No, I am not getting any tipe of errors. I can see the graphics after running the script but all are the same for all the different times. The loop is working changing the day and times but the display is always the same. I did graphic by graphic manually and it works. I define slp1=slp/100 and undefine it after the plot was drawn so that the pointer dont give me the same graphic for the next time and it works. But, I need to do this for other 2 cases that have more times and would like to make this script to run to save time. What I dont understand is why if I am doing the same sequence of commands to get the different plots for each time in a loop and the loop is working fine, why does the plots keep being the same?<br> <br> Thanks,<br> <br> Nelsie<br><br><b><i>Jennifer Adams <jma@COLA.IGES.ORG></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left
: 5px;">
Did you get an "out of buffer space" message when drawing the plot? You<br>can try firing up grads with the "-m NNN" option, which sets the<br>metafile buffer size. Default value is 1000000.<br>Jennifer<br>On Feb 28, 2006, at 1:41 AM, Boyin Huang wrote:<br><br>> When I plotted a T-S diagram, the meta file is very large(50MB). When<br>> this<br>> large meta file was transferred into a ps or gif file and viewed by<br>> ghostview, I found part of the file was missing (Say, it should contain<br>> 1000 scattered dots as shown in the grads display window but only 900<br>> was<br>> showen up), and the ps file size reached 120MB.<br>><br>> What caused the problem?<br>> Is this because the grads set a file size limit?<br>> Is there any way to fix the problem?<br>><br>> Thanks<br>><br>><br>--<br>Jennifer Miletta Adams<br>Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies (COLA)<br>4041 Powder Mill Road, Suite 302<br>Calverton, MD 20705
USA<br>jma@cola.iges.org<br></blockquote><br><p>
<hr size=1> Yahoo! Mail<br>
<a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/mail_us/taglines/pmall2/*http://photomail.mail.yahoo.com">Use Photomail</a> to share photos without annoying attachments.