I am writting an application that evaluate curve fit and draw its plot in a
GUI , I want to draw or show the plot on the GUI not on the pop up window,
but I don't want to save the figure in first step , user just enter an order
for the curve fit and see their plots on the main window (GUI) .
How
Alan G Isaac wrote:
On Thu, 14 Feb 2008, Neal Becker apparently wrote:
Can I get nice default line styles and markers,
automatically set up with matching legend? Automatically
chosen? I don't want to have to go through and manually
choose each marker and line style.
Well, you have to
On Mon, 18 Feb 2008, apparently wrote:
I am writting an application that evaluate curve fit and
draw its plot in a GUI , I want to draw or show the plot
on the GUI not on the pop up window, but I don't want to
save the figure in first step , user just enter an order
for the curve fit and
Chris Kennedy wrote:
hi Mike,
I was able to get it to work using:
reload(matplotlib)
matplotlib.use('Agg')
That suggests that the bug is somehow related to GUI code. As John
pointed out, we'll want to very exactly which GUI backend is being used.
I'll have to beat on it some
On Feb 19, 2008 3:32 AM, sa6113 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am writting an application that evaluate curve fit and draw its plot in a
GUI , I want to draw or show the plot on the GUI not on the pop up window,
but I don't want to save the figure in first step , user just enter an order
for the
Dear all,
I ran into a memory problem when trying to draw a few hundred png files
using one imshow per file. The problem can be boiled down to the
attached code which eats my memory very quickly until Python bombs out.
I tried to del objects after their use, looked for garbage and read
the
On Feb 19, 2008 8:37 AM, Leif Oppermann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
from pylab import *
import gc
for i in range (1000):
A=rand(1024,1024)
im = imshow(A)
#del A #doesn't help
#del im #doesn't help
#print gc.garbage # no garbage
matplotlib overplots by default -- try setting
On Tue, 19 Feb 2008, Neal Becker apparently wrote:
IIUC, in order to have each line with distinct line style, I have to
explicitly set the line style. I want pylab to just choose them, just as
it does for colors.
Well, pylab does choose: it varies color and not the dash
pattern in order
On Feb 19, 2008 9:13 AM, Alan G Isaac [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Of course you can do something like this::
from itertools import cycle
mystyles = ['r+-', 'b.--', 'go-.'] #etc
ax1styles = cycle( mystyles )
You can also cycle through the list matplotlib uses
import
With Stef's help, I was able to get pass the
Matplotlib datafile not found problem in using
py2exe and Matplotlib under Python 2.3 - but then ran
into the same Tkinter not loaded problem like he did.
After reading Stef's messages from this list, I
downloaded the latest version of Matplotlib -
hi John,
John Hunter wrote:
On Feb 18, 2008 1:11 PM, Stef Mientki [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What is setup.cfg, where can I find it and where can I get information
about it ?
Let's keep this on matplotlib-users so we don't annoy the good folks
at the wxpython and distutils lists...
hi John,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
With Stef's help, I was able to get pass the
Matplotlib datafile not found problem in using
py2exe and Matplotlib under Python 2.3 - but then ran
into the same Tkinter not loaded problem like he did.
After reading Stef's messages from this list, I
I'm not an expert but I thought I'd try and help...
On Feb 19, 2008 7:15 PM, Stef Mientki [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
where you got it from,
probably: http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=80706
matplotlib-0.91.2.win32-py2.4.exe
This is a binary distribution, that is one that
So, do I understand this correctly:
In order to get rid of the Tkinter problem when
building a matplotlib application using py2exe, I need
0.91.2 ver of matplotlib and use the setup.cfg file to
select the backend I want (wxpython in my case). Then
run py2exe to build the ap. Correct?
But then,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What I need is a version of 0.91.2 ver of matplotlib
that works with Python 2.3 to see if that works...
I might be misremembering, but I thought 0.91.2 worked with Python 2.3.
I don't use 2.3 every day, however. Can you send the errors that are
produced when you
Michael,
I am referring to the fact that there are no Windows
binaries provided for Python 2.3. If I simply copy
the matplotlib directory over to Python23, py2exe will
get confused.
I have no clue how to build it for Python23. I don't
even have any C compiler.
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