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From: Jeremy L. <jl...@in...> - 2009-06-08 19:46:52
|
I want to let matplotlib control where the tick marks go, but I want to scale the value of the tick labels. For example, if my matrix has a 100 columns the tick marks might be [0,25,50,100]. I want to scale these tick labels by some value say .01 so that the corresponding tick labels would be [0,.25,.5,1]. Now say I zoom in on the image so that the xaxis limits are (0,50). Lets suppose the tick marks are now [0,10,20,30,40,50] Then in this case the tick labels should be [0,.1,.2,.3,.4,.5] So how do I go about creating a custom formatter? Thanks Jeremy Michael Droettboom wrote: > What are you setting the x ticklabels to? If you want to control how > the numbers are displayed, you can create a custom formatter (which is > basically a function to convert a floating-point number to a string). > If you want to control the number of ticks across the axis, you can make > a custom ticker. > > If you can describe what your end goal is, I'm happy to describe the > above options in more detail. > > Cheers, > Mike > > Jeremy Lewi wrote: > >> Hi, >> I'm using imshow to make an image of a 2-d matrix. I use >> set_xticklabels to adjust the x-axis labels. The problem is that when I >> then zoom in on the plot, the axis labels are not adjusted >> appropriately. Does anyone suggestions on how I can fix this? >> >> Thanks >> Jeremy >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> Crystal Reports - New Free Runtime and 30 Day Trial >> Check out the new simplified licensing option that enables unlimited >> royalty-free distribution of the report engine for externally facing >> server and web deployment. >> http://p.sf.net/sfu/businessobjects >> _______________________________________________ >> Matplotlib-users mailing list >> Mat...@li... >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users >> >> > > |
|
From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2009-06-08 19:43:52
|
On Mon, Jun 8, 2009 at 2:14 PM, Gökhan SEVER<gok...@gm...> wrote: > Hello, > > How do you add you automatically check-out new added files from matplotlib > trunk? Is there a specific svn command for this? Check out svn as indicated here:: http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/faq/installing_faq.html#install-from-svn Once you have a checkout, you can get updates with :: > svn up JDH |
|
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2009-06-08 19:24:22
|
What are you setting the x ticklabels to? If you want to control how the numbers are displayed, you can create a custom formatter (which is basically a function to convert a floating-point number to a string). If you want to control the number of ticks across the axis, you can make a custom ticker. If you can describe what your end goal is, I'm happy to describe the above options in more detail. Cheers, Mike Jeremy Lewi wrote: > Hi, > I'm using imshow to make an image of a 2-d matrix. I use > set_xticklabels to adjust the x-axis labels. The problem is that when I > then zoom in on the plot, the axis labels are not adjusted > appropriately. Does anyone suggestions on how I can fix this? > > Thanks > Jeremy > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Crystal Reports - New Free Runtime and 30 Day Trial > Check out the new simplified licensing option that enables unlimited > royalty-free distribution of the report engine for externally facing > server and web deployment. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/businessobjects > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-users mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users > -- Michael Droettboom Science Software Branch Operations and Engineering Division Space Telescope Science Institute Operated by AURA for NASA |
|
From: Gökhan S. <gok...@gm...> - 2009-06-08 19:22:08
|
On Mon, Jun 8, 2009 at 2:16 PM, John Hunter <jd...@gm...> wrote: > On Mon, Jun 8, 2009 at 2:14 PM, Gökhan SEVER<gok...@gm...> wrote: > > Hello, > > > > How do you add you automatically check-out new added files from > matplotlib > > trunk? Is there a specific svn command for this? > > > Check out svn as indicated here:: > > > http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/faq/installing_faq.html#install-from-svn > > Once you have a checkout, you can get updates with :: > > > svn up > > JDH > I need to issue a "python setup.py install" after each svn up, right? |
|
From: Gökhan S. <gok...@gm...> - 2009-06-08 19:14:23
|
Hello, How do you add you automatically check-out new added files from matplotlib trunk? Is there a specific svn command for this? Another question: For example IPython has uses bzr and when I issue bzr branch lp:ipython command I grab the latest development branch. I do a development installation quoting from IPython documentation: "Some users want to be able to follow the development branch as it changes. If you have setuptools installed, this is easy. Simply replace the last step by: $ python setupegg.py develop and one more step: This creates links in the right places and installs the command line script to the appropriate places. Then, if you want to update your IPython at any time, just do: $ bzr pull No duplicated folders and bzr pulls the changes for me. Could this be possible with matplotlib's VCS system? Thank you Gökhan |
|
From: Jeremy L. <jl...@in...> - 2009-06-08 19:10:00
|
Hi,
I'm using imshow to make an image of a 2-d matrix. I use
set_xticklabels to adjust the x-axis labels. The problem is that when I
then zoom in on the plot, the axis labels are not adjusted
appropriately. Does anyone suggestions on how I can fix this?
