htrb is a small, specialized publisher whose single public offering, ngraph-gtk, addresses the needs of researchers, engineers and students who must turn raw numeric data into publication-quality 2-D scientific plots. Built around a fast GTK interface, the program imports ASCII, CSV and binary measurements, lets users layer multiple axes, error bars, logarithmic scales and LaTeX annotations, then exports the finished graph to EPS, PDF, PNG or SVG for insertion into papers or presentations. Typical workflows begin with a data file from a lab instrument or simulation: columns are mapped to x and y channels, curve fits and statistical bands are applied through a built-in formula interpreter, and the resulting diagram is polished with customizable grids, fonts and color palettes. Because ngraph-gtk keeps every editing step in a reversible history, iterative refinement of conference posters or thesis figures is straightforward, while command-line batch mode permits unattended regeneration of hundreds of charts when parameters change. The lightweight executable runs happily on modest notebooks, making it a practical companion in field stations or classrooms where MATLAB or Origin licenses are unavailable. Although the catalog is narrow, the tool’s stability and import flexibility have earned it a quiet following among physicists, chemists and signal-processing specialists who value open formats and scriptable automation over sprawling feature sets. The publisher’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installing the latest version and supporting batch installation alongside other applications.

ngraph-gtk

Create scientific 2-dimensional plots

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