On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 22:39, Paul Menzel wrote:
Dear ConTeXt folks,
I have two coefficients saved in a text file
-0.157737135681261
-0.211443105668896
and I want to use them to plot a line with gnuplot.
Having several of those files I want to use Lua to create the formula
for the line for me.
I have not yet figured out how to read values from a file in Lua and
just tried to print a constant to the gnuplot command.
I tried the following.
\usemodule[gnuplot]
\startGNUPLOTscript[lua]
plot \ctxlua{context(1.2 * x + 3)}
\stopGNUPLOTscript
This won't work. The reason is that contents between
\startGNUPLOTscript and \stopGNUPLOTscript are not parsed by ConTeXt
on purpose.
It was very very very painful if not impossible to get it right with
parsing. I often do things like
\def\E#1{$10^{#1}$}
\startGNUPLOTscript[name]
set logscale y
set format y "\\E{%T}"
plot sin(x) t '$\sin(x) [\E{3}]$' # usually something else with
logscale, but just to show the point
\stopGNUPLOTscript
and if ConTeXt starts parsing this it becomes a pure nightmare.
Realize that it can easily happen that ConTeXt then writes out
set logscale y
set format y "
E
plot sin(x) t '\math{\mathrm{sin}(x) [{10^{3}}]}'
However, \startGNUPLOTinclusions is parsed and you could in theory
misuse that, but it would be very bad coding practice.
It would be a lot better to come up with some proposal how to change
the interface to enable what you want to do. (To be honest, it is
still on my todo list to migrate to Aditya's filter module in the
background, but I don't find the courage to start since I have no idea
how many bugs will creep in.)
But a serious question: what *exactly* do you want to do with lua that
you are unable to do with some (even though ugly) gnuplot trickery?
Gnuplot does have some basic programmable capabilities. I can imagine
that you should be able to do something like:
# params.dat
a=-0.157737135681261
b=-0.211443105668896
\startGNUPLOTinclusions
f(x,a,b)=a*x+b
\stopGNUPLOTinclusions
\startGNUPLOTscript[name]
load 'params.dat'
plot f(x,a,b)
\stopGNUPLOTscript
And if needed you can create params.dat on the fly (but I believe that
the same should be doable even if you start with just pure data values
and do some dirty tricks in gnuplot).
Yet another trick could be to create a text file on the fly with lua
(if you really really really need that) and then your script only says
something like.
# bla.plt created on the fly with lua scripts
plot 1.2 * x + 3
\startGNUPLOTscript[bla]
load 'bla.plt'
\stopGNUPLOTscript
I leave creating a suitable 'bla.plt' with lua to others ...
Mojca