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From: Fabien L. <laf...@gm...> - 2012-01-13 16:26:31
|
How can I show the milliseconds with the library time because
time.time is precise (or at least show) up to 0.01 seconds and it
seems it's not possible to print more than seconds... An idea?
I use
time.strftime("%H:%M:%S", gmtime(time.time()))
Fabien
|
|
From: Yann T. <yan...@bu...> - 2012-01-13 16:26:11
|
I'm trying to update the position of an annotation. If I add an annotation,
change it's position using set_position, I find the value of the position
(found using get_position) is updated, but the actual position on the
figure does not change. How can I actually change the position of the text
and starting point of the corresponding arrow?
Here's an example:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
data = [10, 8, 8, 5]
fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(111)
ax.bar(range(len(data)),data)
ax.set_ylim(0,max(data)+2)
annotationPos1 = ax.annotate("Really long and large label",fontsize=12,
xy=(1.4,8),
xytext=(1.4,8.5),
arrowprops=dict(arrowstyle="->")
)
annotationPos2 = ax.annotate("Really long and large label",fontsize=12,
xy=(1.4,8),
xytext=(1.4,10.5),
arrowprops=dict(arrowstyle="->")
)
apos1before = annotationPos1.get_position()
annotationPos1.set_position((apos1before[0],apos1before[1]+2))
apos1after = annotationPos1.get_position()
apos2 = annotationPos2.get_position()
print apos1before,apos1after,apos2
plt.show()
Thanks, Yann
|
|
From: Jae-Joon L. <lee...@gm...> - 2012-01-13 11:54:00
|
As far as I know, No, there is no such way inside matplotlib that does that for you. But, in theory, it should not be very difficult to implement. Can you open a new issue on our github page? Regards, -JJ On Thu, Jan 12, 2012 at 4:16 AM, Craig the Demolishor <des...@gm...> wrote: > Hi, > I'm drawing a histogram and I would like to place a text box within the > axes that shows the number of events. I like the way I can pass "loc='best'" > to pyplot.legend() and it automatically does its best to avoid my data. Is > there any way to replicate this for a simple call to pyplot.text(), like so: > > ax.text(0.05, 0.95, 'Entries: ' + len(myData), > transform=ax.transAxes, fontsize=14, verticalalignment='top', > bbox=dict(boxstyle='square', facecolor='white')) > > Thanks in advance! > > --craig > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Ridiculously easy VDI. With Citrix VDI-in-a-Box, you don't need a complex > infrastructure or vast IT resources to deliver seamless, secure access to > virtual desktops. With this all-in-one solution, easily deploy virtual > desktops for less than the cost of PCs and save 60% on VDI infrastructure > costs. Try it free! http://p.sf.net/sfu/Citrix-VDIinabox > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-users mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users > |
|
From: Mike M. <mmu...@py...> - 2012-01-13 11:00:52
|
Learn matplotlib and Much More ============================== Scientists like Python. If you would like to learn more about important libraries for scientific applications, you might be interested in these courses. The course in Germany covers: - Overview of libraries - NumPy - Data storage with text files, Excel, netCDF and HDF5 - matplotlib - Object oriented programming for scientists - Problem solving session The course in the USA covers all this plus: - Extending Python in other languages - Version control - Unit testing More details below. If you have any questions about the courses, please contact me. Mike Python for Scientists and Engineers (Germany) --------------------------------------------- A three-day course covering all the basic tools scientists and engineers need. This course requires basic Python knowledge. Date: 19.01.-21.01.2012 Location: Leipzig, Germany Trainer: Mike Müller Course Language: English Link: http://www.python-academy.com/courses/python_course_scientists.html Python for Scientists and Engineers (USA) ----------------------------------------- This is an extend version of our well-received course for scientists and engineers. Five days of intensive training will give you a solid basis for using Python for scientific an technical problems. The course is hosted by David Beazley (http://www.dabeaz.com). Date: 27.02.-02.03.2012 Location: Chicago, IL, USA Trainer: Mike Müller Course Language: English Link: http://www.dabeaz.com/chicago/science.html |
|
From: drcoopa <dr...@gm...> - 2012-01-13 05:25:44
|
> > Looking at the install of basemap closely I noticed some errors that > make me wonder whether the geos libraries need to be compiled as 64- > bit to work? > Mike: Yes, I suspect that is the problem. Unfortunately, I've no idea how to fix that. Even if you get beyond that though - I think you are going to run into problems with basemap/geos using python 2.6 and numpy 1.2.1. I've been waiting for a numpy 1.3 release that fully supports python 2.6 before digging into this. ***** Was this ever resolved? I am having the same basemap/geos error - "Symbol not found: _GEOSArea" I am using python 2.7 with numpy-1.6.1 for py 2.7. I made sure to use the 32 bit python to match with with the numpy version. I'm near at my wits end, so any help would be awesome -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/basemap-install-problem-for-64-Bit-x86_64-on-os-x-tp21921348p33132200.html Sent from the matplotlib - users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. |