Hi, that is great!  Can you give me a git repository address to pull
from?  I can't from the web viewer.

Thanks,
J.

On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 4:25 AM, Reinier Heeres <rein...@heeres.eu> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I updated my patch a bit more, and now all tests are running (try
> "python axes3d.py"). Only the contourf3D is not working correctly yet,
> but I'm sure it's fixable soon. There are also some obvious bugs (e.g.
> the semi-3D histograms are not depth-sorted).
>
> Anyway, I have applied the commit in a different git repo that also
> has gitweb.cgi for viewing:
> http://qtwork.nano.tudelft.nl/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?p=users/rwh/mplot3d;a=summary
>
> Jon, I got rid of the spurious commit-and-revert entries but included
> your latest commits; perhaps you can clone from this tree now?
>
> Although I've not had a close look at the BSD license it definitely
> sounds like a good idea to add it if it applies to the original code.
> Shall we try to work to some sort of easily-installable form of the
> again-working code?
>
> Regards,
> Reinier
>
> On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 3:45 AM, Jonathan Taylor
> <jonathan.tay...@utoronto.ca> wrote:
>> Hi Reinier,
>>
>> Awesome.  Those plots are making me smile! I also agree with your
>> refactoring and have applied your patch to my git repository.
>>
>> I agree with you concerning the sympy plotting routines.  I think what
>> we have here is quite flexible and does a very good job of replicating
>> the equivalent functionality of MATLAB.  I think it would be a huge
>> effort trying to make 2D plots and 3D plots look consistent if another
>> approach was taken.  Indeed, this is a desirable characteristic.  In
>> addition, the code is actually very short and easy to maintain.  Given
>> that matplotlib has had trouble maintaining 3D code in the past, it
>> might not be a good idea to switch to a more complicated codebase.
>>
>> You should grab some of my more recent changes as I have added a few
>> more fixes.  Most importantly, if you reuse the same figure, the old
>> event handlers will still attached preventing Axes objects from dieing
>> and causing interactive manipulation of the plots to be very sluggish.
>>  Also, in terms of performance, I have found that switching to TkAgg
>> from GTKAgg was helpful.
>>
>> Also, I think the original code from John Porter was under a BSD
>> license.  I am thinking of adding our names and the BSD license to the
>> top of each file to protect it while its not officially part of
>> matplotlib.  What do you think?
>>
>> Best,
>> Jonathan.
>
> --
> Reinier Heeres
> Waalstraat 17
> 2515 XK Den Haag
> The Netherlands
>
> Tel: +31 6 10852639
>
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