You can subscribe to this list here.
2003 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
(3) |
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
(12) |
Sep
(12) |
Oct
(56) |
Nov
(65) |
Dec
(37) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 |
Jan
(59) |
Feb
(78) |
Mar
(153) |
Apr
(205) |
May
(184) |
Jun
(123) |
Jul
(171) |
Aug
(156) |
Sep
(190) |
Oct
(120) |
Nov
(154) |
Dec
(223) |
2005 |
Jan
(184) |
Feb
(267) |
Mar
(214) |
Apr
(286) |
May
(320) |
Jun
(299) |
Jul
(348) |
Aug
(283) |
Sep
(355) |
Oct
(293) |
Nov
(232) |
Dec
(203) |
2006 |
Jan
(352) |
Feb
(358) |
Mar
(403) |
Apr
(313) |
May
(165) |
Jun
(281) |
Jul
(316) |
Aug
(228) |
Sep
(279) |
Oct
(243) |
Nov
(315) |
Dec
(345) |
2007 |
Jan
(260) |
Feb
(323) |
Mar
(340) |
Apr
(319) |
May
(290) |
Jun
(296) |
Jul
(221) |
Aug
(292) |
Sep
(242) |
Oct
(248) |
Nov
(242) |
Dec
(332) |
2008 |
Jan
(312) |
Feb
(359) |
Mar
(454) |
Apr
(287) |
May
(340) |
Jun
(450) |
Jul
(403) |
Aug
(324) |
Sep
(349) |
Oct
(385) |
Nov
(363) |
Dec
(437) |
2009 |
Jan
(500) |
Feb
(301) |
Mar
(409) |
Apr
(486) |
May
(545) |
Jun
(391) |
Jul
(518) |
Aug
(497) |
Sep
(492) |
Oct
(429) |
Nov
(357) |
Dec
(310) |
2010 |
Jan
(371) |
Feb
(657) |
Mar
(519) |
Apr
(432) |
May
(312) |
Jun
(416) |
Jul
(477) |
Aug
(386) |
Sep
(419) |
Oct
(435) |
Nov
(320) |
Dec
(202) |
2011 |
Jan
(321) |
Feb
(413) |
Mar
(299) |
Apr
(215) |
May
(284) |
Jun
(203) |
Jul
(207) |
Aug
(314) |
Sep
(321) |
Oct
(259) |
Nov
(347) |
Dec
(209) |
2012 |
Jan
(322) |
Feb
(414) |
Mar
(377) |
Apr
(179) |
May
(173) |
Jun
(234) |
Jul
(295) |
Aug
(239) |
Sep
(276) |
Oct
(355) |
Nov
(144) |
Dec
(108) |
2013 |
Jan
(170) |
Feb
(89) |
Mar
(204) |
Apr
(133) |
May
(142) |
Jun
(89) |
Jul
(160) |
Aug
(180) |
Sep
(69) |
Oct
(136) |
Nov
(83) |
Dec
(32) |
2014 |
Jan
(71) |
Feb
(90) |
Mar
(161) |
Apr
(117) |
May
(78) |
Jun
(94) |
Jul
(60) |
Aug
(83) |
Sep
(102) |
Oct
(132) |
Nov
(154) |
Dec
(96) |
2015 |
Jan
(45) |
Feb
(138) |
Mar
(176) |
Apr
(132) |
May
(119) |
Jun
(124) |
Jul
(77) |
Aug
(31) |
Sep
(34) |
Oct
(22) |
Nov
(23) |
Dec
(9) |
2016 |
Jan
(26) |
Feb
(17) |
Mar
(10) |
Apr
(8) |
May
(4) |
Jun
(8) |
Jul
(6) |
Aug
(5) |
Sep
(9) |
Oct
(4) |
Nov
|
Dec
|
2017 |
Jan
(5) |
Feb
(7) |
Mar
(1) |
Apr
(5) |
May
|
Jun
(3) |
Jul
(6) |
Aug
(1) |
Sep
|
Oct
(2) |
Nov
(1) |
Dec
|
2018 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
(1) |
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2020 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
(1) |
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2025 |
Jan
(1) |
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
1
(22) |
2
(14) |
3
(3) |
4
(2) |
5
(2) |
6
(3) |
7
(2) |
8
(5) |
9
(19) |
10
(9) |
11
(8) |
12
(4) |
13
(14) |
14
(5) |
15
(4) |
16
(8) |
17
(4) |
18
(5) |
19
(4) |
20
(17) |
21
(14) |
22
(15) |
23
(7) |
24
(6) |
25
|
26
(1) |
27
(4) |
28
(5) |
29
(6) |
30
(8) |
31
(3) |
|
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-31 23:29:46
|
>>>>> "Randy" == Randy Heiland <he...@in...> writes: Randy> I'm just playing with matplotlib inside IPython for my Randy> first time and want to do the equivalent of: Randy> In [1]: subplot(211) In [2]: plot([1,2,3]) In [3]: show() -> displays as expected, in the upper half Use ipython in the pylab mode -- it will detect your backend and do the right thing if threading is required, and will set the matplotlib interactive state to be True. > ipython --pylab It will also set you to be in interactive mode, and no use of "show" is required -- see http://matplotlib.sf.net/interactive.html and http://matplotlib.sf.net/faq.html#SHOW. Randy> Now I want to interactively display a 2nd plot in the Randy> bottom, but when I do: In [4]: subplot(212) Randy> I get a new, single empty plot displayed in the lower half. Randy> Is there some 'hold' cmd I'm missing to do this? In matplotlibrc -- http://matplotlib.sf.net/.matplotlibrc -- there is an axes.hold parameter. matplotlib ships with axes.hold : True by default, so this should be your setting unless you changed it in a past life. It may be that the strangeness you are seeing vis-a-vis subplot(212) stems from not using interactive mode properly in conjunction with unsupported use of show, which should not be used in interactive mode as explained in the FAQ. You can query the current hold state with "ishold" and set it with "hold". Notice in the following pylab interactive session I don't need to import