# Example (JKQTPlotter): Step Line Plots in Different Styles {#JKQTPlotterSpecialStepLinePlot} This project (see `./examples/stepplots/`) simply creates a JKQTPlotter widget (as a new window) and adds a single line-graph (a sine-wave). Data is initialized from two QVector objects. The source code of the main application can be found in [`stepplots.cpp`](https://github.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/tree/master/examples/stepplots/stepplots.cpp). For the most part, several datasets of cosine-curves are generated. Then graphs of type `JKQTPSpecialLineHorizontalGraph` are added to the plot: ```.cpp // 3 now we make several plots with different step styles, each one also contains a // symbol plot indicating the location of the datapoints themselves JKQTPSpecialLineHorizontalGraph* graph; //-- JKQTPStepLeft ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- graph=new JKQTPSpecialLineHorizontalGraph(&plot); // set data for the graph graph->setXColumn(columnX); graph->setYColumn(columnY1); // set step style graph->setSpecialLineType(JKQTPStepLeft); graph->setLineWidth(1); graph->setFillCurve(true); graph->setDrawLine(true); graph->setTitle("JKQTPStepLeft, filled"); // enable symbols graph->setDrawSymbols(true); graph->setSymbolType(JKQTPGraphSymbols::JKQTPCircle); ``` Note that you can configure the step type (left/center/right by `graph->setSpecialLineType(JKQTPStepLeft)`. With `graph->setFillCurve(true)` you can draw the curve filled until the y=0-axis and with `graph->setDrawLine(true)` you can switch the line along the values on and off (e.g. to only have the filled area, but no line). With `graph->setDrawSymbols(true)` you can switch on drawing of symbols at the location of the data points. ... and all graphs are added to the plot: ```.cpp // add the graphs to the plot, so it is actually displayed plot.addGraph(graph); ``` In addition to the symbol type and line style, you can also alter the size of the symbols (`graph->setSymbolSize(14)`), the line-width used to draw them (`graph->setSymbolLineWidth(1.5)`) and the line width of the graph line (`graph->setLineWidth(1)`). If you want to switch off the line altogether, use `graph->setDrawLine(false`. The result looks like this: ![stepplots](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/master/screenshots/stepplots.png) If you use `` instead of the horizontal variant `` and exchange x- for y-data, you will get a plot like this: ![stepplots_vertical.png](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/master/screenshots/stepplots_vertical.png) Also note how the red graph is filled towards the y-axis, not the x-axis.