Dear Thomas,
For Gnuplot, you may use the following options, depedning on your system.

set arrow from 0.474342,graph(0,0) to 0.474342,graph(1,1) nohead lt 1 lw 4#set 
arrow from 0.579219, 0.579219 nohead lt 3 lw 1
set arrow from 0.711512,graph(0,0) to 0.711512,graph(1,1) nohead lt 1 lw 4
set arrow from 1.122306,graph(0,0) to 1.122306,graph(1,1) nohead lt 1 lw 4
set xtics ("A" 0, "B" 0.473442,"C" 0.711512,"D" 1.122300)
 Dr. Gul Rahman
Assistant Professor,
Department of Physics,
Quaid-i-Azam University,
Islamabad, Pakistanhttp://www.qau.edu.pk/profile.php?id=818020
 


     On Wednesday, 29 April 2015, 21:38, I. Camps <[email protected]> wrote:
   

 Dear Thomas,

I had used Origin Pro (from OriginLab: http://originlab.com/). It is a Windows 
plotting software (is not free!).


[]'s,

@mps

On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 10:50 AM, Thomas Mathew <[email protected]> 
wrote:

Dear All,

After extracting the band-structure data from .bands file using gnubands 
utility, I used gnuplot for plotting the data.

With just the basic options of gnuplot, the plot doesn't look so professional 
as found on publications.

Is there any utility/script for plotting the band-structure data with a 
professional look? If not what are the gnuplot options used for doing the same

Thanking you

Thomas Mathew
Assistant Professor
Dept of Physics
St Pius X College Rajapuram
Kerala, India
Mob: +91 8129473653




  

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