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Re: [Q] xgraph color setting
On Tue, 9 Nov 1999, Lee Jiwoong wrote:
> I hope set the color of data at my own will.
>
> According to xgraph manual,
>
> ----
> Some options can only be specified in the X defaults file
> or in the data files. These options are described below:
>
> <digit>.Color
> Specifies the color for a data set. Eight indepen-
> dent colors can be specified. Thus, the digit
> should be between '0' and '7'. If there are more
> than eight data sets, the colors will repeat but
> with a new line style (see below).
So your xgraph data file needs to start off something like:
TitleText: end-to-end packet delay variation over 23.99-hour period
YUnitText: packet transit time in s (Y) vs packet start time from 0 to 86371s
XUnitText: s
0.Color: PapayaWhip
1.Color: red
2.Color: SpringGreen
3.Color: blue
4.Color: yellow
5.Color: purple
6.Color: orange
7.Color: hotpink
1 0.119300
31 0.120300
etc., and there's a core set of colours defined in ~xgraph/init.c.
0.Color: is the colour of the line drawn for the current dataset, so
you'd set that differently in every file.
Unfortunately, I've been unable to get xgraph to actually _obey_ these
colour changes on the 256-colour video I'm stuck with; I simply get
messages of the form:
Parameter 2.Color: can't translate `SpringGreen' into a color
(defaulting to `black')
which is a bit odd, seeing how SpringGreen is in init.c as well as
being a standard X11 colour like PapayaWhip, and X11's list is
in the usual place of /lib/X11/rgb.txt (okay, so it's symlinked from
/usr/openwin/lib/X11/rgb.txt and we're compensating for Solaris
default deficiencies here), and how everything else seems to cope
with 256 colours with varying[*] degrees of success.
So, you will probably need 24-bit video to see the differences -
things are rather better on our Ultra30s, where I can see PapayaWhip
in all its glory.
More importantly, I haven't been able to generate colour postscript
from xgraph for our colour printers either. Anyone?
thanks,
L.
[*] try surfing the web from a 256-colour Sparc20.
See the difference between gif transparency and 'matching'
the background colours. Admire a whole new range of 'fleshtones'.
<[email protected]>PGP<http://www.ee.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/L.Wood/>