Difference between revisions of "Introduction to the Coordinate Index"
(set up links) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | [[Category: Graphs]] | ||
+ | |||
If you want to plot two or more values relationally, such as in an X-Y plot, and the values are arranged as columns in a single table, the ''Coordinate Index'' is used to single out these columns as separate values so they can be plotted against each other. This page contains introductory examples, in a tutorial format, that you can follow along with to get familiar with the Coordinate Index. | If you want to plot two or more values relationally, such as in an X-Y plot, and the values are arranged as columns in a single table, the ''Coordinate Index'' is used to single out these columns as separate values so they can be plotted against each other. This page contains introductory examples, in a tutorial format, that you can follow along with to get familiar with the Coordinate Index. | ||
− | [[Making a Multi-D Scatter Plot]] | + | * [[Making a Multi-D Scatter Plot]] |
− | [[Graphing a Probability Density]] | + | * [[Graphing a Probability Density]] |
− | [[Plotting Multi-D Population Data]] | + | * [[Plotting Multi-D Population Data]] |
+ | |||
+ | ==See Also== | ||
+ | * [[XY comparison]] | ||
+ | * [[Graph settings]] |
Latest revision as of 00:15, 13 February 2016
If you want to plot two or more values relationally, such as in an X-Y plot, and the values are arranged as columns in a single table, the Coordinate Index is used to single out these columns as separate values so they can be plotted against each other. This page contains introductory examples, in a tutorial format, that you can follow along with to get familiar with the Coordinate Index.
See Also
Comments
Enable comment auto-refresher