Hey there, I don't think it is directly in there, but I am not too sure about this. You could just use matplotlib. Basically you could do something like this: import matplotlib.pyplot as plt plt.plot([1,2,3,4], [1,4,9,16]) plt.show() Pylab would be possible as well, maybe even better, as it also gives you the math namespace. Hope that helps. All the best Hannes PS: For actually opening a file you might want to try: plt.plotfile(/fname/,/cols=(0/,/)/,/plotfuncs=None/,/comments='#'/,/skiprows=0/,/checkrows=5/,/delimiter='/,/'/,/names=None/,/subplots=True/,/newfig=True/,/**kwargs/) plt.plotfile(fname, (0,1,2), subplots=False) Which would plot the second and third column of the file 'fname' against the first one. On 07/02/2012 09:50 AM, Amol Holkundkar wrote:
Dear All,
How we can use yt to plot ASCII files like gnuplot. Any simple example will be really appreciated.
Thanks,
Regards Amol
_______________________________________________ yt-users mailing list yt-users@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-users-spacepope.org