mlterm
feedgnuplot
mlterm | feedgnuplot | |
---|---|---|
2 | 16 | |
143 | 700 | |
- | - | |
7.8 | 5.1 | |
4 days ago | 3 months ago | |
C | Perl | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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mlterm
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Are We Sixel Yet
In XTerm, this (rightly) makes no difference. In Foot and Contour however, you still end up a line resp. a screen below where you started, if now with the correct horizontal position.
So it seems to me like what you want should work by default, except it doesn’t.
It should be possible to instead just treat the whole thing as a graphical overlay (by computing or directly asking for the character cell size, as Kirill Panov rightly admonishes me is possible with XTWINOPS) without touching the cursor; that’s what the “sixel scrolling” setting (DECSDM) is supposed to do. Then you can just manually move the cursor forward however many positions after you’re done drawing.
Except apparently the DEC manual (the VT330/340 one above) and DEC hardware contradict each other as to which setting of DECSDM (set or reset) corresponds to which scrolling state (enabled or disabled), and XTerm has implemented it according to the manual not the VT3xx[1,2,3]—then most other emulators followed suit[4]—then XTerm switched to following the hardware[5,6] (unless you and that’s what I’m seeing on my machine right now. So now you need to check if you’re on XTerm ≥ 369 or not[7]. If I’m reading the Notcurses code right, other terminals have followed suit[8].
Again, ouch.
P.S. It seems DEC had an internal doc for how their terminals should operate (DEC STD 070) [9]. It does not document DECSDM at all.
[1] https://github.com/wez/wezterm/issues/217#issuecomment-86449...
[2] https://github.com/hackerb9/lsix/issues/41
[3] https://github.com/dankamongmen/notcurses/issues/1782
[4] https://github.com/arakiken/mlterm/pull/23
[5] https://invisible-island.net/xterm/xterm.log.html#xterm_369
[6] https://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html#h3-T...
[7] https://github.com/dankamongmen/notcurses/commit/0918fa251e2... (the correct version cutoff is 369 not 359, the patch contains a now-fixed bug)
[8] https://github.com/dankamongmen/notcurses/blob/master/src/li... (look for mentions of invertsixel)
[9] http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/standards/EL-SM070-00_DEC_S...
- A command line tool that draw plots on the terminal
feedgnuplot
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Brplot – plotting app/lib in C
Thanks for the post. The obvious comparison is feedgnuplot: https://github.com/dkogan/feedgnuplot/
That works similarly in that it plots standard input. The backend is gnuplot, which is a double-edged sword: it's far more full-featured than brplot, but almost certainly is much slower also. I'll try out brplot to see if it would be a good replacement for cases where speed is important. Thanks!
- Feedgnuplot: Visualize the output of ANY commandline tool
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A command line tool that draw plots on the terminal
Oh hey Dima.
Feedgnuplot is really slick.
https://github.com/dkogan/feedgnuplot
It's in the debian repos too.
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D2: A new declarative language to turn text into diagrams
Is there a declarative language or framework to create ad-hoc GUIs that consume structured data from stdin stream and spit-out a GUI?
Like feedgnuplot [1] but not only restricted to graphs.
[1] https://github.com/dkogan/feedgnuplot
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jupyter and vim
I found using shell as an interactive environment to be pretty productive using https://github.com/dkogan/feedgnuplot and https://github.com/dkogan/vnlog. The filesystem becomes your state (instead of in memory state of your Python interpreter) which forces you to write Unix-style tools. Plotting with feedgnuplot spins up an interactive Qt plotter which I often used to explore 3D plots. It's not "inline" and fancy and does take a bit of grokking but I eventually found it more productive than Jupyter, especially as my development moved away from Python.
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termplotlib: Plots in the terminal
One of the tools I absolutely love is feedgnuplot which presents a stdin CLI interface to gnuplot.
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Anyone know of a good Data Visualization Library?
Also, if one doesn't want to learn Gnuplot's DSL try using feedgnuplot which presents a stdin interface for whitespace delimited tabular data.
- Show HN: Simple tool for creating commandline bar charts
- Git 2.33 released with new “merge-ort” merging with 500~9000x speed-up
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Best scientific graphing library?
Write space delimited tabular data (ideally in vnlog format) and plot it using feedgnuplot. Also helps decouple concerns (data generating application focuses on generating data).
What are some alternatives?
datadash - Visualize and graph data in the terminal
implot - Immediate Mode Plotting
st - build of the suckless simple terminal with patches for alpha, font2, copyurl, openclipboard, invert, appsync, xresources, scrollback, w3m, keyboard select, boxdraw
matplotlib-cpp - Extremely simple yet powerful header-only C++ plotting library built on the popular matplotlib
SDL1.2-SIXEL - SDL 1.2 with libsixel based video driver
ttyplot - a realtime plotting utility for terminal/console with data input from stdin
Amethyst - Automatic tiling window manager for macOS à la xmonad.
plotext - plotting on terminal
KittyTerminalImages.jl - A package that allows Julia to display images in the kitty terminal editor
matplotlib - C++ wrappers around python's matplotlib
st-sixel - fork of https://st.suckless.org/
matplotplusplus - Matplot++: A C++ Graphics Library for Data Visualization 📊🗾