Not a problem.

Hopefully it works for you. If you have tested it already would you mind 
posting what your results were? If you figured something else out as well that 
works for you I would also be appreciative if you posted your approach.

Regards,
Josh
On Jul 16, 2012, at 4:49 PM, Keith Jones wrote:

> Thanks Josh this is much appreciated. I will definitely have a look at this 
> approach.
>  
> Just for clarification, my code does only create the figures when the frame 
> is initialised.  The plots are then updated/cleared as required.
>  
> Regards,
> Keith
> From: Joshua Koehler [mailto:jjkoehl...@gmail.com] 
> Sent: Tuesday, 17 July 2012 12:12 a.m.
> To: matplotlib-users@lists.sourceforge.net
> Subject: Re: [Matplotlib-users] wxpython matplotlib figure resize
>  
> Yes, my apologies for being a bit vague. Hopefully the following can help you 
> out, but I can't make promises. It did fix the issue for me.
>  
> First off, from reading other threads about handling figures, it might be 
> better to use matplotlib.pylab.figure instead of matplotlib.figure. 
> Apparently the former registers the figure with a manager which allows for 
> better cleanup. 
>  
> Second, it looks to me from your code as if you are creating a figure every 
> time a new plot is created. Is this correct? Or are these functions just 
> called on startup? If you are creating a new figure each time for a plot, 
> (which is what I was originally doing) you should redesign so you keep the 
> same figure and then just update the subplots. Clear the figure and then add 
> the appropriate subplots. Here is a segment from my code:
>  
> def plot(figure, rows, cols, graph, title):
>     figure.clear()
>     plt.figure(figure.number)
>     pos_counter = 1
>     for g in graph:
>         g.axes = figure.add_subplot(rows, cols, pos_counter)
>         if title:
>             g.axes.set_title(g.plot_title)
>         plot_nx(g, plot_options=g.plot_options)
>         pos_counter = pos_counter + 1
>     figure.canvas.draw()
>  
> plt is the pylab module from matplotlib and plot_nx is an internal call to 
> networkx plotting capabiility (same as if you called the pyplot.plot). If you 
> do use pylab, make sure to include the plt.figure(figure.number) call as this 
> seems to be a bug (or perhaps this just is with networkx integration). 
>  
> This setup works for me rather well. I no longer have to manually resize 
> anything. 
>  
> I hope that helps. If not, I am at a loss for what would be a good way to 
> proceed. I, probably like you, spent a long time trying to figure this one 
> out and found this  to be the best solution. It might be good to go with the 
> clunky mechanism since it works and wait until this is addressed later (if it 
> is indeed a bug)
>  
> Regards,
>  
> Josh
> On Jul 14, 2012, at 4:13 AM, Keith Jones wrote:
> 
> 
> Hi Josh,
> I am not quite sure what information you need, but I have an application with 
> several wx notebooks, each with pages carrying related but different 2D and 
> 3D plots.  I hope this overview covers what you want.  In the code below I 
> set up the axes and toolbar in each panel ready to accept plots as required.  
> I use wxFormbuilder to create MyFrame1 and then this code to add graphs and 
> other functionality.  The 'tickle' function is called when a notebook is 
> selected for display.
>  
> import wx
> from matplotlib.backends.backend_wxagg import FigureCanvasWxAgg as 
> FigureCanvas
> from matplotlib.backends.backend_wxagg import NavigationToolbar2WxAgg
> from matplotlib.figure import Figure
> from mpl_toolkits.mplot3d import Axes3D
>  
> class ProjectFrame(bare_gui.MyFrame1):
>     def __init__( self, parent):
>         bare_gui.MyFrame1.__init__( self, parent)
> ...
>         self.Create2DGraph(self.CT_graph_1, "Current / %")#CT notebook
>         self.Create2DGraph(self.VT_graph_1, "Voltage/ %")#VT notebook
> ...
>         self.Show(True)
>  
>     def Create2DGraph(self, panel, xlabel):
>         panel.figure = Figure(None)
>         panel.canvas = FigureCanvas(panel, -1, panel.figure)
>         panel.axes1 = panel.figure.add_subplot(2,1,1)
>         panel.axes2 = panel.figure.add_subplot(2,1,2)
>         panel.axes1.set_xlabel(xlabel)
>         panel.axes1.set_ylabel('Error / %')
>         panel.axes2.set_xlabel(xlabel)
>         panel.axes2.set_ylabel('Phase / crad')
>         panel.sizer = wx.BoxSizer(wx.VERTICAL)
>         panel.sizer.Add(panel.canvas, 1, wx.LEFT | wx.TOP | wx.GROW)
>         panel.SetSizer(panel.sizer)
>         panel.Fit()
>         self.add_2Dtoolbar(panel)
>      
>     def add_2Dtoolbar(self, panel):
>         panel.toolbar = NavigationToolbar2WxAgg(panel.canvas)
>         panel.toolbar.Realize()