pylab as ipython does it for me; just make sure you're using a recent version of ipython and matplotlib. John-Hunters-Computer:~> ipython --pylab Python 2.3 (#1, Sep 13 2003, 00:49:11) Type "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. IPython 0.6.6 -- An enhanced Interactive Python. ? -> Introduction to IPython's features. %magic -> Information about IPython's 'magic' % functions. help -> Python's own help system. object? -> Details about 'object'. ?object also works, ?? prints more. Welcome to pylab, a matplotlib-based Python environment help(matplotlib) -> generic matplotlib information help(pylab) -> matlab-compatible commands from matplotlib help(plotting) -> plotting commands In [1]: ishold() Out[1]: True In [2]: hold(False) In [3]: ishold() Out[3]: False In [4]: |
From: Randy H. <he...@in...> - 2004-12-31 23:04:08
|
I'm just playing with matplotlib inside IPython for my first time and want to do the equivalent of: In [1]: subplot(211) In [2]: plot([1,2,3]) In [3]: show() -> displays as expected, in the upper half Now I want to interactively display a 2nd plot in the bottom, but when I do: In [4]: subplot(212) I get a new, single empty plot displayed in the lower half. Is there some 'hold' cmd I'm missing to do this? --Randy |
From: Jeff W. <js...@fa...> - 2004-12-31 13:31:08
|
Hi: The first version of a map plotting module is available at http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/jeffrey.s.whitaker/python/basemap/ (Source code http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/jeffrey.s.whitaker/python/basemap/basemap-20041229.tar.gz) It's not nearly as fully featured as the the matlab mapping toolbox, nor does it have the same API - but it does provide some useful functions for plotting images and contour plots on mercator, lat/lon, lambert conformal and stereographic projections. Plotting coastlines, countries boundaries and state boundaries in the Americas is supported. Filling continents is supported, but filling ocean areas is not (yet). There are also functions to plot selected parallels and meridians, as well as an interpolation function to regrid regularly spaced lat/lon data to a native map projection grid. In addition to numarray and matplotlib, the module requires proj (from http://proj.maptools.org). Hope someone finds it useful - comments and suggestions are welcome. -Jeff -- Jeffrey S. Whitaker Phone : (303)497-6313 NOAA/OAR/CDC R/CDC1 FAX : (303)497-6449 325 Broadway Web : http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/~jsw Boulder, CO, USA 80305-3328 Office: Skaggs Research Cntr 1D-124 |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-30 21:07:08
|
Stephen> Sounds like an interesting project. The first item I'd Stephen> have on a list of desired features is, surprise, the Stephen> ability to load multiple aligned images and blink between Stephen> them. With the new keypress event handling in matplotlib-0.70, and the cleanup to make sure the visible property is respected, this is pretty easy. The example below is more complicated than you need for the usual case, since it handles images of different pixel dimensions that occupy the same physical dimensions, but it gives you the idea (btw, this is now examples/toggle_images.py, which contains a bit more information in the header) What's the second item on the list :-) JDH from pylab import * # two images x1 is initially visible, x2 is not x1 = rand(100, 100) x2 = rand(150, 175) # arbitrary extent - both images must have same extent if you want # them to be resampled into the same axes space extent = (0,1,0,1) im1 = imshow(x1, extent=extent) im2 = imshow(x2, extent=extent, hold=True) im2.set_visible(False) def toggle_images(event): 'toggle the visible state of the two images' if event.key != 't': return b1 = im1.get_visible() b2 = im2.get_visible() im1.set_visible(not b1) im2.set_visible(not b2) draw() connect('key_press_event', toggle_images) #savefig('toggle_images') show() |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-30 20:48:33
|
