This is exactly what I wanted.
Thanks a lot.
I just wanted to know wether it was possible to add a little margin for the
y axes because I can't see the highest point of the curve since it's on the
edge of the subplot.
Anyway, thanks a lot for the good work.
Johan
2008/6/10 John Hunter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Tue, Jun 10, 2008 at 8:51 AM, Johan Mazel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > Hi
> > I display two data vectors : the first is in the subplot 2,1,1 and the
> > second in the subplot 2,1,2. Each of the data vectors have an x vector of
> > dates to display values on x axis.
> > The 2 data vectors are correlated in time and I want to show the
> > correlation.
> >
> > But the two data vectors are not aligned as I wanted them to be since the
> > data vector of subplot 2,1,2 have less element than the other one.
> >
> > I can't use the same x vector for both curves since it would force me to
> add
> > empty values in the second data vector. And I don't want to do that since
> it
> > would add useless points in my curve.
> >
> > So I need to find a way to allow me to align both data vectors on the
> > different subplots without adding point to the data vector with a smaller
> > number of elements.
>
> Does this do what you want?
>
> ax1 = subplot(211)
> ax1.plot(x1, y1)
> ax2 = subplot(212, sharex=ax1)
> ax2.plot(x2, y2)
>
> ditto for sharey if you want to share the same y axes...
>
>
> I
>
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