On 10/18/2013 12:58 PM, Paulo Meira wrote:
Hi, all,
It didn't work for me with mpl 1.3 but it does with 1.3.1 (openSuse
12.3, python 2.7.3, 64-bit).
To install 1.3.1, I had to use the archive from SourceForge directly
since only 1.3.0 is listed on pypi (I used pip) -- could that be the
sourc
Hi, all,
It didn't work for me with mpl 1.3 but it does with 1.3.1 (openSuse 12.3,
python 2.7.3, 64-bit).
To install 1.3.1, I had to use the archive from SourceForge directly since
only 1.3.0 is listed on pypi (I used pip) -- could that be the source of
this issue for you?
Regards,
Paulo Meira
--
I am using mpl 1.3, python 2.7.3, 64-bit linux (fedora 19)
Andrew Dawson wrote:
> For what it is worth I see behaviour identical to Neal. I'm using a
> development version of matplotlib (v1.4.x, sorry I don't know the hash of
> the installed version) on 64-bit Linux (Ubuntu 12.04) and Python 2.7.
For what it is worth I see behaviour identical to Neal. I'm using a
development version of matplotlib (v1.4.x, sorry I don't know the hash of
the installed version) on 64-bit Linux (Ubuntu 12.04) and Python 2.7.3.
That probably doesn't help much, except to show that this is not specific
to just Nea
This is really puzzling. What version of matplotlib are you running,
what platform, and what version of Python? Your example works just fine
for me.
Mike
On 10/18/2013 08:40 AM, Neal Becker wrote:
> Neal Becker wrote:
>
>> This example shows the error on my platform - the xlabel is not render
Neal Becker wrote:
> This example shows the error on my platform - the xlabel is not rendered with
> tex but instead the '$' are printed:
>
> import numpy as np
> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
> plt.xkcd()
>
> fig = fig = plt.figure()
> ax = fig.add_subplot(111)
> plt.plot (np.arange (10), 2*n
Michael Droettboom wrote:
> On 10/18/2013 08:20 AM, Neal Becker wrote:
>> Michael Droettboom wrote:
>>
>>> The built-in mathtext support does. (I can put "xkcd()" at the top of
>>> the mathtext_demo.py example and all is well).
>>>
>>> It does not work when |text.usetex| is True (when using extern
On 10/18/2013 08:20 AM, Neal Becker wrote:
> Michael Droettboom wrote:
>
>> The built-in mathtext support does. (I can put "xkcd()" at the top of
>> the mathtext_demo.py example and all is well).
>>
>> It does not work when |text.usetex| is True (when using external TeX).
>> But in that case, it sh
This example shows the error on my platform - the xlabel is not rendered with
tex but instead the '$' are printed:
import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.xkcd()
fig = fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(111)
plt.plot (np.arange (10), 2*np.arange(10))
ax.set_xlabel ('$E_{s}/N
Michael Droettboom wrote:
> The built-in mathtext support does. (I can put "xkcd()" at the top of
> the mathtext_demo.py example and all is well).
>
> It does not work when |text.usetex| is True (when using external TeX).
> But in that case, it should have thrown an exception:
>
> |Traceback (mo
The built-in mathtext support does. (I can put "xkcd()" at the top of
the mathtext_demo.py example and all is well).
It does not work when |text.usetex| is True (when using external TeX).
But in that case, it should have thrown an exception:
|Traceback (most recent call last):
File "mathtex
It appears that latex doesn't work with xkcd?
I put for example:
self.ax.set_xlabel ('$E_s/N_0$')
Which go rendered with the '$' signs and not as latex
And my vertical axis was labeled as:
$\mathdefault{10^{3}}$ ...
-
12 matches
Mail list logo