XXX-PLT:  Write quantities from a log file, in a form suitable for plotting.

There is a version of this program for each application (eg, net-plt).
Each version allows the quantities defined for that application to be
plotted.  The data for plotting is written to standard output, in a
form appropriate for plotting.  It may be convenient to pipe this
output into an suitable plot program (but xxx-plot does not actually
invoke such a plot program itself).  

The output of xxx-plt may also be piped into the 'series' program
(which will look only at the 'x-axis' quantity, ignoring the 'y-axis'
quantity).

Usage:
  
   xxx-plt x-axis y-axis { log-file [ range ] } [ / { app-args } ]

Here 'xxx' is a prefix identifying the particular incarnation of this
program.  The 'x-axis' and 'y-axis' specifications give the quantities
to plot on the two axes.  These are followed by specifications of
where the data comes from.  Depending on the application, further
arguments may follow after a slash (for which, see the documentation
specific to that application - eg, net-plt).

For the format of the quantity specifications, see the documentation
on generic quantities, quantities for Monte Carlo runs, quantities for
neural networks, etc.  The number of values specified for each axis
must either be the same, or one axis must have only a single value
(which will be reused).  For each x-axis value and the corresponding
y-axis value, a continuous trace of data from each log file will be
output.  Breaks will be inserted at the start of each log file and at
the start of each new combination of values.

Data comes from records with indexes in the specified ranges within
the log files mentioned.  The ranges have the form "[low][:[high]]][%mod]".  
The low bound defaults to one.  If no high bound is given, the range
extends to the highest index in the log file.  If the "%mod" option is
present, only iterations within the range whose index is a multiple of
"mod" are used (e.g. "5:12%3" is equivalent to 6 9 12).  If no range
is given, the default is "1:".

Everything is reset between log files, so it is possible that the number 
of values for a particular quantity will change from log file to log file.

            Copyright (c) 1995 by Radford M. Neal