![]() Please email me with any notes you think might be useful to others, and I'll include your comments here (tell me if you prefer to be anonymous). I am interested in other's experiences with this software on a variety of configurations, and in any other relevant information. This binary seems to work fine on OSX 10.3.4 (Panther) on a couple of different G3 and G4 systems. You can get Aquaterm sources and binaries (which can be used with more than just Gnuplot), here.This has also undergone a major revision, so if you have a version < 1.0 you should upgrade. This lets you plot color-mapped surfaces. One significant enhancement is the incorporation of the pm3d splot mode, which has been an unofficial part of Gnuplot for some time. I suggest you read up on the new features in v.4.0, a major upgrade. The readme document that comes with the binary download claims that it will not run unless X11 is also installed, but this is not true fortunately you can run this gnuplot without needing to install X Windows. It works with X11 or AquaTerm, and in fact requires the latter to be installed. 4.0 sources compile without modification on OS X, and there is also a binary available here for PPC macintoshes. However, some graphical unix programs can be made to work with OSX's native display system (Aqua) This includes programs such as Gnuplot that, on traditional unix systems, produced graphical output with the X Window System, by installing a version of the X Window System on the Mac, such as the one that can be downloaded fromĪpple. Since OSX is a unix system, any unix program that was written to be reasonably portable can be compiled to run on it. I recommend installing the traditional unix Gnuplot for serious use on OSX. At the moment you can get the self-contained Carbon gnuplot here. If I list a link here that means that at least I have downloaded the program from that location and verified that it seems to work (on an OS X system). The application has been tested under MacOS 9.0, MacOS 9.1, and MacOS X”ĭownload links for the carbon Gnuplot have a history of appearing and disappearing with the help of visitors to this page I'll try to keep a pointer here to a working link from a trustworthy source. ![]() it will run only on Mac OS 8.6 and above, must have Color Quickdraw, QuickTime, and CarbonLib 1.1 or above. In particular, gnuplot is AppleScriptable and recordable, supports PICT and QuickTime movie formats, incorporates a built-in gnuplot command file editor, and is drag-and-drop savvy. ![]() Gnuplot for Macintosh supports of number of Mac-specific technologies. However, this version has some unique features: This does not require X-Windows or any external viewer, and is easy to install, but it's not as good for external control (from gnuplot-py, etc.) as the standard Gnuplot. This also runs on (at least some versions of) OS X, and may be convenient if you just need to see the output of a Gnuplot command file, for instance, but don't need a permanent installation. There is a self-contained Carbon binary that may be your only choice if you are running a classic (pre-OS X) Macintosh system. There are two main forms of Gnuplot available for the Mac. ![]() Welcome PHY 410-505 students! The Two Types Self-contained
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |