On Mon, 3 Dec 2007, Michael Droettboom wrote:
> That may be beyond matplotlib's control. Matplotlib "requests" a solid
> grey color, but the printing stack (Acrobat, the printer driver or the
> printer itself) could be interpreting that in many ways. You could
> experiment with various printer s
Peter I. Hansen wrote:
> On Nov 30, 2007 11:14 PM, Michael Droettboom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Thanks for the script. I ran it through 0.90 and 0.91... Perhaps I
>> don't understand your problem with color. To my eyes, the plot
>> generated with Agg (to a PNG) and to a PDF look the same, in
Peter I. Hansen wrote:
> On Nov 30, 2007 4:58 PM, Michael Droettboom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Peter I. Hansen wrote:
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> I'm typestting some graphs including a few axvspan's with eg. a
>>> facecolor='0.6' . This looks very nice if I output a PNG, but when I
>>> inculde this in my
On Nov 30, 2007 4:58 PM, Michael Droettboom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Peter I. Hansen wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I'm typestting some graphs including a few axvspan's with eg. a
> > facecolor='0.6' . This looks very nice if I output a PNG, but when I
> > inculde this in my TeX document the axis labels
Peter I. Hansen wrote:
> Hi
>
> I'm typestting some graphs including a few axvspan's with eg. a
> facecolor='0.6' . This looks very nice if I output a PNG, but when I
> inculde this in my TeX document the axis labels dosn't scale. Then I
> try to go the postscript way, and the the labels scale nic
Hi
I'm typestting some graphs including a few axvspan's with eg. a
facecolor='0.6' . This looks very nice if I output a PNG, but when I
inculde this in my TeX document the axis labels dosn't scale. Then I
try to go the postscript way, and the the labels scale nicely but the
colored fields of axvsp