ython 2.5.4 under Windows XP.
Maybe this is what you are looking for:
http://dalelane.co.uk/blog/?p=778
Grüessli
--
Kurt Mueller
--
Let Crystal Reports handle the reporting - Free Crystal Reports 2008 30-Day
trial. Sim
Hi,
In an aerodynamic environment.
I need to plot multiple curves in one grid.
A standard view would be the coefficients of:
1) lift vs. angle-of-attack
2) lift vs. drag
3) pitching-moment vs. angle-of-attack
all three curves can be out of multiple data-sets (polars).
This 3 curves need to be i
Axes ax2 with a new GridSpec gs2.
With the command gs2.update() the Axes ax1 will be put back
to the place where it would be without ax1.set_position().
Is this behavior to be explained?
Thanks
--
Kurt Mueller
Am 17.09.2011 um 15:38 schrieb Jae-Joon Lee:
> Thanks for reporting this.
> I opened a pull request that I believe fixes this problem.
> https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/pull/472
Thank you very much!
> Please test this if you can.
I hope next week.
> Depending on your need, you may wo
Am 17.09.2011 18:49, schrieb Kurt Mueller:
> Am 17.09.2011 um 15:38 schrieb Jae-Joon Lee:
>> Thanks for reporting this.
>> I opened a pull request that I believe fixes this problem.
>> https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/pull/472
> Thank you very much!
>> Please
s expected.
With the resize event (as you suggested),
it only adjusts the borders of the four axes to the outside of the figure.
But between the axes there is no space at all.
Do I miss something?
Thanks a lot
Kurt
--
Kurt Mueller
---
Hi,
Since upgrading to SUSE 11.3 matplotlib simply craches
(segfault on dlopen("/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/matplotlib/_path.so", 2);
> python -V
Python 2.6.5
> uname -a
Linux mcp20 2.6.34.7-0.5-default #1 SMP 2010-10-25 08:40:12 +0200 i686 i686
i386 GNU/Linux
I did a 1-Click Installati
Now I found a solution:
>From the Education Repository of openSuse:
"URL: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/Education/openSUSE_11.3/";
Install the packages:
- python-numpy
- python-matplotlib
These two seems to work together.
Have a nice day
--
m...@problemlos.ch
Am 15.01.2011 um 12:07 schrieb Leslie Burnett:
> My apologies if this question is a bit simple, but I am new to Python, but I
> think I've done all the RTFM things and still hit a brick wall. I can see
> from Google that I am not the first to strike this problem, but no solutions
> seem to be p