Thanks all
Yeah I need that in scatter plots, I need the distance between points
to be right, category plots won't help.
I hope this get implemented soon. Gnumeric is a excellent software,
but this is a major drawback IMHO, because it will force me to export
as a SVG and manually edit in Inkscape a graph I could have in
publication-ready format directly from Gnumeric..
Oh, I found the symbols, my bad...
Cheers
Carlos
On 8/15/07, Emmanuel Pacaud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Le mercredi 15 août 2007 à 13:44 +0100, Carlos "Guâno" Grohmann a
> écrit :
> > Hello all,
> > first post to the list. I usually use R to my stats/graphics, but
> > decided to give Gnumeric a try, and so far I'm must say I loving it!
> > Easy, fast, powerful.
> > But I have a problem..
> > I want the tics of the X-axis of a plot to be at specific values
> > (3,5,7,9,11,13,15,17,19,21,31,51)
> > and I found no way of doing it.
>
> It depends on what sort of plot you use.
>
> Currently, with scatter plot (xy), it's not possible, but planned.
>
> Using Line/Area plots, you can define arbitrary tick labels, but ticks
> are always equidistant (See axis settings and Series->Names entry in the
> data tab).
>
> > And just a wish to add, can we have more symbols to plot? there's not
> > even a circle...
>
> Which symbols ? The only symbols we have currently are plot markers, and
> there's a circular one.
>
> Perhaps what you want is simple objects you can place over plots. That's
> not implemented yet. As a workaround, you can already draw shapes on the
> plot area using an xy plot. But that's not convenient.
>
> Regards,
>
> Emmanuel.
>
>
--
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
Carlos Henrique Grohmann - Guano
Visiting Researcher at Kingston University London - UK
Geologist M.Sc - Doctorate Student at IGc-USP - Brazil
Linux User #89721 - carlos dot grohmann at gmail dot com
+-----------------------------------------------------------+
_________________
"Good morning, doctors. I have taken the liberty of removing Windows
95 from my hard drive."
--The winning entry in a "What were HAL's first words" contest judged
by 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY creator Arthur C. Clarke
Can't stop the signal.
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