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2.11.1 newhistogram
Syntax:
|      newhistogram {"<title>"} {<linetype>} {<fillstyle>} {at <x-coord>}
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More than one set of histograms can appear in a single plot. In this case you can force a gap between them, and a separate label for each set, by using the newhistogram command. For example
|       set style histogram  cluster
      plot newhistogram "Set A", 'a' using 1, '' using 2, '' using 3, \
           newhistogram "Set B", 'b' using 1, '' using 2, '' using 3
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The labels "Set A" and "Set B" will appear beneath the respective sets of histograms, under the overall x axis label.
The newhistogram command can also be used to force histogram coloring to begin with a specific color (linetype). By default colors will continue to increment successively even across histogram boundaries. Here is an example using the same coloring for multiple histograms
|       plot newhistogram "Set A" lt 4, 'a' using 1, '' using 2, '' using 3, \
           newhistogram "Set B" lt 4, 'b' using 1, '' using 2, '' using 3
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Similarly you can force the next histogram to begin with a specified fillstyle. If the fillstyle is set to ‘pattern‘, then the pattern used for filling will be incremented automatically.
The ‘at <x-coord>‘ option only applies to column-stacked histograms.
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