Thanks. Easy and useful.
On Fri, Jun 1, 2012 at 7:23 PM, Tony Yu wrote:
>
>>> On 06/01/2012 02:58 PM, Mark Bakker wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello List,
>>>
>>> I want to plot plot([1000,2000])
>>> Then on the y-axis, I want labels 1 and 2, and at the top of the y-axis
>>> I want E3.
>>> This works automati
>
>
>> On 06/01/2012 02:58 PM, Mark Bakker wrote:
>>
>> Hello List,
>>
>> I want to plot plot([1000,2000])
>> Then on the y-axis, I want labels 1 and 2, and at the top of the y-axis I
>> want E3.
>> This works automatically with plot([1e7,2e7]).
>> But I assume that is something that can be set for
Thanks Zoltan.
That sounds like an interesting video that I will watch.
For now, does anybody know the answer?
Mark
On Fri, Jun 1, 2012 at 3:01 PM, Zoltán Vörös wrote:
> I think, you could just watch the video by John Hunter. He discusses
> these issues at length.
>
> http://marakana.com/s/ad
I think, you could just watch the video by John Hunter. He discusses
these issues at length.
http://marakana.com/s/advanced_matplotlib_tutorial_with_library_author_john_hunter,1133/index.html
Cheers,
Zoltná
On 06/01/2012 02:58 PM, Mark Bakker wrote:
Hello List,
I want to plot plot([1000,2000]
Hello List,
I want to plot plot([1000,2000])
Then on the y-axis, I want labels 1 and 2, and at the top of the y-axis I
want E3.
This works automatically with plot([1e7,2e7]).
But I assume that is something that can be set for plot([1e3,2e3]) as well.
I have been browsing the examples, and tried t