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/*second*/
freq = 1;
s=sin( cum( freq/10 ) );
a=0.5*sin( cum( freq/10 ) );
graph1=a;
graph0 = s;
graph0style=2;
graph1style=2;
graph0barcolor=3;
graph1barcolor=7;

In the first we can see two overlapping sinusoidal bargraphs, one
yellow and one greyblue.
In the second, yellow bars disappear.
It is not tricky.
There is a priotity in graphing overlapping bars.
According to Mr Janeczko valuable hint "the graph lines are drawn in
a reverse order graph0 is drawn the last and it covers previous graph
lines"
An interesting application of this priority was used in #2182 mail:
Using graph0barcolor=0 in the "first" , where 0 is no color, i.e.
background color, we can have "floating" bars.
Use it whenever is appropriate.

Dimitris Tsokakis







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