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  3. Suggestions for graphing software...

Suggestions for graphing software...

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data-structureshelp
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  • C Chris C B

    … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

    R Offline
    R Offline
    Rage
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    Not free, but enough if it is a one-shot : imc FAMOS - data analysis framework - productive testing[^]

    Do not escape reality : improve reality !

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    • C Chris C B

      … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

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      S Houghtelin
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      I use the pirates favorite... R[^] RStudio is nice IDE envirionment for R that makes it easier to use. You can import and export Excel and csv file easily. and there are plenty of support communities where you can find how-tos and examples. RStudio – Open source and enterprise-ready professional software for R[^] [Edit] - And it's open source.

      It was broke, so I fixed it.

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      • N NeverJustHere

        I'd use matplotlib and numpy/pandas in the python world. numpy is a lower level high performance array structure. pandas is a higher level data frame structure built on top of numpy matplotlib is a graphing library that will take data frames and render a huge variety of visualisations. Use an IDE like spyder and it's all quite easy and interactive. And all free.

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        Chris C B
        wrote on last edited by
        #7

        Thanks, but that's a bit like reinventing the wheel. I just have this bunch of data and need to display it in a graph outside the application, as a once-off. I was a bit gobsmacked that Excel couldn't do it. Somewhere there has to be something where you establish the X and Y axes of the graph from the max and min of the data, and then plot all the X,Y points from the dataset. The data collection points on the X axis are non-linear, but I need to display them along a linear X axis.

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        • S S Houghtelin

          I use the pirates favorite... R[^] RStudio is nice IDE envirionment for R that makes it easier to use. You can import and export Excel and csv file easily. and there are plenty of support communities where you can find how-tos and examples. RStudio – Open source and enterprise-ready professional software for R[^] [Edit] - And it's open source.

          It was broke, so I fixed it.

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          Chris C B
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Thanks, but I really, realy, realy do not want to write one more line of code just to display the data just one time.

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          • C Chris C B

            Thanks, but I really, realy, realy do not want to write one more line of code just to display the data just one time.

            S Offline
            S Offline
            S Houghtelin
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            So, what your really, realy, realy looking for is some CODZ PLZ URGNTZZ? :laugh:

            It was broke, so I fixed it.

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            • S S Houghtelin

              So, what your really, realy, realy looking for is some CODZ PLZ URGNTZZ? :laugh:

              It was broke, so I fixed it.

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              C Offline
              Chris C B
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Nah! I don't need no CODZ PLZ URGNTZZ. Don't really like the stuff. I am actually having poached salmon in a lemon sauce tonight. :laugh:

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              • C Chris C B

                Nah! I don't need no CODZ PLZ URGNTZZ. Don't really like the stuff. I am actually having poached salmon in a lemon sauce tonight. :laugh:

                S Offline
                S Offline
                S Houghtelin
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                Is that with real lemons?

                It was broke, so I fixed it.

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                • C Chris C B

                  … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

                  F Offline
                  F Offline
                  Foothill
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  I just plugged two sets of random numbers into Excel (2013) and produced a proper scatter plot. I followed these steps to get the trend line: trendline example. Is your data set too big for Excel?

                  if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); }

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                  • S S Houghtelin

                    Is that with real lemons?

                    It was broke, so I fixed it.

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                    C Offline
                    Chris C B
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    Nah! Furniture polish - it's cheaper.

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                    • C Chris C B

                      Nah! Furniture polish - it's cheaper.

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                      S Offline
                      S Houghtelin
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      Chris C-B wrote:

                      Nah! Furniture polish - it's cheaper.

                      :laugh: plus if you're grilling, you get the added bonus of that flame thrower touch of excitement, the kids will love it!

                      It was broke, so I fixed it.

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                      • C Chris C B

                        … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

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                        Kirill Illenseer
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #15

                        Scilab seems like the way to go. Several of my scientific co-workers use that for dealing with data sets doing all kinds of stuffs that physics does with data, including non-linear axes.

