On Tue, 3 Mar 2020, Artur Tarassow wrote:
Am 03.03.20 um 13:07 schrieb Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti:
> On Mon, 2 Mar 2020, Allin Cottrell wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 2 Mar 2020, Artur Tarassow wrote:
>>
>>> Am 02.03.20 um 10:06 schrieb Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti:
>>>> On Sun, 1 Mar 2020, Artur Tarassow wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>> Maybe we could find a way to show dates, but there's not much
space
>>>>>> available in "scatters". At least now we don't
over-extend the x-axis.
>>>>>
>>>>> Maybe its beneficial to rotate the x-labels to save some space. But
it
>>>>> has no priority I guess.
>>>>
>>>> Something like this, perhaps?
>>>>
>>>> <hansl>
>> [nice example script]
>>>> </hansl>
>>>
>>> I don't get any xtics here :-/ But apart from this: This is a very nice
>>> example of exploiting "scatters" for enhancing multiplots.
>>
>> Hmm, why aren't you getting any xtics? They're shown here OK. Anyway,
>> Jack's script might be a good approach to getting dates in place for
>> "scatters", maybe better than trying to use gnuplot's
"timefmt".
>
> I think I found it. You should get tyhe xtics only using current git. With
> 2019d, the x scale is in "years", with current git is just an integer
> sequence. This version of the script should give you the xtics with 2019d
> as well:
Thanks Jack, with a freshly compiled gretl your code works fine!
Attaching calendar dates to time-series "scatters" with daily data
is now implemented in git. There may be some rough spots!
Allin