This module provides a Julia interface to GR, a framework for visualisation applications.
From the Julia REPL an up to date version can be installed with:
julia> using Pkg
julia> Pkg.add("GR")
or in the Pkg REPL-mode:
pkg> add GR
The Julia package manager will download and install a pre-compiled run-time (for your hardware architecture), if the GR software is not already installed in the recommended locations.
In Julia simply type using GR
and begin calling functions
in the GR framework API.
Let's start with a simple example. We generate 10,000 random numbers and create a histogram. The histogram function automatically chooses an appropriate number of bins to cover the range of values in x and show the shape of the underlying distribution.
using GR
histogram(randn(10000))
Plots
is a powerful wrapper around other Julia visualization
"backends", where GR
seems to be one of the favorite ones.
To get an impression how complex visualizations may become
easier with Plots, take a look at
these examples.
Plots
is great on its own, but the real power comes from the ecosystem surrounding it. You can find more information
here.
Besides GR
and Plots
there is a nice package called GRUtils which provides a user-friendly interface to the low-level GR
subsytem, but in a more "Julian" and modular style. Newcomers are recommended to use this package. A detailed documentation can be found here.
GR
and GRUtils
are currently still being developed in parallel - but there are plans to merge the two modules in the future.
GR.jl
is a wrapper for the GR
Framework. Therefore, the GR
run-time libraries are required to use the software. These are provided via the GR_jll.jl package, which is an autogenerated package constructed using BinaryBuilder. This is the default setting.
Another alternative is the use of binaries from GR tarballs, which are provided directly by the GR developers as stand-alone distributions for selected platforms - regardless of the programming language. In this case, only one GR runtime environment is required for different language environments (Julia, Python, C/C++), whose installation path can be specified by the environment variable GRDIR
.
ENV["JULIA_DEBUG"] = "GR" # Turn on debug statements for the GR package
ENV["GRDIR"] = "<path of you GR installation>" # e.g. "/usr/local/gr"
using GR
For more information about setting up a local GR installation, see the GR Framework website.
However, if you want to permanently use your own GR run-time, you have to set the environment variable GRDIR
accordingly before starting Julia, e.g.
- macOS or Linux:
export GRDIR=/usr/local/gr
- Windows:
set GRDIR=C:\gr
Please note that with the method shown here, GR_jll
is not imported.
To aid in switching between BinaryBuilder and upstream framework binaries, the GR.GRPReferences
module implements three methods use_system_binary()
, use_upstream_binary()
, and use_jll_binary()
. These use Preferences.jl to configure GR.jl
and GR_jll.jl.
To use an existing GR install, invoke use_system_binary
.
using GR
GR.GRPreferences.use_system_binary("/path/to/gr"; force = true)
To download and switch to upstream binaries invoke use_upstream_binary
.
using GR # repeat this if there is an error
GR.GRPreferences.use_upstream_binary(; force = true)
use_system_binary
and use_upstream_binary
accept an override
keyword. This may be set to one of the following:
:depot
(default) - Use Overrides.toml in the Julia depot. This normally resides in.julia/artifacts/Overrides.toml
:project
- Use LocalPreferences.toml. This is usually located near the Project.toml of your active project environment.(:depot, :project)
- Use both of the override mechanisms above.
To switch back to BinaryBuilder binaries supplied with GR_jll, invoke use_jll_binary
:
using GR # repeat this if there is an error
GR.GRPreferences.use_jll_binary(; force = true)
This will reset both the :depot
and :project
override mechanisms above.
If you encounter difficulties switching between binaries, the diagnostics()
function will provide useful information.
Please include this information when asking for assistance.
using GR
GR.GRPreferences.diagnostics()