ok thanks for the check. Since it seems like a personal setting pb, I
have now restarted from a clean matplotlibrc and set up my prefered option.
It now works (no clue why it didn't...)
sorry for the trouble and thanks for doing that test.
cheers
Eric
Eric Firing wrote:
> It works on my machine (
> "Eric" == Eric Firing <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Eric> either, indistinguishably from the way it does now. The
Eric> problem is that with a linear axis we want the axis to start
Eric> at zero by default, but with a log axis we want it to start
With ymin at 1e-100, the default (
Diwaker Gupta wrote:
>> Examples:
>>
>> This makes a sensible plot that behaves well under zooming and panning:
>> hist(randn(1000), log=True)
>> show()
>
> Thanks! However...
>
>> The following still generates an exception:
>> hist(randn(1000))
>> gca().set_yscale('log')
>> show()
>
> I think t
> Examples:
>
> This makes a sensible plot that behaves well under zooming and panning:
> hist(randn(1000), log=True)
> show()
Thanks! However...
> The following still generates an exception:
> hist(randn(1000))
> gca().set_yscale('log')
> show()
I think this makes the API more confusing. As an
It works on my machine (linux) with svn, but I don't see anything about
this in CHANGELOG.
Eric
Eric Emsellem wrote:
> hi,
>
> I am trying to have text written on 2 lines, but everything is written
> on a single line. Is that normal?
>
> here is an example:
>
> plot(arange(10))
> ylabel('this
hi,
I am trying to have text written on 2 lines, but everything is written
on a single line. Is that normal?
here is an example:
plot(arange(10))
ylabel('this is vertical \n test')
text(0.5,0.5,"this is a test \n but does not work")
thanks
Eric
===
Suse 10.1
matplotlib versi
John,
Thank you for your thorough and thoughtful reply. OK, I am convinced. I
had not realized that the present line-drawing code actually is omitting
nonpositive points, but now I see the Line.get_plottable() method.
I have committed changes to svn that I think will be helpful--maybe good
en
Chris Pettit wrote:
> Thanks in advance to anyone who can help. This is my first extended
> attempt to make matplotlib work, and I'm relatively new to the whole
> Python world. I have MacPython2.4 running now, which seems to work
> fine. I installed everything for matplotlib, scipy, etc., fro
Thanks in advance to anyone who can help. This is my first extended
attempt to make matplotlib work, and I'm relatively new to the whole
Python world. I have MacPython2.4 running now, which seems to work
fine. I installed everything for matplotlib, scipy, etc., from the
Mac OS 10.4 SciPy Su
Petr Danecek wrote:
> Hello,
> first of all: thanks for the great software!! After the years of
> struggling with gnuplot, i really enjoy making my graphs with
> matplotlib.
>
> I'd like to ask, if it is possible to create a contour graph using polar
> coordinates? If not, can someone give me some
Hello,
first of all: thanks for the great software!! After the years of
struggling with gnuplot, i really enjoy making my graphs with
matplotlib.
I'd like to ask, if it is possible to create a contour graph using polar
coordinates? If not, can someone give me some pointers about how to
implement i
> "Eric" == Eric Firing <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Eric> Adjusting zero and negative values (or maybe just zero)
Eric> would be unacceptable in a numerics library, but in the
Eric> context of our graphical transforms it is analogous to
Eric> clipping, and this we do all the
Hi Steve!
Yes, that's right. Most of the people will help themselves with saving
the picture and then printing by an arbitary program.
On Linux I would implement printing via pipelines to lp, but on Windows
I have no clue how to get the job done. So I was glad to find the
PrintOperations for GTK2
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