and plotters, is affected by the
environment variable PCL_ASSIGN_COLORS. It should be set to "yes"
when producing PCL 5 output for a color printer or other color
device. This will ensure accurate color reproduction by giving the
output device complete freedom in assigning colors, internally, to
its "logical pens". If it is "no" then the device will use a fixed
set of colored pens, and will emulate other colors by shading. The
default is "no" because monochrome PCL 5 devices, which are much
more common than colored ones, must use shading to emulate color.
plot -T hpgl, which produces Hewlett-Packard Graphics
Language output, is affected by several environment variables. The
most important is HPGL_VERSION, which
may be set to "1", "1.5", or "2" (the default). "1" means that the
output should be generic HP-GL, "1.5" means that the output should
be suitable for the HP7550A graphics plotter and the HP758x,
HP7595A and HP7596A drafting plotters (HP-GL with some HP-GL/2
extensions), and "2" means that the output should be modern
HP-GL/2. If the version is "1" or "1.5" then the only available
fonts will be vector fonts, and all lines will be drawn with a
default width (the -W option will not work). Additionally,
if the version is "1" then the filling of arbitrary curves with
solid color will not be supported (circles and rectangles aligned
with the coordinate axes may be filled, though).
The position of the plot -T hpgl graphics display on the
page can be rotated 90 degrees counterclockwise by setting the
HPGL_ROTATE environment variable to
"yes". This is not the same as the rotation obtained with the
--rotation option, since it both rotates the graphics
display and repositions its lower left corner toward another corner
of the page. Besides "no" and "yes", recognized values for
HPGL_ROTATE are "0", "90", "180", and
"270". "no" and "yes" are equivalent to "0" and "90", respectively.
"180" and "270" are supported only if HPGL_VERSION is "2" (the default).
By default, plot -T hpgl will draw with a fixed set of
pens. Which pens are present may be specified by setting the
HPGL_PENS environment variable. If
HPGL_VERSION is "1", the default
value of HPGL_PENS is "1=black"; if
HPGL_VERSION is "1.5" or "2", the
default value of HPGL_PENS is
"1=black:2=red:3=green:4=yellow:5=blue:6=magenta:7=cyan". The
format should be self-explanatory. By setting HPGL_PENS you may specify a color for any pen in
the range #1...#31. All color names recognized by the X Window
System may be used. Pen #1 must always be present, though it need
not be black. Any other pen in the range #1...#31 may be omitted.
If HPGL_VERSION is "2" then
plot -T hpgl will also be affected by the environment
variable HPGL_ASSIGN_COLORS. If its
value is "yes", then plot -T hpgl will not be restricted to
the palette specified in HPGL_PENS:
it will assign colors to "logical pens" in the range #1...#31, as
needed. The default value is "no" because other than color LaserJet
printers and DesignJet plotters, not many HP-GL/2 devices allow the
assignment of colors to logical pens.
Opaque filling and the drawing of visible white lines are
supported only if HPGL_VERSION is "2"
and the environment variable HPGL_OPAQUE_MODE is "yes" (the default). If its
value is "no" then white lines (if any), which are normally drawn
with pen #0, will not be drawn. This feature is to accommodate
older HP-GL/2 devices. HP-GL/2 pen plotters, for example, do not
support opacity or the use of pen #0 to draw visible white lines.
Some older HP-GL/2 devices may, in fact, malfunction if asked to
draw opaque objects.
plot -T tek, which produces output for a Tektronix
terminal or emulator, checks the TERM
environment variable. If the value of TERM is a string beginning with "xterm",
"nxterm", or "kterm", it is taken as a sign that plot is
running in an X Window System VT100 terminal emulator: a copy of
xterm(1),
nxterm(1),
or kterm(1).
Before drawing graphics, plot -T tek will emit an escape
sequence that causes the terminal emulator's auxiliary Tektronix
window, which is normally hidden, to pop up. After the graphics are
drawn, an escape sequence that returns control to the original
VT100 window will be emitted. The Tektronix window will remain on
the screen.
If the value of TERM is a string
beginning with "kermit", "ansi.sys", or "nansi.sys", it is taken as
a sign that plot is running in the VT100 terminal emulator
provided by the MS-DOS version of kermit(1).
Before drawing graphics, plot -T tek will emit an escape
sequence that switches the terminal emulator to Tektronix mode.
Also, some of the Tektronix control codes emitted by plot -T
tek will be kermit-specific. There will be a limited
amount of color support, which is not normally the case (the 16
`ansi.sys' colors will be supported). After drawing graphics,
plot -T tek will emit an escape sequence that returns the
emulator to VT100 mode. The key sequence `ALT minus' can be
employed manually within kermit to switch between the two
modes.
SEE ALSO
graph(1),
pic2plot(1),
tek2plot(1),
plotfont(1),
plot(3),
plot(5), and
"The GNU Plotting Utilities Manual".
AUTHORS
plot was written by Robert S. Maier
().
BUGS
Email bug reports to .