Graphs
that are produced with GTL derive their general default appearance
features (fonts, colors, line properties, and marker properties) from
the current ODS style. The following three images show the same graph
that is rendered with three different styles.
An important
point to note, here, is that the appearance of the graph changes when
the template is executed, not when it is compiled.
Fully
one third of all GTL syntax addresses matters of appearance. Yet,
most of the examples in this document do not use the appearance syntax
because the examples take advantage of the pre-defined styles. Whenever
the options in your graph template explicitly change a color or font
family, you are locking those decisions into the compiled template.
Appearance options in GTL always override any similar appearance settings
contained in the style. Thus, setting a fixed font or color appearance
option might yield satisfactory results with some styles but not
with others. For that reason, the compiled graph and table templates
that are included with many SAS procedures do not contain references
to fixed fonts and colors.
This chapter
shows "best practices" to follow so that your GTL programs integrate
style definitions to create the look you desire in your graphics output.
The coding strategy that you use will depend on how much style integration
you need. If you want to change the appearance of all your graphs
or apply a custom style to them, you can define your own style. For
details,
see Managing the Graph Appearance with Styles.