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From: Hernán De A. <var...@gm...> - 2021-11-22 09:57:36
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Gnuplot can handle many different formats for time data and plot. Have a look at pages 58 and 151-152 in the pdf manual. May be you find one that suits you. /H. Den 2021-11-21 kl. 20:18, skrev Dave Horsfall: > I was recently diagnosed with diabetes (ugh!) and not only do I need > to track my glucose levels but also the time of day; the latter is > just as important, involving a test two hours after a meal. The times > of the meals are also important; it's not your "Western" diet i.e. > three meals/day, but what I may as well call the "Eastern" diet i.e. > snacking throughout the day with no major meal. > > My GP wants to see a table of this, but I lean towards a plot instead; > the application that came with my meter is a bit tricky to interpret. > > The problem is how to represent the time; I can think of three ways: > > 1) A fractional day; hard to compute and interpret. > > 2) Coloured bars; I don't have a working inkjet. > > 3) A 3-D graph with the Z axis as the time, resulting in a wiggly line. > > Any ideas on how to do it? > > Thanks. > > -- Dave > > > _______________________________________________ > gnuplot-info mailing list > gnu...@li... > Membership management via: > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gnuplot-info |