问题
I am using the following script to fit a function on a plot. In the output plot I would like to add a single value with etiquette on the fitting curve lets say the point f(3.25). I have read that for gnuplot is very tricky to add one single point on a plot particularly when this plot is a fitting function plot.
Has someone has an idea how to add this single point on the existing plot?
set xlabel "1000/T (K^-^1)" font "Helvetica,20"
#set ylabel "-log(tau_c)" font "Helvetica,20"
set ylabel "-log{/Symbol t}_c (ns)" font "Helvetica,20"
set title "$system $type $method" font "Helvetica,24"
set xtics font "Helvetica Bold, 18"
set ytics font "Helvetica Bold, 18"
#set xrange[0:4]
set border linewidth 3
set xtic auto # set xtics automatically
set ytic auto # set ytics automatically
#set key on bottom box lw 3 width 8 height .5 spacing 4 font "Helvetica, 24"
set key box lw 3 width 4 height .5 spacing 4 font "Helvetica, 24"
set yrange[-5:]
set xrange[1.5:8]
f(x)=A+B*x/(1000-C*x)
A=1 ;B=-227 ; C=245
fit f(x) "$plot1" u (1000/\$1):(-log10(\$2)) via A,B,C
plot [1.5:8] f(x) ti "VFT" lw 4, "$plot1" u (1000/\$1):(-log10(\$2)) ti "$system $type" lw 10
#set key on bottom box lw 3 width 8 height .5 spacing 4 font "Helvetica, 24"
set terminal postscript eps color dl 2 lw 1 enhanced # font "Helvetica,20"
set output "KWW.eps"
replot
回答1:
There are several possiblities to set a point/dot:
1. set object
If you have simple points, like a circle, circle wedge or a square, you can use set object
, which must be define before the respective plot
command:
set object circle at first -5,5 radius char 0.5 \
fillstyle empty border lc rgb '#aa1100' lw 2
set object circle at graph 0.5,0.9 radius char 1 arc [0:-90] \
fillcolor rgb 'red' fillstyle solid noborder
set object rectangle at screen 0.6, 0.2 size char 1, char 0.6 \
fillcolor rgb 'blue' fillstyle solid border lt 2 lw 2
plot x
To add a label, you need to use set label
.
This may be cumbersome, but has the advantage that you can use different line and fill colors, and you can use different coordinate systems (first
, graph
, screen
etc).
The result with 4.6.4 is:

2. Set an empty label with point option
The set label
command has a point
option, which can be used to set a point using the existing point types at a certain coordinate:
set label at xPos, yPos, zPos "" point pointtype 7 pointsize 2
3. plot with '+'
The last possibility is to use the special filename +
, which generates a set of coordinates, which are then filtered, and plotted using the labels
plotting style (or points
if no label is requested:
f(x) = x**2
x1 = 2
set xrange[-5:5]
set style line 1 pointtype 7 linecolor rgb '#22aa22' pointsize 2
plot f(x), \
'+' using ($0 == 0 ? x1 : NaN):(f(x1)):(sprintf('f(%.1f)', x1)) \
with labels offset char 1,-0.2 left textcolor rgb 'blue' \
point linestyle 1 notitle
$0
, or equivalently column(0)
, is the coordinate index. In the using
statement only the first one is taken as valid, all other ones are skipped (using NaN
).
Note, that using +
requires setting a fixed xrange
.
This has the advantages (or disadvantages?):
- You can use the usual
pointtype
. - You can only use the axis values as coordinates (like
first
orsecond
for the objects above). - It may become more difficult to place different point types.
- It is more involved using different border and fill colors.
The result is:

回答2:
Adding to Christoph's excellent answers :
4. use stdin
to pipe in the one point
replot "-" using 1:(f($1))
2.0
e
and use the method in 3rd answer to label it.
5. bake a named datablock (version > 5.0) that contains the one point, then you can replot without resupplying it every time:
$point << EOD
2.0
EOD
replot $point using 1:(f($1)):(sprintf("%.2f",f($1))) with labels
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19452516/add-a-single-point-at-an-existing-plot