LabPlot
13 likes
LabPlot is a free, open source and cross-platform Data Visualization and Analysis software accessible to everyone and trusted by professionals.
License model
- Free • Open Source
Application types
Country of Origin
Germany
EU
Platforms
- Mac
- Windows
- Linux
- BSD
- Haiku
- FreeBSD
- Snapcraft
- Flathub
Features
LabPlot News & Activities
Highlights All activities
Recent News
- Maoholguin published news article about LabPlotLabPlot 2.12 launched with enhancements to Worksheet, Spreadsheets, and Analysis tools
LabPlot has launched version 2.12 of its open source Data Visualization and Analysis platform, feat...
- POX published news article about LabPlotKDE releases LabPlot 2.11 with support for more data formats and visualization types
KDE has released version 2.11 of LabPlot, its open-source, cross-platform data visualization and an...
Recent activities
- braky updated LabPlot
- tpongo liked LabPlot
- thinks Works Offline is a important feature of LabPlot
- Ferula liked LabPlot
- added Lightweight as a feature to LabPlot
- johns12 updated LabPlot
Comments and Reviews
LabPlot offers not only great data import and export capabilities, but also tools for analysis and interactive data visualization, even with live data. Graphs can be exported to various formats. There is also a built-in plot digitizer to extract data from existing charts. If you are familiar with Python, R or other languages one can use them in the built-in interactive notebooks. Look no further.
This puppy is broken. This is a excellent software for importing and handling data and...thats it. You probably need a software for visualizing data and with labplot you will have to waste to much time adjusting the graph window that is 9x9cm by default. Sooner or later you will find the window properties for your computer screen but still useless waste of time on a software that is very good at the area others fails. Its so sad the programmers was not able thinking all the way to the end result and got stuck with tinkering tables. Look further.
I don't know what program this comment is about, but in my opinion, it is entirely wrong for LabPlot.