Hello Jerzy & All, On 14 February 2012 17:55, Jerzy Karczmarczuk wrote: > Andrea, I believe that if you find ONE good visual aspect ratio, > according to your figure size, that should do. Yo know your > figsize, and if you know all in your axes([bot,lft,wid, height]), that > this visual ratio should be easy to fix.
I managed to get *almost* there, but there still is a small glitch. I attach a self-evident sample, which generates data very similar to the real ones I have and shows the two "parallel" curves to the main one. You will notice that the "parallel" curves look parallel almost all the time, except in a few areas (I have annotated the plot for reference). I can't see the reason for this difference, but it is obvious I am missing something. One thing I didn't include is that in my real-life plot, the figure size should be full screen (which on my screen means 20x13.65 inches) and I use the subplots_adjust command like this: fig.subplots_adjust(left=0.03, right=0.7, bottom=0.04, top=0.96) Thank you in advance for any suggestion. Andrea. "Imagination Is The Only Weapon In The War Against Reality." http://xoomer.alice.it/infinity77/
parallels2.py
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Virtualization & Cloud Management Using Capacity Planning Cloud computing makes use of virtualization - but cloud computing also focuses on allowing computing to be delivered as a service. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfnl/114/51521223/
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