gnuplot*borderWidth: 2 | |
gnuplot*axisWidth: 0 | |
gnuplot*line1Width: 0 | |
gnuplot*line2Width: 0 | |
gnuplot*line3Width: 0 | |
gnuplot*line4Width: 0 | |
gnuplot*line5Width: 0 | |
gnuplot*line6Width: 0 | |
gnuplot*line7Width: 0 | |
gnuplot*line8Width: 0 |
gnuplot honors the following resources for setting the dash style used for plotting lines. 0 means a solid line. A two-digit number jk (j and k are 6#6= 1 and 5#5= 9) means a dashed line with a repeated pattern of j pixels on followed by k pixels off. For example, '16' is a "dotted" line with one pixel on followed by six pixels off. More elaborate on/off patterns can be specified with a four-digit value. For example, '4441' is four on, four off, four on, one off. The default values shown below are for monochrome displays or monochrome rendering on color or grayscale displays. For color displays, the default for each is 0 (solid line) except for axisDashes which defaults to a '16' dotted line.
gnuplot*borderDashes: 0 | |
gnuplot*axisDashes: 16 | |
gnuplot*line1Dashes: 0 | |
gnuplot*line2Dashes: 42 | |
gnuplot*line3Dashes: 13 | |
gnuplot*line4Dashes: 44 | |
gnuplot*line5Dashes: 15 | |
gnuplot*line6Dashes: 4441 | |
gnuplot*line7Dashes: 42 | |
gnuplot*line8Dashes: 13 |