Using a data file as input in tikz

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4














I have a sorted data in a file (named data.dat). These data should be plotted vertically. I prepared a code in latex using tikz that works. The problem is each data is typed one by one in the main body of the code and I need a way in which I call the data file and each data is substituted one by one. Here is my code



documentclass[border= 5 pt]standalone 
usepackagetimes,comment
usepackagegraphicx
usepackagetikz


newcommandpoint[1]
draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

begindocument

begintikzpicture[scale=1]
point0
point1
point2
point2.5
point3.4
point4
point5.8
point6.9
point7.5

endtikzpicture

enddocument


The data file can be download from here.










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  • 3




    ctan.org/pkg/pgfplots
    – Henri Menke
    Dec 29 '18 at 6:47















4














I have a sorted data in a file (named data.dat). These data should be plotted vertically. I prepared a code in latex using tikz that works. The problem is each data is typed one by one in the main body of the code and I need a way in which I call the data file and each data is substituted one by one. Here is my code



documentclass[border= 5 pt]standalone 
usepackagetimes,comment
usepackagegraphicx
usepackagetikz


newcommandpoint[1]
draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

begindocument

begintikzpicture[scale=1]
point0
point1
point2
point2.5
point3.4
point4
point5.8
point6.9
point7.5

endtikzpicture

enddocument


The data file can be download from here.










share|improve this question

















  • 3




    ctan.org/pkg/pgfplots
    – Henri Menke
    Dec 29 '18 at 6:47













4












4








4


1





I have a sorted data in a file (named data.dat). These data should be plotted vertically. I prepared a code in latex using tikz that works. The problem is each data is typed one by one in the main body of the code and I need a way in which I call the data file and each data is substituted one by one. Here is my code



documentclass[border= 5 pt]standalone 
usepackagetimes,comment
usepackagegraphicx
usepackagetikz


newcommandpoint[1]
draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

begindocument

begintikzpicture[scale=1]
point0
point1
point2
point2.5
point3.4
point4
point5.8
point6.9
point7.5

endtikzpicture

enddocument


The data file can be download from here.










share|improve this question













I have a sorted data in a file (named data.dat). These data should be plotted vertically. I prepared a code in latex using tikz that works. The problem is each data is typed one by one in the main body of the code and I need a way in which I call the data file and each data is substituted one by one. Here is my code



documentclass[border= 5 pt]standalone 
usepackagetimes,comment
usepackagegraphicx
usepackagetikz


newcommandpoint[1]
draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

begindocument

begintikzpicture[scale=1]
point0
point1
point2
point2.5
point3.4
point4
point5.8
point6.9
point7.5

endtikzpicture

enddocument


The data file can be download from here.







tikz-pgf plot tikz-datavisualization






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asked Dec 29 '18 at 5:58









Hadi SobhaniHadi Sobhani

24116




24116







  • 3




    ctan.org/pkg/pgfplots
    – Henri Menke
    Dec 29 '18 at 6:47












  • 3




    ctan.org/pkg/pgfplots
    – Henri Menke
    Dec 29 '18 at 6:47







3




3




ctan.org/pkg/pgfplots
– Henri Menke
Dec 29 '18 at 6:47




ctan.org/pkg/pgfplots
– Henri Menke
Dec 29 '18 at 6:47










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















8














As pointed out by Henri Menke, you could use pgfplots to plot the data. Assuming you want to use TikZ and your command point instead, you could use pgfplotstable to load and loop over the data. (You won't need beginfilecontents*data.dat ... endfilecontents* because you already have data.dat, this is just to make it more convenient for others to get the file on their system.)



documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
usepackagefilecontents
beginfilecontents*data.dat
0
1
2
2.5
3.4
4
5.8
6.9
7.5
endfilecontents*
usepackagepgfplotstable
pgfplotssetcompat=1.16
% from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/445369/121799
newcommand*ReadOutElement[4]%
pgfplotstablegetelem#2#3of#1%
let#4pgfplotsretval

newcommandpoint[1]
draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

begindocument

begintikzpicture[scale=1]
pgfplotstableread[header=false]data.datdatatable
pgfplotstablegetrowsofdatatable
pgfmathtruncatemacrorownumpgfplotsretval-1
foreach X in 0,...,rownum
ReadOutElementdatatableX[index]0tmpx
pointtmpx

endtikzpicture

enddocument


enter image description here






share|improve this answer




























    2














    Although in this case you can use pgfplots lo load the external data (+1) and in other type of macros probably you can also use the datatool package, in case you know R and knitr, here are another approach to access individual values as argument of a macro: load the external data as an R data frame object, said with name "data", and then access concrete values of this vector as Sexprdata[3,1] (print the third value of first column).



    To load the external CSV file as a data.frame, you can use the read.csv() R function but for the example I created the data frame from the scratch:



    documentclassarticle 
    usepackagetimes,comment
    usepackagegraphicx
    usepackagetikz
    newcommandpoint[1]
    draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,
    font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;
    begindocument
    <<mydata,echo=F>>=
    # data <- read.csv("data.dat", sep=",", header=F) # to load external data
    data <- data.frame(x=c(0,1,2,2.5,3.4,4,5.8,6.9,7.5)) # internal data
    @
    begintikzpicture[scale=1]
    pointSexprdata[1,1]
    pointSexprdata[2,1]
    pointSexprdata[3,1]
    pointSexprdata[4,1]
    pointSexprdata[5,1]
    pointSexprdata[6,1]
    pointSexprdata[7,1]
    pointSexprdata[8,1]
    pointSexprdata[9,1]
    endtikzpicture
    enddocument


    (The result is identical to the image of marmot, no need to add it twice).






    share|improve this answer






















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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
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      active

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      8














      As pointed out by Henri Menke, you could use pgfplots to plot the data. Assuming you want to use TikZ and your command point instead, you could use pgfplotstable to load and loop over the data. (You won't need beginfilecontents*data.dat ... endfilecontents* because you already have data.dat, this is just to make it more convenient for others to get the file on their system.)



      documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
      usepackagefilecontents
      beginfilecontents*data.dat
      0
      1
      2
      2.5
      3.4
      4
      5.8
      6.9
      7.5
      endfilecontents*
      usepackagepgfplotstable
      pgfplotssetcompat=1.16
      % from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/445369/121799
      newcommand*ReadOutElement[4]%
      pgfplotstablegetelem#2#3of#1%
      let#4pgfplotsretval

      newcommandpoint[1]
      draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

      begindocument

      begintikzpicture[scale=1]
      pgfplotstableread[header=false]data.datdatatable
      pgfplotstablegetrowsofdatatable
      pgfmathtruncatemacrorownumpgfplotsretval-1
      foreach X in 0,...,rownum
      ReadOutElementdatatableX[index]0tmpx
      pointtmpx

      endtikzpicture

      enddocument


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer

























        8














        As pointed out by Henri Menke, you could use pgfplots to plot the data. Assuming you want to use TikZ and your command point instead, you could use pgfplotstable to load and loop over the data. (You won't need beginfilecontents*data.dat ... endfilecontents* because you already have data.dat, this is just to make it more convenient for others to get the file on their system.)



        documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
        usepackagefilecontents
        beginfilecontents*data.dat
        0
        1
        2
        2.5
        3.4
        4
        5.8
        6.9
        7.5
        endfilecontents*
        usepackagepgfplotstable
        pgfplotssetcompat=1.16
        % from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/445369/121799
        newcommand*ReadOutElement[4]%
        pgfplotstablegetelem#2#3of#1%
        let#4pgfplotsretval

        newcommandpoint[1]
        draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

        begindocument

        begintikzpicture[scale=1]
        pgfplotstableread[header=false]data.datdatatable
        pgfplotstablegetrowsofdatatable
        pgfmathtruncatemacrorownumpgfplotsretval-1
        foreach X in 0,...,rownum
        ReadOutElementdatatableX[index]0tmpx
        pointtmpx

        endtikzpicture

        enddocument


        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer























          8












          8








          8






          As pointed out by Henri Menke, you could use pgfplots to plot the data. Assuming you want to use TikZ and your command point instead, you could use pgfplotstable to load and loop over the data. (You won't need beginfilecontents*data.dat ... endfilecontents* because you already have data.dat, this is just to make it more convenient for others to get the file on their system.)



          documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
          usepackagefilecontents
          beginfilecontents*data.dat
          0
          1
          2
          2.5
          3.4
          4
          5.8
          6.9
          7.5
          endfilecontents*
          usepackagepgfplotstable
          pgfplotssetcompat=1.16
          % from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/445369/121799
          newcommand*ReadOutElement[4]%
          pgfplotstablegetelem#2#3of#1%
          let#4pgfplotsretval

          newcommandpoint[1]
          draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

          begindocument

          begintikzpicture[scale=1]
          pgfplotstableread[header=false]data.datdatatable
          pgfplotstablegetrowsofdatatable
          pgfmathtruncatemacrorownumpgfplotsretval-1
          foreach X in 0,...,rownum
          ReadOutElementdatatableX[index]0tmpx
          pointtmpx

          endtikzpicture

          enddocument


          enter image description here






          share|improve this answer












          As pointed out by Henri Menke, you could use pgfplots to plot the data. Assuming you want to use TikZ and your command point instead, you could use pgfplotstable to load and loop over the data. (You won't need beginfilecontents*data.dat ... endfilecontents* because you already have data.dat, this is just to make it more convenient for others to get the file on their system.)



          documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]standalone
          usepackagefilecontents
          beginfilecontents*data.dat
          0
          1
          2
          2.5
          3.4
          4
          5.8
          6.9
          7.5
          endfilecontents*
          usepackagepgfplotstable
          pgfplotssetcompat=1.16
          % from https://tex.stackexchange.com/a/445369/121799
          newcommand*ReadOutElement[4]%
          pgfplotstablegetelem#2#3of#1%
          let#4pgfplotsretval

          newcommandpoint[1]
          draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;

          begindocument

          begintikzpicture[scale=1]
          pgfplotstableread[header=false]data.datdatatable
          pgfplotstablegetrowsofdatatable
          pgfmathtruncatemacrorownumpgfplotsretval-1
          foreach X in 0,...,rownum
          ReadOutElementdatatableX[index]0tmpx
          pointtmpx

          endtikzpicture

          enddocument


          enter image description here







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 29 '18 at 8:21









          marmotmarmot

          90.4k4104195




          90.4k4104195





















              2














              Although in this case you can use pgfplots lo load the external data (+1) and in other type of macros probably you can also use the datatool package, in case you know R and knitr, here are another approach to access individual values as argument of a macro: load the external data as an R data frame object, said with name "data", and then access concrete values of this vector as Sexprdata[3,1] (print the third value of first column).



              To load the external CSV file as a data.frame, you can use the read.csv() R function but for the example I created the data frame from the scratch:



              documentclassarticle 
              usepackagetimes,comment
              usepackagegraphicx
              usepackagetikz
              newcommandpoint[1]
              draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,
              font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;
              begindocument
              <<mydata,echo=F>>=
              # data <- read.csv("data.dat", sep=",", header=F) # to load external data
              data <- data.frame(x=c(0,1,2,2.5,3.4,4,5.8,6.9,7.5)) # internal data
              @
              begintikzpicture[scale=1]
              pointSexprdata[1,1]
              pointSexprdata[2,1]
              pointSexprdata[3,1]
              pointSexprdata[4,1]
              pointSexprdata[5,1]
              pointSexprdata[6,1]
              pointSexprdata[7,1]
              pointSexprdata[8,1]
              pointSexprdata[9,1]
              endtikzpicture
              enddocument


              (The result is identical to the image of marmot, no need to add it twice).






              share|improve this answer



























                2














                Although in this case you can use pgfplots lo load the external data (+1) and in other type of macros probably you can also use the datatool package, in case you know R and knitr, here are another approach to access individual values as argument of a macro: load the external data as an R data frame object, said with name "data", and then access concrete values of this vector as Sexprdata[3,1] (print the third value of first column).



