I've seen some similar questions out of which I have made a system which works for me but I need to optimize it because this program alone is taking up a lot of CPU load.
Here is the problem exactly.
I have an incoming signal/stream of data which I need to plot in real time. I only want a limited number of points to be displayed at a time (Say 1024 points) so I plot the data points along the y axis against an index from 0-1024 on the x-axis. The values of the incoming data range from 0-1023.
What I do currently (This is all in C++) is I put the data into a circular loop as it comes and each time the data gets updated (Or every second/third data point), I write out to a file and using a pipe, I plot the data from that file with gnuplot.
While this works almost perfectly, it causes a fair bit of load (Depending on the input data rate, I saw even 70% usage on both my cores of my Core 2 Duo). I'll need to be running some processor intensive code along with this short program so I feel that it is almost necessary to optimize it.
What I was hoping could be done is this: Can I only plot the differences between the current plot and the new data (Or plot each point as it comes in without replotting the whole graph such that the old item at that x index is removed).
I have a fixed number of points on the graph so replot wouldn't work. I want the old point at that x location to be removed.