Thanks Eric. I'll give it a shot,
Mark
On 1/6/07, Eric Firing <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Mark Bakker wrote:
> Eric -
>
> Yeah, I agree. The words 'equal' is confusing. But it was taken from
> matlab. 'scaled' was my invention/doing. I thought it was better than
> 'equal', as it makes the scales equal on both axes. Either way, I would
> like it if we can fix the data limits in a simple way, and I think
> incorporating it in 'scaled' would be one option. A new option would be
> a good idea too. Something like 'scaledfixed' ? Maybe too long. Or just
> 'scaledf' ? Code is simple:
>
> elif s == 'scaledf':
> self.set_aspect('equal', adjustable='box',
anchor='C')
> self.set_autoscale_on(False)
No one else said anything about this, so I suspect that you may be the
only person using 'scaled' now. Given that you invented it, and that it
was present for a while in your original form, I decided to simply
restore it to that rather than to introduce another option. There are
potentially too many combinations to have a short name for each.
This is not irrevocable, of course.
I had to make a slight change in apply_aspect so that toggling back and
forth between this version of scaled and equal would work; I hope that
hasn't fouled up anything else. I think it should be OK.
Eric
>
> Thanks,
>
> Mark
>
>
> On 1/3/07, *Eric Firing* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
>
> Mark Bakker wrote:
> > The enhanced way of handling aspect ratios that Eric implemented
> works
> > great.
> > There is, however, one change from the old implementation that I
> don't like.
> >
> > In the old implementation, when setting axis('scaled') it also
> turned
> > autoscale off.
> > This makes sense (and I used it a lot). It means that you can set
the
> > axis('scaled'), which means the aspect ratios are set equal and
> the axis
> > limits are not changed, at any point when you like the data
> limits. The
> > axis limits are then fixed so that every time you add something
> else to
> > the figure it will keep these limits.
> >
> > In the new implementation (ok, it has been there for a little
while
> > now), you have to give a separate set_autoscale_on(False)
command.
> > Besides the odd name of the function (you actually turn the
autoscale
> > off), it is a command that should be set right away by
> axis('scaled').
> > If you want the autoscale to remain on, you should use
axis('equal')
>
> Here is the present code fragment (slightly mangled by the mailer):
>
> elif s in ('equal', 'tight', 'scaled', 'normal',
'auto',
> 'image'):
> self.set_autoscale_on(True)
> self.set_aspect('auto')
> self.autoscale_view()
> self.apply_aspect()
> if s=='equal':
> self.set_aspect('equal', adjustable='datalim')
> elif s == 'scaled':
> self.set_aspect('equal', adjustable='box',
> anchor='C')
> elif s=='tight':
> self.autoscale_view(tight=True)
> self.set_autoscale_on(False)
> elif s == 'image':
> self.autoscale_view(tight=True)
> self.set_autoscale_on(False)
> self.set_aspect('equal', adjustable='box',
> anchor='C')
>
> At present, the difference between "equal" and "scaled" is not the
> autoscale state but the "adjustable".
>
> I don't have any objection to changing the behavior of "scaled" as
you
> suggest, if that is what people want. Alternatively, yet another
word
> could be used to define the behavior you want, and that behavior
could
> be added. I don't find "scaled" or "equal" very descriptive or
> intuitive; nor do I find that either word suggests how autoscale
should
> be set. (And I agree, "set_autoscale_on(False)" is ugly.)
>
> Eric
>
>
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