David J. Raymond wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 19, 2010 at 05:47:05PM -1000, Eric Firing wrote:
>> David J. Raymond wrote:
>>> I am using python 2.5.5 and the gtk background (as far as I can tell).
>>> Turning off path.simplify gets rid of the extraneous line. I am
>>> attaching pngs with path.simplify bot
On Fri, Mar 19, 2010 at 05:47:05PM -1000, Eric Firing wrote:
> David J. Raymond wrote:
> >I am using python 2.5.5 and the gtk background (as far as I can tell).
> >Turning off path.simplify gets rid of the extraneous line. I am
> >attaching pngs with path.simplify both on and off. I am also
> >at
David J. Raymond wrote:
> I am using python 2.5.5 and the gtk background (as far as I can tell).
> Turning off path.simplify gets rid of the extraneous line. I am
> attaching pngs with path.simplify both on and off. I am also
> attaching the full coastline file that produced the original problem.
I can't reproduce anything like a bug, either. What backend are you
using? Have you tried turning path.simplify on or off? (Makes no
difference here, just seems a likely candidate).
Mike
Jeff Whitaker wrote:
> On 3/19/10 11:10 AM, David J. Raymond wrote:
>> I am trying to plot two 1-D masked
On 3/19/10 11:10 AM, David J. Raymond wrote:
I am trying to plot two 1-D masked arrays against each other
in a line plot and an extraneous straight line appears on
the plot. This phenomenon only occurs sporadically and with
certain data sets. I have noticed a similar phenomenon with
masked arro
I am trying to plot two 1-D masked arrays against each other
in a line plot and an extraneous straight line appears on
the plot. This phenomenon only occurs sporadically and with
certain data sets. I have noticed a similar phenomenon with
masked arrow arrays, but that is much harder to track down