March EPD Webinar: How do I...solve ODEs? Part II
This Friday, Warren Weckesser will present a second installment of his
webinars on differential equations. We will explore two Python packages for
solving boundary value problems. Both are packaged as scikits:
scikits.bvp_solver, written by John S
Hi,
I created an eps figure file with matplotlib. I can look at it via mac preview,
but when I inserted it into a word document and printed it out, I got nothing
except for the eps file information. So what's the problem? Here are all the
packages I used in the python code. Does any of them imp
Some time ago I tried to install matplotlib using zc.buildout, to make
sure I always had the same version everywhere and so on.
Even if numpy was installed it was not found, and someone told me to
modify the setup.py of matplotlib.
But since I think it should work out of the box I think I'm doing
Paul Ivanov writes:
>
> Hi Andrea,
>
> I think Gökhan is pointing out a different feature than the one
> you want. You seem to want to adjust the x and y limits of the
> plot to be some fraction larger than the data that's plotted.
>
> You can do this with:
>
> ax = plt.subplot(111)
> ax.plot(ra
Gökhan Sever writes:
> Hi,
>
> You can try:
>
> fig, ax = plt.subplots(1,1)
> ax.plot(range(10))
> fig.subplots_adjust(left=0.05, right=0.95, bottom=0.05, top=0.95)
>
> If you choose WXAgg as your backend you get a nice config tool to adjust
> spacing in the figure. Then just pass those numbers in