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                        • C Chris C B

                          … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

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                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          You could have a look at GNUplot, it certainly meets your requirement for free.

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                          • C Chris C B

                            … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

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                            Pete Kelley
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            I don't have a solution to offer, but I'm wondering if you could give some usable example data?(rigged-up or otherwise) I certainly recognize that this simple need has arisen more times than I can remember. It's time to dabble in tool-building. This kind of issue is a lot like when I only want to make a simple chicken-scratch sketch using old-school Paint but the system I happen to be using only has a major drawing program that takes too-long/forever to load up. Or I just want to type a sentence and a bloated word processor starts loading. Great to have some of the suggestions - checking out GNUPlot and some of the free-or-inexpensive options.

                            Pete K.

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                            • C Chris C B

                              Thanks, but I really, realy, realy do not want to write one more line of code just to display the data just one time.

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                              S Houghtelin
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              So, how was the salmon? ;) Anyway I got 'yer Codez. It's like 6 lines of code.

                              # Install & Load Library
                              if (!require("readxl")) install.packages("readxl")
                              library("readxl")

                              Choose & Read Excel file, the 2 denotes the desired sheet number.

                              my_data <- read_excel(file.choose(), 2)

                              Extract data from the desired columns. RStudio will provide drop-down with column names.

                              Ydata <- my_data$Column_With_Ydata
                              Xdata <- my_data$Column_With_Xdata

                              Plot data

                              plot(Ydata, Xdata)

                              As with any code you can get as fancy as you want, but for a one time look see...

                              It was broke, so I fixed it.

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                              • C Chris C B

                                … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

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                                mngerhold
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                At the risk of sounding dumb, I can't see the problem - what are 'non-linear X values' ? You can't just mean they are at unequal X-intervals, because surely that is trivial, even for Excel?

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                                • C Chris C B

                                  … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

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                                  cmkrnl
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  I found ZedGraph maybe 10 years ago, and have driven it with C# for countless graphing needs since then.

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                                  • C Chris C B

                                    … preferably free, but cheap is good too. All I want to do is set up an X axis, set up a Y axis, and plot a line-scatter graph. It seems Excel can't do this with non-linear X values on a linear X axis - or I can't coerce it to do so. Either way, I have given up struggling with it, to the point where I am prepared to drop some valuable beer vouchers on the problem. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be very glad to hear them.

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                                    jcmaida
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    convert non-linear to linear via log base 10, base 2, etc.

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                                    • C Chris C B

                                      Thanks for that - it looks useful, but I need something that I can import Excel or CSV data into. I have a LOT of data! :sigh:

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                                      thewazz
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      Add that info to your OP.

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                                      • F Foothill

                                        I just plugged two sets of random numbers into Excel (2013) and produced a proper scatter plot. I followed these steps to get the trend line: trendline example. Is your data set too big for Excel?

                                        if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); }

                                        C Offline
                                        C Offline
                                        Chris C B
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        The scatter graph works fine for X-Y points, but the data collection points are equally spaced on the graph, where they are, in fact, non-linear to the point of being random. They are closely spaced at the start of the X-axis, becoming sparser further along - but they are essentially just points where data had been collected, and adhere to no mathematically defined function. I want to impose a linear X-axis, say from 0 to 100, and have the graph points plotted along that linear axis. If I just use the X-Y data in a plot, then the X-axis is divided into equidistant points for the X value and the Y value plotted above it. If I add a third column of data to represent the X-axis, Excel accepts it but then draws two graphs, one for the X values and one for the Y values. If it were not for the 11,000 odd data points, I would use a piece of graph paper...

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                                        • K Kirill Illenseer

                                          Scilab seems like the way to go. Several of my scientific co-workers use that for dealing with data sets doing all kinds of stuffs that physics does with data, including non-linear axes.

                                          C Offline
                                          C Offline
                                          Chris C B
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          Thanks, I will check it out.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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