                To load the external CSV file as a data.frame, you can use the read.csv() R function but for the example I created the data frame from the scratch:



                documentclassarticle 
                usepackagetimes,comment
                usepackagegraphicx
                usepackagetikz
                newcommandpoint[1]
                draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,
                font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;
                begindocument
                <<mydata,echo=F>>=
                # data <- read.csv("data.dat", sep=",", header=F) # to load external data
                data <- data.frame(x=c(0,1,2,2.5,3.4,4,5.8,6.9,7.5)) # internal data
                @
                begintikzpicture[scale=1]
                pointSexprdata[1,1]
                pointSexprdata[2,1]
                pointSexprdata[3,1]
                pointSexprdata[4,1]
                pointSexprdata[5,1]
                pointSexprdata[6,1]
                pointSexprdata[7,1]
                pointSexprdata[8,1]
                pointSexprdata[9,1]
                endtikzpicture
                enddocument


                (The result is identical to the image of marmot, no need to add it twice).






                share|improve this answer

























                  2












                  2








                  2






                  Although in this case you can use pgfplots lo load the external data (+1) and in other type of macros probably you can also use the datatool package, in case you know R and knitr, here are another approach to access individual values as argument of a macro: load the external data as an R data frame object, said with name "data", and then access concrete values of this vector as Sexprdata[3,1] (print the third value of first column).



                  To load the external CSV file as a data.frame, you can use the read.csv() R function but for the example I created the data frame from the scratch:



                  documentclassarticle 
                  usepackagetimes,comment
                  usepackagegraphicx
                  usepackagetikz
                  newcommandpoint[1]
                  draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,
                  font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;
                  begindocument
                  <<mydata,echo=F>>=
                  # data <- read.csv("data.dat", sep=",", header=F) # to load external data
                  data <- data.frame(x=c(0,1,2,2.5,3.4,4,5.8,6.9,7.5)) # internal data
                  @
                  begintikzpicture[scale=1]
                  pointSexprdata[1,1]
                  pointSexprdata[2,1]
                  pointSexprdata[3,1]
                  pointSexprdata[4,1]
                  pointSexprdata[5,1]
                  pointSexprdata[6,1]
                  pointSexprdata[7,1]
                  pointSexprdata[8,1]
                  pointSexprdata[9,1]
                  endtikzpicture
                  enddocument


                  (The result is identical to the image of marmot, no need to add it twice).






                  share|improve this answer














                  Although in this case you can use pgfplots lo load the external data (+1) and in other type of macros probably you can also use the datatool package, in case you know R and knitr, here are another approach to access individual values as argument of a macro: load the external data as an R data frame object, said with name "data", and then access concrete values of this vector as Sexprdata[3,1] (print the third value of first column).



                  To load the external CSV file as a data.frame, you can use the read.csv() R function but for the example I created the data frame from the scratch:



                  documentclassarticle 
                  usepackagetimes,comment
                  usepackagegraphicx
                  usepackagetikz
                  newcommandpoint[1]
                  draw [<->,purple] ( 0 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,left,
                  font=tiny] #1 -- ( 1 , #1 ) node[yshift=0,right,font=tiny] #1 ;
                  begindocument
                  <<mydata,echo=F>>=
                  # data <- read.csv("data.dat", sep=",", header=F) # to load external data
                  data <- data.frame(x=c(0,1,2,2.5,3.4,4,5.8,6.9,7.5)) # internal data
                  @
                  begintikzpicture[scale=1]
                  pointSexprdata[1,1]
                  pointSexprdata[2,1]
                  pointSexprdata[3,1]
                  pointSexprdata[4,1]
                  pointSexprdata[5,1]
                  pointSexprdata[6,1]
                  pointSexprdata[7,1]
                  pointSexprdata[8,1]
                  pointSexprdata[9,1]
                  endtikzpicture
                  enddocument


                  (The result is identical to the image of marmot, no need to add it twice).







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Dec 30 '18 at 23:07

























                  answered Dec 29 '18 at 10:49









                  FranFran

                  51.7k6114175




                  51.7k6114175



























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