Date: 2021-03-30 04:45 pm (UTC)
pantha: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pantha
I mean, coming from a stats-y / data science-y perspective, my gut feeling would be bung it all in a big .csv file and chart it using something like ggplot2 in R. Of course, that requires learning a bit of coding. However, R and all its packages are freeware (as is the big 'how to' book and the editing environment RStudio) and ggplot2 is one of the easier things to code (and very adaptable and pretty).

Here's the best ggplot2 breakdown/instructions I've found: http://www.sthda.com/english/wiki/ggplot2-essentials

And here is the sort of graph I was trying to sketch (see how there's multiple graphs stacked but they all share the same x-axis?): https://i2.wp.com/owi.usgs.gov/blog/static/beyond-basic-plotting/verticalfacetplotfixedlabels-1.png?zoom=1.25&w=578&ssl=1

And here is how to do it: http://www.sthda.com/english/articles/24-ggpubr-publication-ready-plots/81-ggplot2-easy-way-to-mix-multiple-graphs-on-the-same-page/
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