I like that. Furthermore, now that we build and push the docs with every
merge in master, there is less reason to not do it that way.

On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 1:56 PM, Thomas Caswell <tcasw...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Currently we are doing MEPs on the wiki (
> https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/wiki/MEPTemplate) , but I would
> like to move them to be in the docs (make a MEP folder next to 'users'?) as
> the visibility on the wiki is low, there isn't a great way to leave line
> comments, and we should have these documents in the official docs
> eventually.
>
> Tom
>
> On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 1:45 PM Nicolas P. Rougier <
> nicolas.roug...@inria.fr> wrote:
>
>>
>> Yes, a MEP makes sense to discuss the proposal.
>> What's the procedure to open a MEP (i.e. where) ?
>>
>> Nicolas
>>
>>
>> > On 18 Mar 2015, at 18:44, Benjamin Root <ben.r...@ou.edu> wrote:
>> >
>> > Also, perhaps it makes sense to make this a MEP to finalize and
>> document the spec?
>> >
>> > On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 1:42 PM, Benjamin Root <ben.r...@ou.edu> wrote:
>> > That is neat. I would be sure to put in some "..seealso::" lines in
>> places like plt.subplots and GridSpec and such.
>> >
>> > A thought... could this perhaps be extended somehow to specify
>> colorbars in the layout? I am not sure how I would do that, but if we could
>> come up with a way to do it, *that* would make this a killer feature. But
>> even without that, this is still pretty useful.
>> >
>> > On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 1:20 PM, Thomas Caswell <tcasw...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> > Cool.  I think it make sense to put this in to `pyplot.py` next to
>> `subplots`
>> >
>> > Tom
>> >
>> > On Wed, Mar 18, 2015 at 1:14 PM Nicolas P. Rougier <
>> nicolas.roug...@inria.fr> wrote:
>> >
>> > Hi,
>> >
>> > I've been experimenting with a simple idea for specifying plot layout
>> in a rather intuitive way.
>> > The idea is simply to "draw" your layout using strings.
>> >
>> > Examples:
>> >
>> > layout = ["AB"]
>> > -> means two plots side by side with equal width
>> >
>> > layout = ["AAAB"]
>> > -> means two plots side by side A being 3 times wider than B
>> >
>> > layout = ["AB",
>> >           "CC"]
>> > -> means two plots (A & B) side by side and C below with full width
>> >
>> > layout = ["AB",
>> >           "C "]
>> > -> means two plots (A & B) side by side and C below A (same width)
>> >
>> > etc... (have a look at sources)
>> >
>> > I guess you cannot express every layout but it might work for most
>> common ones.
>> >
>> > If you think this might a good addition I can try to make a PR but I'm
>> not sure where to insert it.
>> > My idea would be to have a layout function such that you can write:
>> >
>> > A,B,C = plt.layout(["AB", "CC"], border=0.01)
>> > A.plot(...)
>> > B.plot(...)
>> > C.plot(...)
>> >
>> >
>> > Nicolas
>> >
>> >
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>> >
>> >
>>
>>
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