This is (hopefully) a final rollup of what is (should be) a fairly stable tree. Mainly I wanted to send a release notification out to the larger python community (scipy/numpy/python-list) since I haven't done that since 0.60 (July 2004). For the major releases, I tend to try and shy away from new features preferring a stable src. But for you hardened, grizzled matplotlib veterans, there are a few enticements nonetheless - pie charts and new example/pie_demo.py. See http://matplotlib.sf.net/screenshots.html#pie_demo - support for object picking - see examples/picker_demo.py. As people test this out and we settle on an interface, this will probably become part of the core, as will other keypress functionality for navigation, grid toogle, zoom toggle etc. - Fixed coords notification in wx toolbar - key press and release event supported across backends -- see examples/keypress_demo.py - added Shadow patch class to provide a shadow effect for polygons, legends, pie charts - http://matplotlib.sf.net/screenshots.html#legend_demo - new examples/text_rotation.py demonstrates how text rotations and alignment work in matplotlib. Bug fixes - Fixed PS mathtext bug where color was not set - Fixed an agg text rotation alignment bug, fixed some text kwarg processing bugs - Refactored event handling - multiple connects and disconnects now work across backends. See examples/coords_demo.py, especially with test_disconnect - Fixed a tkagg interactive bug that caused segfaults in some conditions. As usual, downloads at http://sourceforge.net/projects/matplotlib JDH |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-30 20:25:22
|
>>>>> "seberino" == seberino <seb...@sp...> writes: seberino> Normally x-axis (horizontal) values increase to right seberino> and y-axis (vertical) values increase up the page. seberino> Is it easy/possible to reverse this for the y-axis?? seberino> (So that y-values **decrease** up the page for some seberino> range?) ylim(ymax, ymin) OR xlim(xmax, xmin) See, for example, http://matplotlib.sf.net/examples/invert_axes.py |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-30 20:23:25
|
>>>>> "Randy" == Randy Heiland <he...@in...> writes: Randy> Can matplotlib do image plots of a nonuniform mesh? from Randy> matplotlib.matlab import * Randy> x=array([0.,0.5,0.51,4.]) y=array([0.,1.]) X,Y = Randy> meshgrid(x,y) Z=array([[0,1,1,2],[0,1,1,2]]) im = Randy> imshow(Z,cmap=cm.jet) show() Yes, but note that the pcolor has numrows-1 rows and numcols-1 cols since the endpoints must be specified in your X,Y arrays x = array([0.,0.5,0.6,4.]) y = array([0.,1.,4]) X,Y = meshgrid(x,y) Z = array([[0,1,2,2],[0,1,1,2],[2,0,1,2]]) pcolor(X, Y, Z, cmap=cm.jet) JDH |
From: Randy H. <he...@in...> - 2004-12-30 19:36:34
|
Can matplotlib do image plots of a nonuniform mesh? from matplotlib.matlab import * x=array([0.,0.5,0.51,4.]) y=array([0.,1.]) X,Y = meshgrid(x,y) Z=array([[0,1,1,2],[0,1,1,2]]) im = imshow(Z,cmap=cm.jet) show() thanks, Randy |
From: <seb...@sp...> - 2004-12-30 07:26:26
|
Normally x-axis (horizontal) values increase to right and y-axis (vertical) values increase up the page. Is it easy/possible to reverse this for the y-axis?? (So that y-values **decrease** up the page for some range?) Chris -- _______________________________________ Christian Seberino, Ph.D. SPAWAR Systems Center San Diego Code 2872 49258 Mills Street, Room 158 San Diego, CA 92152-5385 U.S.A. Phone: (619) 553-9973 Fax : (619) 553-6521 Email: seb...@sp... _______________________________________ |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-30 02:59:55
|
>>>>> "seberino" == seberino <seb...@sp...> writes: seberino> It seems if your grid has 20 rows ( different y values) seberino> of points that you won't get 20 colored horizontal seberino> strips but rather *19*. This is because we must lose seberino> one row to specify the top and/or bottom EDGE of the seberino> plot.... so XX rows means (XX-1) rows of colored seberino> squares. yep that's right, a frequent source of confusion. seberino> Please tell me if this is right but more importantly, seberino> how to most wisely remove the white horizontal strip seberino> from this pcolor plot. Well it would help if you posted your code, but my guess is that you need to set your axis limits to equal your ymin/ymax of the pcolor. Perhaps this example will give you a hint >>> pcolor(rand(10,7)) # no white strip... >>> ylim(0,11) # a white strip because the ylim is wrong In essence, the axis autoscaler will round up, eg 4990 to 5000, to make nice integer ticks. With pcolors and images, you often don't want this, so use the axis, xlim, and/or ylim commands to set the limits properly. Eg ymin = min(ravel(Y)) ymax = max(ravel(Y)) ylim(ymin, ymax) Also, if your x and y grids are equally spaced, you'll get much better performance for large arrays, as well as more interpolation options, if you use imshow with the extent kwarg to set the extent of your image data. JDH |
