Scientific Graphics Toolkit for creating interactive graphics applications Version 3.0! |
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The Scientific Graphics Toolkit (SGT) facilitates easy development of platform independent, Java applications to produce highly interactive, flexible, publication quality, object oriented graphics of scientific data. Features include user settable or automatically scaled axes, sophisticated, automatically self-scaling time axes, labels as movable, customizable objects, automatic generation of legends to explain the data being displayed, and many more. SGT was originally developed for NOAA's NOAAServer project, and is freely available from this web page. For convenience of use, SGT conforms to the JavaBeans component architecture guidelines. For details about SGT, please see our American Meteorological Society paper "Interactive Graphics for Java Applications and Web Applets" , OCEANS '99 paper "The Scientific Graphics Toolkit", or our presentation to the 81st Annual AMS meeting in January 2001. A more technical overview was presented to the Seattle Java Users Group in Aug. 2000. SGT is being enhanced to provide users with easy-to-use features, such as, JavaBeans and Customizers. See SGT news for more information. FeaturesSGT was designed to support scientific graphics on the client by:
Demonstrations of SGT in action!
SGT Tutorial
SGT Help and Javadoc
SGT Version 3.0
SGT Version 1 web page.Note: The next release of SGT (rel-3.0) will not include the deprecated packages gov.noaa.pmel.sgt.awt and gov.noaa.pmel.sgt.util. Individual deprecated classes will also be removed.
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Announcements, discussions, and help are available at the sgt mail list sgt@noaa.gov, you must be a member of the list to post messages. To subscribe, unsubscribe, or get help on the mail list send mail to epic-majordomo@noaa.gov with "subscribe sgt", "unsubscribe sgt", or "help", respectively, in the body of the mail message.
This software is provided free of charge for all to use. |
Acknowledgments: This software was developed at the Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean (JISAO), a joint institute of the University of Washington (UW) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL), and funded by NOAA/ESDIM, NOAA/HPCC, NSF, and NOAA/PMEL.