Am 22.06.2020 um 21:00 schrieb Artur Tarassow:
Am 22.06.20 um 20:24 schrieb Artur Tarassow:
> Am 22.06.20 um 20:16 schrieb Sven Schreiber:
>> Thanks, Artur. It seems to work fine here on Windows 10,
however; no
>> overlap occurs.
>>
>> Cristián, what is the gretl version you are using, please? (And are you
>> actually on Windows?)
>
> Actually, I can confirm that weird behavior here using WIndows 10 and
> gretl 2020b (build data 2020-04-11). Also, gnuplot version 5.2.
> patchlevel 4 is used. The created gnuplot file looks fine to me but
> the plot is broken.
A follow up on this: Also latest snapshot does not work on Win10.
Hmm, I tested on a self-compiled version from 10 days ago, so that's
interesting.
I believe that in such a setup the gnuplot program is taken from
http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/pub/gretl/winbuild/gp524w64.tar.gz, but when
I fire up the wgnuplot.exe from the installation location
C:/programme/gretl it says Version 5.2 patchlevel 6. (where the filename
would suggest patchlevel 4 instead?)
But I just cross-checked on another Windows machine with an "ordinary"
snapshot, and there I'm seeing the same problem that you showed us.
There gnuplot reports itself as 5.2 patchlevel 4.
Not sure whether the patchlevel is supposed to make a difference, but
that would be my working hypothesis right now. Maybe they fixed
something relevant that is Windows-specific in some way?
thanks
sven