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From: | Ben Abbott |
Subject: | Re: plot issues -> favor pdfcairo [new changeset 2] |
Date: | Mon, 15 Jun 2009 09:06:29 -0400 |
On Jun 15, 2009, at 3:35 AM, Benjamin Lindner wrote:
Ethan Merritt wrote:On Wednesday 10 June 2009 07:46:08 Benjamin Lindner wrote:Ben Abbott wrote:On Wednesday, June 10, 2009, at 09:11AM, "Benjamin Lindner" <address@hidden > wrote:Ok. I'm running developers sources that are less than a week old. I don't see the problem you reported.Ben Abbott wrote:On Jun 10, 2009, at 5:02 AM, Benjamin Lindner wrote:plot(0:0.1:10, sin(0:0.1:10), "@-;sin;", 0:0.1:10, cos(0:0.1:10), "@-;cos;");print -depsc2 -debug:print.eps.log test.eps print -dpsc2 -debug:print.ps.log test.ps print -dpng -debug:print.png.log test.png print -demf -debug:print.emf.log test.emf print -dpdf -debug:print.pdf.log test.pdf I get now a pdfcairo and pngcairo output.However the pdfcairo output seems buggy, since it consists of 3 pages: a blank first page, a second page with the expected graph and a blank third page.Hmm, looks like a problem with gnuplot I guess. benjaminWhat version of gnuplot are you running?I can run 4.2.2, 4.2.3, 4.2.4, 4.2,5 and 4.3.0 (current developers sources). If I can confirm the same behavior, I'll add "pdfcairo_is_broken" to __gnuplot_has_feature__ and switch to ghostrscript for that instance.I have a 4.3.0 version, namely the CVS 2008-11-21 snapshot. benjaminProbably it has been fixed in CVS.I hope there will be another gnuplot CVS snapshot, so I can include it in a octave 3.2.1 release.Yes. There was a cairo terminal bug fixed 10 May 2009.If you generate a snapshot, please use the 4.4 pre-release sources rather than the 4.3 sources. It is currently marked "alpha", but if you have a need for a more well-definedversion level we could bump that to "-rc1". EthanOk, possibly dumb question: How do I get the 4.4 sources?I'm doing a "cvs update -d" from the sourceforge sources as recommended on the gnuplot website. Correct?For inclusion in an octave binary a snapshot would be good, because it makes support easier if there is a well-defined version bundled. I'm not a cvs expert, not even a mildly experienced user. I know from svn and mercurial, that there is a unique version or revision which characterizes the source tree, so if I check out today and compile a binary, I can tell which version of the source tree was used, even without a dedicated snapshot.Is there an equivalent in cvs? benjamin
I see the 4.4 branch does exist. http://gnuplot.cvs.sourceforge.net/viewvc/gnuplot/gnuplot/term/x11.trm?view=log&pathrev=branch-4-4-stableHowever, I'm a novice when it comes to selecting cvs branches. Using the command line, how to I select a particular branch?
... and is MAIN or GNUPLOT_BETA the default branch for development? Benp.s. I've cc'd the gnuplot mail-list. We should remove that once the cvs questions are answered.
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