From: <seb...@sp...> - 2004-12-30 02:18:29
|
I'm getting great pcolor plots like attached one and learning lots about it. So far so good. One minor question if you don't mind... I'm getting an empty white strip across the top of attached plot as you can see which led me deeper into workings of pcolor function. It seems if your grid has 20 rows ( different y values) of points that you won't get 20 colored horizontal strips but rather *19*. This is because we must lose one row to specify the top and/or bottom EDGE of the plot.... so XX rows means (XX-1) rows of colored squares. Please tell me if this is right but more importantly, how to most wisely remove the white horizontal strip from this pcolor plot. Thanks! chris |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-29 18:25:29
|
>>>>> "Eric" == Eric Emsellem <ems...@ob...> writes: Eric> Am I doing something wrong there? No, this is a bug in the tick labeling / extent setting for aspect preserved images - thanks for reminding me. I had managed to suppress it from my active memory! JDH |
From: Eric E. <ems...@ob...> - 2004-12-29 18:22:19
|
Hi, I am trying to display an image with imshow. What I am doing now is to write a small function which plot the image preserving the aspect ratio of the pixels in X and Y, but scaling the size of the image of the window but at the same time scaling the axes either to just surround the image (default) or to be larger. This should be easy as I can use 'preserve' for the 'aspect' of imshow: that takes care of the pixel scale on the figure. However then it does have axis which show incorrect coordinates, namely: - along the direction where the image is filling the figure window better it shows the right coordinates - along the other direction, the image is not filling the entire length (as expected if the image does not follow the window aspect ratio) but the axis are STILL showing the limits of the image. To be clear: for a square figure window. If my image is 100 x 50, then with aspect='preserve' I have the right coordinates along X (showing 0==> 100) but the wrong coordinates for Y (showing 0=>50, and NOT 0=>100 as it should since it fills only half the figure...). I hope this is clear. Am I doing something wrong there? Thanks, Eric E. -- =============================================================== Observatoire de Lyon ems...@ob... 9 av. Charles-Andre tel: +33 4 78 86 83 84 69561 Saint-Genis Laval Cedex fax: +33 4 78 86 83 86 France http://www-obs.univ-lyon1.fr/eric.emsellem =============================================================== |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-29 14:42:19
|
>>>>> "seberino" == seberino <seb...@sp...> writes: seberino> I installed Numeric and I can import it into Python but seberino> newest stable Matplotlib is barfing on it. I installed seberino> Matplotlib after I installed Numeric so I'm not sure seberino> reinstalling it will fix this problem. How fix? Just to be sure * rm -rf your "build" subdir in the matplotlib directory * make sure you have Numeric installed for the same python you are building with. Eg, specify the full path to python when testing and building > /usr/bin/python2.3 >>> import Numeric >>> CTRL-D > sudo /usr/bin/python2.3 setup.py install >& build.out * make sure you choose numerix : Numeric in .matplotlibrc If you encounter more problems, post build.out - the incantation for capturing standard output and standard error may differ depending on your shell Most of the times problems like this occur from distutils not properly rebuilding when it should and can be solved by erasing its memory, ie the "build" directory. Let me know... JDH |
From: <seb...@sp...> - 2004-12-29 07:11:12
|
