#1
Posté 01 janvier 2013 - 12:57
#2
Posté 01 janvier 2013 - 06:30
#3
Posté 01 janvier 2013 - 07:41
#4
Posté 01 janvier 2013 - 08:48
If it's got to be free, try Open Office. It's a suite of programs that closely mirrors Microsoft Office, including an Excel-like spreadsheet, but is free to download.
If it's serious 'graphs from functions' that you need, you'll have to google what you want and see if anything really fits your bill.
Rethymno Rugby League Appreciation Society
Founder (and, so far, only) member.
#5
Posté 01 janvier 2013 - 10:47
OpenOffice is very good free alternative to MS Office. If it is mathematical plots you are after (in a mathematical sense graphs are different to plots) then gnuplot, Octave (an open source version if MATLAB), Wolfram Alpha and Paraview all do the job and they are free. If you are a Mac user, there is grapher that is shipped with every Mac that produces beautiful graphs.Excel does offer excellent graphing possibilities.
If it's got to be free, try Open Office. It's a suite of programs that closely mirrors Microsoft Office, including an Excel-like spreadsheet, but is free to download.
If it's serious 'graphs from functions' that you need, you'll have to google what you want and see if anything really fits your bill.
#6
Posté 02 janvier 2013 - 09:21
#7
Posté 02 janvier 2013 - 11:27
"Perhaps it would be better that future criticism of sports be made on the narrow basis of what is being discussed, without reference to other sports, unless those sports offer a solution to the problem in hand." - Brian 'Pigface' Moore
"What happens in rugby union? A player takes the ball, moves forward a little and gets tackled. A whole load of players then roll about on the ground. Pheep! The referee gives a penalty." - Simon Barnes
#8
Posté 02 janvier 2013 - 11:56
#9
Posté 02 janvier 2013 - 04:29
#10
Posté 02 janvier 2013 - 04:31
Really? Just the same as Excel for 90% of jobs. Have you tried googledocs?Well trying it on open office, not as easy as I though but hey ho
#11
Posté 02 janvier 2013 - 06:14
Well trying it on open office, not as easy as I though but hey ho
There are a few minor differences from Excel (I think semi-colons are used as parameter separators instead of the commas used in Excel?) but there is comprehensive help available from the menu bar.
I did find the ranges a bit tricky to set or reset when graphing, but I worked it out in the end. Like everything, practice makes perfect.
Rethymno Rugby League Appreciation Society
Founder (and, so far, only) member.
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