Andrea Crotti, on 2011-03-01 10:29, wrote:
Gökhan Sever gokhanse...@gmail.com writes:
You can try:
fig, ax = plt.subplots(1,1)
ax.plot(range(10))
fig.subplots_adjust(left=0.05, right=0.95, bottom=0.05, top=0.95)
Uhm strange, with the version of matplotlib that I have know I have
I tried building the standalone html docs using:
cd doc
python make.py html
I notice that there are around 30 .pyc files left in the
build/html/pyplots/ directory. Are these needed in the html
documentation build directory?
Also, it seems that the files in _images are redundant, as they are
On Tuesday, March 1, 2011, Zhaoru Zhang zhaoruzh...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I created an eps figure file with matplotlib. I can look at it via mac
preview, but when I inserted it into a word document and printed it out, I
got nothing except for the eps file information. So what's the problem?
Hi,
have you tried to print the EPS without putting it into a DOC? Is
there a specific reason for why you don't use an PNG for that task?
Can Word print EPS at all?
Best,
Daniel
2011/3/1 Zhaoru Zhang zhaoruzh...@gmail.com:
Hi,
I created an eps figure file with matplotlib. I can look at it
On Tue, 1 Mar 2011 12:44:20 +0900
Jae-Joon Lee lee.j.j...@gmail.com wrote:
Is this a bug?
Unfortunately, bbox_inches option is never meant to be complete in
figuring out the exact size of the figure area.
Why not? What's the purpose of bbox_inches='tight' otherwise?
However, you can
Zhaoru Zhang zhaoruzh...@gmail.com writes:
I created an eps figure file with matplotlib. I can look at it via mac
preview, but when I inserted it into a word document and printed it
out, I got nothing except for the eps file information.
It's a long time since I tried using eps files in Word,