I installed Numeric and I can import it into Python but newest stable Matplotlib is barfing on it. I installed Matplotlib after I installed Numeric so I'm not sure reinstalling it will fix this problem. How fix? Chris ...Here is error output....: The import of the numeric version of the _contour module, _nc_contour, failed. This is is either because numeric was unavailable when matplotlib was compiled, because a dependency of _nc_contour could not be satisfied, or because the build flag for this module was turned off in setup.py. If it appears that _nc_contour was not built, make sure you have a working copy of numeric and then re-install matplotlib. Otherwise, the following traceback gives more details: Traceback (most recent call last): File "test_campbell_diagram.py", line 10, in ? import campbell_diagram File "/home/seberino/MAIN/BusinessStuff/ThomasStuff/PlottingProject/CampbellDi agram/campbell_diagram.py", line 14, in ? import matplotlib.pylab File "/usr/lib/python2.3/site-packages/matplotlib/pylab.py", line 184, in ? from axes import Axes, PolarAxes File "/usr/lib/python2.3/site-packages/matplotlib/axes.py", line 11, in ? import _contour File "/usr/lib/python2.3/site-packages/matplotlib/_contour.py", line 11, in ? from matplotlib._nc_contour import * ImportError: No module named _nc_contour |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-29 03:54:18
|
>>>>> "Eric" == Eric Emsellem <ems...@ob...> writes: Eric> Hi, working more and more with matplotlib and adapt my local Eric> tools I find that (for me) 2 plotting functionalities are Eric> still missing (but are in the list of the ''goals''): Eric> - plotting a surface either using a mesh/grid like plotwith Eric> colours or a smooth rendering - I am not familiar with "plotwith colours". Is that a gnuplot command? I assume you are referring to a 3D surf or mesh plot here, no? The official answer here has always been we're deferring any serious work on 3D until we have a feature complete 2D lib in part because there are already a number of excellent 3D tools for python. There has been some proof-of-concept work integrating VTK ( a premier 3D lib) with matplotlib/agg -- you can find links on the goals page. Although there are good tools already out there, I am receptive to the argument that it's nice to have a core set of functionality under one roof, and so would like to include support for basic 3D plots down the road. If some enterprising person wanted to take this on sooner, I wouldn't be opposed. But I can't give you an estimate on the time frame right now. Like much in the open source world, it's chronically 6 months away :-) Eric> have the connect function update the ''key'' field when Eric> using the keyboard OK, to make up for the non-committal answer above, I implemented this in CVS and it will be available in the next release. Here's the keypress_demo from CVS from pylab import * def press(event): if event.key=='g': grid() draw() connect('key_press_event', press) title('press g to toggle grid') plot(rand(12), rand(12), 'go') show() In the process of getting this to work, I refactored the event handling across backends in such a way that it is now robust and seems to work well on all the backends, supporting multiple connects and disconnects. JDH |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-29 03:44:23
|
>>>>> "Jeff" == Jeff Whitaker <js...@fa...> writes: Jeff> I'm currently working on a map plotting module. I've added Jeff> the ability to plot filled continents on various map Jeff> projections, using the GSHHS coastline polygon dataset Jeff> (http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/wessel/gshhs/gshhs.html). This Jeff> dataset provides polygon segments that define continental Jeff> outlines. However, before I post it here I'd like to also Jeff> provide the capability to fill the 'wet' areas as well. In Jeff> order to do this I need to figure out how to fill the area Jeff> between the polygons. Looks like this module Jeff> (http://www.dezentral.de/soft/Polygon/index.html) would do Jeff> the trick, but it requires the generaly polygon clipping C Jeff> library. Do you have any suggestions? agg actually includes a wrapper for gpc, as well as the gpc code itself, but gpc is GPLd and I haven't included it in matplotlib for that reason. Agg separately implements a "scanline boolean algebra" which I haven't studied in detail but which I understand basically does the same thing: allow clipping to arbitrary polygons, and supports boolean operations on polygons -- http://www.antigrain.com/demo/index.html#PAGE_DEMO_scanline_boolean We have to expose the functionality such that it is available for use by other backends, much as we use agg for image across backends. If this is an area that you want to dive into, by all means. Otherwise, it's on the list of things to do (I just added it to the goals page in my tree, so it will appear on the site docs in the not-too-distant-future. JDH |
