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From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2013-06-04 13:11:04
|
On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 3:58 AM, trendelkamp <tre...@ze...>wrote: > Hi, > > there is a minor bug in the axes.twiny() function. Apparently the > parent axes xlim() values are not copied. > Example: > > from numpy import * > import matplotlib.pyplot as plt > > x=linspace(-2.0, 2.0, 100) > y=x**2 > > fig=plt.figure() > ax1=fig.add_subplot(111) > ax1.plot(x, y) > > ax2=ax1.twiny() > ax1.get_xlim() --> (-2.0, 2.0) > ax2.get_xlim() --> (0.0, 1.0) > > It is simple to fix by hand, but I do not think that this is the desired > behavior. > > I can see the argument for copying the x limits, but let's dig further here. Should we also copy the autoscalex switch? The x-axis ticks/tickers/tick formatters? Right now, the way it works, the x-axis in the new axes object is set up just like any other axes, with only the y-axis properties tied together. I personally prefer simplicity and consistency over "magic". Every time I make an axes, it is set up the same way. We are about ready to re-examine our limit handling code soon, so this is a good question to ask in that light. One of the things we are looking to do is to have a concept of "null limits" (in other words, limits that have yet to be explicitly set). It may make sense at that point to consider such behaviors as what you suggest. Cheers! Ben Root |
|
From: trendelkamp <tre...@ze...> - 2013-06-04 07:58:21
|
Hi, there is a minor bug in the axes.twiny() function. Apparently the parent axes xlim() values are not copied. Example: from numpy import * import matplotlib.pyplot as plt x=linspace(-2.0, 2.0, 100) y=x**2 fig=plt.figure() ax1=fig.add_subplot(111) ax1.plot(x, y) ax2=ax1.twiny() ax1.get_xlim() --> (-2.0, 2.0) ax2.get_xlim() --> (0.0, 1.0) It is simple to fix by hand, but I do not think that this is the desired behavior. Thanks, Benjamin |