Great news! Thank you Hendrik!
Hey Hendrik! Yes, that's the one.
Add formatting options to the text tool
Hi Fellype, Thank you, I was afraid it would be something like that. I guess I will also need to write every number with a decimal separator and hope the plots line up. Well, as long as they are aligned, I could touch up the numbers in Gimp to get rid of any unseemly formats. All the best, A.
Hello, I hope everyone has been doing well during these weird times. I wonder if there is a way to accomplish what I'm failing to do and I just haven't been able to figure it out. Attached is a rather simple case of a thermal analysis. I am monitoring several different values as my samples are heated and I need to know what happens at which point. My x values are temperature and time and I have a bunch of different y values, all at very different magnitudes. A single plot with 2 y axes becomes difficult...
If I'm not mistaken, the former developers designed the fit plugins structure in a way to make the software extensible, with the possibility of having advanced users writing their own plugins and adding them without having to compile all the software, but just the plugins they had wrote. In which case the symbol versions would be different than those of the system or SciDAVis, if they were explicitly linked against (g)libc. So there's no reason for explicit linking?
The discussion I linked to had left me quite baffled; I was wondering if anything might break if I do not explicitly link the shared objects to glibc in my spec file.
Hello and happy new year to all, I'm having a feeling of déjà-vu with this one, so if it has already been discussed, please point me to the conclusion. There was this change in Fedora 30, aiming to reduce unneeded linking and I believe there might have been some other system-wide modifications in that vein. Side effects of those changes sparked discussions like this one here. Recently I pushed an update for version 1.26 and I noticed that our linter complained about these plugins: scidavis.x86_64:...