Hi,
I trying to define an area in a pcolor plot (several plots) using the
ginput(). However since it is an irregular shape and will be different
in each plot so I cant define how many points there will be before hand,
I've tried the following but it requires a double click at each point,
which
On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 9:07 AM, David Craig wrote:
> Hi,
> I trying to define an area in a pcolor plot (several plots) using the
> ginput(). However since it is an irregular shape and will be different in
> each plot so I cant define how many points there will be before hand, I've
> tried the fo
Le jeudi 07 juin 2012 à 14:07 +0100, David Craig a écrit :
> Hi,
> I trying to define an area in a pcolor plot (several plots) using the
> ginput(). However since it is an irregular shape and will be different
> in each plot so I cant define how many points there will be before hand,
> I've trie
On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 12:14 PM, kamel maths wrote:
> Thanks for your answers.
>
> It is not very clear for me yet. This a script I tested.
> --
> from pylab import *
>
> fig = figure()
> ax = fig.add_subplot(111)
> ax.axis('equal')
>
> x = linspace(-2,
Thank you very much. It works at last.
Kamel
2012/6/7 Tony Yu
>
> On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 12:14 PM, kamel maths wrote:
>
>> Thanks for your answers.
>>
>> It is not very clear for me yet. This a script I tested.
>> --
>> from pylab import *
>>
>> fig =
Is it possible to clip an image like the matplotlib clip example, but by using
a polycollection. I'd like to avoid looping through and creating paths/patches
for each element and then combining them all at the end, is that the only way?
Cheers,
Alex
Alexander Crosby
RPS ASA
55 Village Square Dr
I am on Ubuntu 11.10
matplotlib version 1.1.0
numpy version 1.5.1
I have two bar graph scripts (good.py and bad.py). Each generates a graph
that contains two bars: one bar that extends along the positive y-axis and
another bar that extends along the negative y-axis. The only difference
between the
On Thu, Jun 7, 2012 at 3:44 PM, Mark Gurling wrote:
> I am on Ubuntu 11.10
> matplotlib version 1.1.0
> numpy version 1.5.1
>
> I have two bar graph scripts (good.py and bad.py). Each generates a graph
> that contains two bars: one bar that extends along the positive y-axis and
> another bar that
Mark Gurling:
>
> I have two bar graph scripts (good.py and bad.py).
...
> while in good.py the y-axis ends precisely at -30.0, in bad.py the
> y-axis ends below -30.0 despite the yticks setting specified on line
> 20. Is there an explanation for this behavior? How might I remedy this?
What do y