Appendix A. Finding Help and Information
I hope that this book has been useful to you in getting gnuplot to do what you need it to do. But no single book can contain everything you might need to know. So, in this Appendix, I have compiled a brief list of other sources of gnuplot information and education.
The most direct and immediate source of help when using gnuplot is the built-in help system; by typing the Help
topic at the interactive prompt you can get detailed information on any topic. This is most useful if you already have some idea about what you are looking for. Sometimes the help system provides too much information, and often not enough, but this is usually the first place to look if you need to know all the options associated with a particular command.
The official gnuplot manual, which can be found in various HTML and PDF configurations at the official gnuplot home at http://gnuplot.info/documentation.html, contains some detailed information that cannot be found anywhere else, and is an essential reference work for the advanced gnuplotter. Beware that it is impossible to actually learn how to use gnuplot from this manual, however, and it is organized in a way that makes it difficult to find relevant information.
There is a gnuplot reference card at http://www.gnuplot.info/docs_4.0/gpcard.pdf, which is a brief reminder of the most useful commands and options, suitable for printing out and tacking up next to your computer.
There is a great collection of gnuplot demos indexed from http://gnuplot.info/screenshots/index.html#demos.
More beautiful 3D sample plots (with scripts) can be found at http://ayapin.film.s.dendai.ac.jp/~matuda/Gnuplot/pm3d.html.
The first book treating gnuplot in detail was Gnuplot in Action by Philipp K. Janert, which can be found at http://www.manning.com/janert/. This is more concerned with teaching data analysis than gnuplot per se, but is a well-regarded volume.
The page of gnuplot tips and "not so Frequently Asked Questions" by T. Kawano at http://t16web.lanl.gov/Kawano/gnuplot/index-e.html has some very useful information and examples, although it was last updated in 2005.
More gnuplot demonstrations can be found at http://www.csse.uwa.edu.au/programming/gnuplot_demos/.
An impressive collection of Gnuplot tricks, showing some nonobvious ways of doing things with gnuplot, can be discovered at http://gnuplot-tricks.blogspot.com/.
David MacKay's lovely examples of using gnuplot in physics can be found at http://www.inference.phy.cam.ac.uk/teaching/comput/C++/examples/gnuplot/index.shtml.
The involved subject of date/time plotting in gnuplot is given a tutorial treatment by Marco Fioretti in the article How to handle time-based data with Gnuplot at http://www.zdnetasia.com/how-to-handle-time-based-data-with-gnuplot-62301350.htm.
The gnuplot mailing list is archived at http://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.graphics.gnuplot.user, and the newsgroup comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot
can be scanned at http://groups.google.com/group/comp.graphics.apps.gnuplot/topics. You should keep an eye on both of these if you want to keep up-to-date; gnuplot is actively developed.
Finally, I maintain a page about gnuplot at http://lee-phillips.org/gnuplot. Its original purpose was to help people who want to install gnuplot on the Macintosh, but now serves up general information and maintains a current list of links to other gnuplot resources. You will also be able to find updated and, if necessary corrected code and data files for use in this book, on this page.