Graph (Unix)
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| Original author(s) | Douglas McIlroy (AT&T Bell Laboratories) |
|---|---|
| Developer(s) | Various open-source and commercial developers |
| Operating system | Unix, Unix-like |
| Platform | Cross-platform |
| Type | Command |
In Unix, graph is a command-line utility used to draw plots from tabular data.
The graph utility, written by Douglas McIlroy, was present in the first version of Unix, and every later version, for instance:
Its output is a sequence of commands for the plot utility, which creates plots using ASCII graphics.
This design demonstrates the Unix philosophy: defining the plot (graph) and drawing it (plot) are separate tools, so they can be recombined with other tools. For instance, plot can be substituted with a different utility, that accepts the same plot commands, but creates the plot in a graphics file format, or sends it to a plotter.
Unix v7 also provided device drivers for plotting the results to various graphics devices; [3] this was announced as now standard.[4]
The GNU plotutils package provides a free non-exact reimplementation, available for Linux and many other systems. It can create plots in various graphics formats.
Usage
In its simplest use, the graph utility takes a textfile containing pairs of numbers, indicating the points of a line plot.
It outputs the line plot. Several options can be supplied to modify its behavior.