From: Jeff W. <js...@fa...> - 2004-12-28 23:11:28
|
John Hunter wrote: >>>>>>"Jeff" == Jeff Whitaker <js...@fa...> writes: >>>>>> >>>>>> > > Jeff> How do I suppress drawing a line around the polygon when > Jeff> using fill? I've tried fill(x,y,'gray',linewidth=0), but I > Jeff> still get a little tiny line (which is especially noticeable > Jeff> when using the postscript backend). > >Just make the facecolor and edgecolor the same > > > John: Thanks - I figured that one out myself about 5 minutes after I sent the message. I'm currently working on a map plotting module. I've added the ability to plot filled continents on various map projections, using the GSHHS coastline polygon dataset (http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/wessel/gshhs/gshhs.html). This dataset provides polygon segments that define continental outlines. However, before I post it here I'd like to also provide the capability to fill the 'wet' areas as well. In order to do this I need to figure out how to fill the area between the polygons. Looks like this module (http://www.dezentral.de/soft/Polygon/index.html) would do the trick, but it requires the generaly polygon clipping C library. Do you have any suggestions? Thanks for you help, -Jeff -- Jeffrey S. Whitaker Phone : (303)497-6313 Meteorologist FAX : (303)497-6449 NOAA/OAR/CDC R/CDC1 Email : Jef...@no... 325 Broadway Web : www.cdc.noaa.gov/~jsw Boulder, CO, USA 80303-3328 Office : Skaggs Research Cntr 1D-124 |
From: Alan G I. <ai...@am...> - 2004-12-28 22:33:07
|
>>>>>> "Jeff" == Jeff Whitaker <js...@fa...> writes: > Jeff> How do I suppress drawing a line around the polygon when > Jeff> using fill? I've tried fill(x,y,'gray',linewidth=0), but I > Jeff> still get a little tiny line (which is especially noticeable > Jeff> when using the postscript backend). On Tue, 28 Dec 2004, John Hunter apparently wrote: > Just make the facecolor and edgecolor the same I'll chime in here because I know someone is creating arrows using polygons. I have found that *any* width along the edge is a problem for arrows: they must be *only* filled and not stroked or they look like they point to the wrong point. (Perhaps 0.3 point unscaled would not be a serious problem for many uses, but remember there is a join at the tip!) So: is it possible to fill a polygon without stroking the edge (or to set the edge with to approximate 0)? By way of comment: this was a real problem in gnuplot up to version 3.8. (I've been meaning to check whether it was fixed in 4.0.) The arrows were stroked as well as filled, and they often looked very wrong. fwiw, Alan Isaac |
From: Eric E. <ems...@ob...> - 2004-12-28 13:55:56
|
Hi, working more and more with matplotlib and adapt my local tools I find that (for me) 2 plotting functionalities are still missing (but are in the list of the ''goals''): - plotting a surface either using a mesh/grid like plotwith colours or a smooth rendering - have the connect function update the ''key'' field when using the keyboard What is the present status/effort on these issues? thanks! Eric Emsellem -- =============================================================== Observatoire de Lyon ems...@ob... 9 av. Charles-Andre tel: +33 4 78 86 83 84 69561 Saint-Genis Laval Cedex fax: +33 4 78 86 83 86 France http://www-obs.univ-lyon1.fr/eric.emsellem =============================================================== |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-28 13:25:30
|
>>>>> "Jeff" == Jeff Whitaker <js...@fa...> writes: Jeff> How do I suppress drawing a line around the polygon when Jeff> using fill? I've tried fill(x,y,'gray',linewidth=0), but I Jeff> still get a little tiny line (which is especially noticeable Jeff> when using the postscript backend). Just make the facecolor and edgecolor the same >>> fill(x,y, edgecolor='gray', facecolor='gray) or whatever color you want them to be. You can also use aliases >>> fill(x,y, ec='gray', fc='gray) FYI, the new set/get introspection is designed to help you find these things, by printing property names and the values they accept In [3]: p, = fill(x,y) In [4]: p Out[4]: <matplotlib.patches.Polygon instance at 0x3b5ec60> In [5]: set(p) alpha: float antialiased or aa: [True | False] clip_box: a matplotlib.transform.Bbox instance clip_on: [True | False] edgecolor or ec: any matplotlib color - see help(colors) facecolor or fc: any matplotlib color - see help(colors) figure: a matplotlib.figure.Figure instance fill: [True | False] label: any string linewidth or lw: float lod: [True | False] transform: a matplotlib.transform transformation instance visible: [True | False] zorder: any number Hope this helps, JDH |
