On 05-Jun-20 8:49 AM, Roberto Ragusa wrote:
On 2020-06-04 15:38, Max Pyziur wrote:
Greetings,
I mostly use Python/MatPlotLib for my graphing charting needs for a
bunch of self-built, production-oriented things I require.
However, once in a while I need to assemble something ad-hoc, and I
generally revert to MS Excel because of fidelity and functionality.
I've tried doing the same within Gnumeric and Libreoffice, but the
results are considerably less compelling than that of MS Excel.
Would there be any recommendations on what's available w/in the Linux
world that should be evaluated in this regard?
Much thanks,
xmgrace (dnf install grace)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_(plotting_tool)
Very not-modern interface, very long history, very oriented to
scientific graphs,
used in most scientific articles because it is basically the "LaTex" of
plots and graphs.
But if you want 3D colored pie-charts (Excel style), this is the wrong
tool.
Regards.
Yes I use xmgrace for 2D and gnuplot for 3D. Xmgrace is old, and not
actively developed anymore but has the advantage of a powerful Command
Line interface. Other possibiities are SciDavis and Veusz.
GiP
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