Hello Linux folkz, Does somebody know any good statistical software for Linux that allows to create Pareto charts, draw graphs, diagrams, calculate cumulative percentage, Cpk, median, standard distribution and other things for the yield improvement engineering applications? Thanks in advance. Alex -- MS Windows users should be covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Hi Alex: Octave is pretty good. I don't know if it does all the things you ask but you can write scripts for it. The GNUplot that works with it is very good. Both GNUPlot and Xgfe (a GUI frontend for GNUplot are on the SuSE 7.0 Professional CD's) It's best to get Octave and compile it. You can obtain the tar.gz package from here: http://www.octave.org/. The GNUplot and Xgfe URL's are : http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/gnuplot/gnuplot.html http://home.flash.net/~dmishee/xgfe/xgfe.html Also Scilab is pretty good. It is on the 7.0 CD's. On Saturday 20 January 2001 12:29, you wrote:
Hello Linux folkz, Does somebody know any good statistical software for Linux that allows to
-- Cheers, Jonathan
Alex, I would suggest that you have a look at SAL - Scientific Applications on Linux http://sal.rising.com.au/index.shtml This is an extremely good place to look for any scientific applications. It lists a wide variety of applications with short and full descriptions and links to their home pages.. Also have a look at Ploticus if you want a good graphic script language for creating graphs. http://www.sgpr.net/doc/Welcome.html On 20-Jan-2001 Alex Daniloff wrote:
Hello Linux folkz, Does somebody know any good statistical software for Linux that allows to create Pareto charts, draw graphs, diagrams, calculate cumulative percentage, Cpk, median, standard distribution and other things for the yield improvement engineering applications? Thanks in advance. Alex
Regards, Graham Smith ----------------------------------
Hi! I would like to run X-Window (set up on a server pc) from more remote machines for more users. (The users should log in from diskless computers. - this part is ok already) Could you advice me a good (detailed) description on how to do this? I know the diskless and root over NFS howtos, they're very good but don't say too much about setting up X this way. Should't I mount any directories for X? How is it working? Thank you.
participants (4)
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Alex Daniloff
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Graham Smith
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Jonathan Drews
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Szûcs Dénes