Gist is a scientific graphics library written by David H. Munro of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It features support for three common graphics output devices: X-Windows, (Color) PostScript, and ANSI/ISO Standard Computer Graphics Metafiles (CGM). The library is small (written directly to Xlib), portable, efficient, and full-featured. It produces x-vs-y plots with ``good'' tick marks and tick labels, 2-D quadrilateral mesh plots with contours, vector fields, or pseudocolor maps on such meshes, and a selection of 3-D plots. The Python Gist module utilizes the ``Numerical'' package due to J. Hugunin and others. It is therefore fast and able to handle large datasets. The Gist module includes an X-windows event dispatcher which can be dynamically added to the Python interpreter. This makes fast mouse-controlled zoom, pan, and other graphic operations available to the researcher while maintaining the usual Python command-line interface.
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957 B
Text
15 lines
957 B
Text
Gist is a scientific graphics library written by David H. Munro of Lawrence
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Livermore National Laboratory. It features support for three common
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graphics output devices: X-Windows, (Color) PostScript, and ANSI/ISO
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Standard Computer Graphics Metafiles (CGM). The library is small
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(written directly to Xlib), portable, efficient, and full-featured. It
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produces x-vs-y plots with ``good'' tick marks and tick labels,
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2-D quadrilateral mesh plots with contours, vector fields, or pseudocolor
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maps on such meshes, and a selection of 3-D plots.
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The Python Gist module utilizes the ``Numerical'' package due to
|
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J. Hugunin and others. It is therefore fast and able to handle large
|
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datasets. The Gist module includes an X-windows event dispatcher which
|
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can be dynamically added to the Python interpreter. This makes fast
|
|
mouse-controlled zoom, pan, and other graphic operations available to
|
|
the researcher while maintaining the usual Python command-line interface.
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