From: Jeff W. <js...@fa...> - 2004-12-28 12:23:59
|
How do I suppress drawing a line around the polygon when using fill? I've tried fill(x,y,'gray',linewidth=0), but I still get a little tiny line (which is especially noticeable when using the postscript backend). -Jeff -- Jeffrey S. Whitaker Phone : (303)497-6313 NOAA/OAR/CDC R/CDC1 FAX : (303)497-6449 325 Broadway Web : http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/~jsw Boulder, CO, USA 80305-3328 Office: Skaggs Research Cntr 1D-124 |
From: Stephen W. <ste...@cs...> - 2004-12-27 19:21:16
|
On Fri, 2004-12-24 at 09:21 -0500, Paul Barrett wrote: > I therefore propose that we start developing a Python version of DS9. > The benefits of a Python version based on matplotlib are TrueType fonts > (with arbitrary text rotation), alpha blending, and direct support for > numarray. Sounds like an interesting project. The first item I'd have on a list of desired features is, surprise, the ability to load multiple aligned images and blink between them. |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-27 19:07:00
|
>>>>> "Haibao" == Haibao Tang <ba...@ug...> writes: Haibao> Hi, in some analysis, I really think it useful if you can Haibao> add a crosshair feature so I can visually align the Haibao> position of peaks and falls (like the stock market), and Haibao> may be not hard to include, too. Basically, if the Haibao> "crosshair" checkbox checked, a horizontal and a vertical Haibao> line will appear with the movement of the mouse. It would be nice to have this feature efficiently across backends. There is an example which shows you how to do this for an arbitrary backend http://matplotlib.sf.net/examples/cursor_demo.py but it can be slow because it redraws the entire figure every time you move the cursor. This is a general problem with animations in matplotlib that we are thinking about - see for example http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?msg_id=10330431 . There is also an example showing how to do this for WX/WXAgg (if memory serves, you are using wx because it supports chinese characters). This uses WX to do the cursoring, which is much more efficient because you don't have to redraw the figure http://matplotlib.sf.net/examples/wxcursor_demo.py When time permits, it would be nice to add cursoring on each backend with native drawing of the cursor for efficiency... JDH |
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2004-12-27 18:57:52
|
>>>>> "Istvan" == Istvan Szapudi <sz...@If...> writes: Istvan> Hi All, I am fairly new to matplotlib, and I am impressed Istvan> with its capabilities. Istvan> I have trouble plotting loglog plots with errorbars. I Istvan> have the following, program, a slightly modified version Istvan> of one given earlier by JDH on 9-28-2004 in this mailing Istvan> list: This is definitely a gotcha that matplotlib needs to be smarted about handling. The log zero error is occurring when the transformation is made on the axes limits and not on the data. The autoscaler picks the best min/max for the data coordinates, and will round down or up to facilitate nice integer ticking. When you plot with linear coords, the autoscaler makes it's pick according to linear scaling, and then when you change scales the old scaling is in effect and the log transform fails when converting the viewport. Solution: rescale the axes after changing coords, either manually ax.set_yscale("log") ax.set_xscale("log") axis([0.5*min(x), 2*max(x), 0.5*min(y-err), 2*max(y+err)]) or use the autoscaler ax.set_yscale("log") ax.set_xscale("log") ax.autoscale_view() or set your log coords *before* calling plot ax = gca() ax.set_yscale("log") ax.set_xscale("log") errorbar(x,y,err,fmt='o') show() and then the errorbar command will pick a "locator" to handle ticking and viewport scaling appropriately from the outset. This is the approach taken in http://matplotlib.sf.net/examples/log_bar.py . Until I get this fixed to work automagically, I'll make it a FAQ. JDH |