>         tw, th = panel.toolbar.GetSizeTuple()
>         fw, fh = panel.canvas.GetSizeTuple()
>         panel.toolbar.SetSize(wx.Size(fw, th))
>         panel.sizer.Add(panel.toolbar, 0, wx.LEFT | wx.EXPAND)
>         # update the axes menu on the toolbar
>         panel.toolbar.update()
>  
>     def Create3DGraph(self, panel):
>         panel.figure = Figure(None)
>         panel.canvas = FigureCanvas(panel, -1, panel.figure)
>         panel.ax = Axes3D(panel.figure)
>         #these labels should be selected later for specific components
>         panel.ax.set_xlabel('Current / %')
>         panel.ax.set_ylabel('Phase / degree')
>         panel.ax.set_zlabel('Error / %')
>         panel.sizer = wx.BoxSizer(wx.VERTICAL)
>         panel.sizer.Add(panel.canvas, 1, wx.LEFT | wx.TOP | wx.GROW)
>         panel.SetSizer(panel.sizer)
>         panel.Fit()
>         self.add_2Dtoolbar(panel)
> From: Joshua Koehler [jjkoehl...@gmail.com]
> Sent: Friday, 13 July 2012 10:45 p.m.
> To: matplotlib-users@lists.sourceforge.net
> Subject: Re: [Matplotlib-users] wxpython matplotlib figure resize
> 
> Hi Keith,
>  
> How are you storing the plot in the frame/panel?
>  
> Josh
> On Jul 12, 2012, at 11:59 PM, Keith Jones wrote:
> 
> 
> Hi Josh,
> Yes I too am using the wx backend.
>  
> Regards,
> Keith
>  
> From: Tony Yu [mailto:tsy...@gmail.com] 
> Sent: Friday, 13 July 2012 3:16 p.m.
> To: Keith Jones
> Cc: Joshua Koehler; matplotlib-users@lists.sourceforge.net
> Subject: Re: [Matplotlib-users] wxpython matplotlib figure resize
>  
>  
> On Thu, Jul 12, 2012 at 9:27 PM, Keith Jones <k.jo...@irl.cri.nz> wrote:
> Hi,
> I am interested in a better solution to this problem, but I have used this 
> simple method to force the right size.
>  
>     def tickle(self):
>         #gets frame to redraw and resize, not elegant.
>         if self.IsMaximized(): #then needs a kick
>             self.Restore()
>             self.Maximize()
>         else:
>             x,y = self.GetSize()
>             self.SetSize((x-1, y-1))
>             self.SetSize((x, y))
>  
> Regards,
> Keith
>  
> From: Joshua Koehler [mailto:jjkoehl...@gmail.com] 
> Sent: Saturday, 7 July 2012 1:51 a.m.
> To: matplotlib-users@lists.sourceforge.net
> Subject: [Matplotlib-users] wxpython matplotlib figure resize
>  
> Hi all,
> 
> I am currently trying to use matplotlib with wxPython and all is going well 
> except for one annoying issue that I can't figure out. 
> 
> I initialize a wxcanvas object with a figure and then throughout the life of 
> the program I want the canvas' figure to change and display the corresponding 
> plot. I can get the change of figure, but when the program goes to plot, the 
> figure isn't the right size. It changes to the right size only when I 
> manually resize the figure (see attached images). Is there some command that 
> I am missing? This is the update sequence I am using:
> 
> self.figure = figure
>         
>         self.canvas.figure.clear()
>         self.canvas.figure = self.figure
>         self.canvas.draw()
>         self.color_background()
>         
>         #self.GetParent().Layout()
>         #self.SetSizer(self.main_sizer)
>         #self.Fit()
>         self.SendSizeEvent()
> 
> As you can tell from the comments (there are more in my code), I have tried a 
> variety of ways to update the figure off the bat.
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> Josh
> 
>  
> This may be similar to a Qt-backend bug, which didn't take the toolbar into 
> account when resizing the figure:
> https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/pull/756
> It doesn't quite fit, though, because Josh's original example shows a figure 
> that's the correct size (but the axes doesn't fill the figure).  The toolbar 
> issue tended to squish the axes in the vertical direction (at least in the 
> GUI window), whereas Josh's example is squished in the horizontal direction.
>  
> Keith: Are you also using the Wx-backend? I don't have Wx installed so I 
> can't provide much help. I've been planning to take a look at a similar issue 
> in the Tk backend, but haven't had time.
>  
> Best,
> -Tony
>  
>  
>  
> 
> This electronic transmission and any documents accompanying this electronic 
> transmission contain confidential information belonging to the sender. This 
> information may be legally privileged. The information is intended only for 
> the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended 
> recipient, you are hereby notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution 
> or the taking of any action in reliance on or regarding the contents of this 
> electronically transmitted information is strictly prohibited.
>  
>  
>  

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