Thanks
Jeremy
|
|
From: green63 <mag...@vo...> - 2009-06-08 18:06:27
|
I ve a problem with the use of griddata. I have a grid of x,y with value z. the grid have 4500 points I would like to have a rigular grid of 1500 points. I try the function zi = griddata(x,y,z,xi,yi) but I have an error "too many indices". I don't understant why!!! x,y,z,xi and yi are numpy array with 1 column. Sorry for my bad english!! Thanks Josh Lawrence-2 wrote: > > Greetings all, > > In using the function griddata in mlab.py, I think I have found a bug. > The following line in mlab.py errors for me. > I supply it an xi and yi that have shape (N,1). I have surface data, > but I only care about the variation in one direction. In mlab, when it > gets to this line (2956 in svn revision 7040): > > if min(xo[1:]-xo[0:-1]) < 0 or min(yo[1:]-yo[0:-1]) < 0: > raise ValueError, 'output grid defined by xi,yi must be > monotone increasing' > > the result is an error. That is, I get the following: > > ValueError: min() arg is an empty sequence > > A couple of things. First, if I make my variation in x to be 2 points > (x = 0 for the case I'm interested in--so I just have both values of x > be zero), I do not get this error and I believe the result works. So, > it seems that there should be some handling of the case that there are > only 1 point in either x or y direction. > > Second, is it better to use the builtin python function min, or should > numpy.min be used instead? > > Cheers, > > Josh Lawrence > Ph.D. Student > Clemson University > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Stay on top of everything new and different, both inside and > around Java (TM) technology - register by April 22, and save > $200 on the JavaOne (SM) conference, June 2-5, 2009, San Francisco. > 300 plus technical and hands-on sessions. Register today. > Use priority code J9JMT32. http://p.sf.net/sfu/p > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-users mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Griddata-tp23083610p23929245.html Sent from the matplotlib - users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. |
|
From: Sebastian B. <web...@th...> - 2009-06-08 07:19:53
|
Esmail wrote: > ... > By the way, any idea how different the MayaVi interface is? I understand that > matplotlib doesn't do 3D plots and I may want to plot some. > ... Hey Esmail, there was the possibility for 3D plots in matplotlib: http://www.scipy.org/Cookbook/Matplotlib/mplot3D however, the mayavi "mlab" interface was designed explicitly to be as simple as pylab. http://code.enthought.com/projects/mayavi/docs/development/html/mayavi/mlab.html have fun 3D plotting, sebastian. |
|
From: Esmail <eb...@ho...> - 2009-06-08 03:10:11
|
Brian Blais wrote: > On Jun 4, 2009, at 19:48 , Esmail wrote: > >> Someone recently generously shared this code with me on the python > > since I was the one to share this with you, I might be able to answer a > couple questions. :) Hi Brian, (sorry for the tardy reply) I was grateful for the code example, I didn't want to bother you with more questions. >> .. these sort of things I >> am curious to learn about before I see them in code for the first >> time. >> > > actually, that's how I learned most of it...by seeing it in code at some > point. :) Yes, that is very instructive - though a nice narrative/tutorial would be good too. I'll have to see if I can find a copy of the book locally for me to look through. > hope this helps, It sure does, thanks again, Esmail |
|
From: Esmail <eb...@ho...> - 2009-06-08 03:05:34
|
John Hunter wrote: > On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 6:48 PM, Esmail <eb...@ho...> wrote: >> Hi, >> >> Beginning Python Visualization: Crafting Visual Transformation Scripts >> by Shai Vaingast >> http://www.amazon.com/Beginning-Python-Visualization-Transformation-Professionals/dp/1430218436/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1244158389&sr=8-1 >> >> >> Has anyone seen/read this book? I am looking for a good >> hardcopy reference for matplotlib and associated tools. >> >> While the gallery on the matplotlib site is a good way to learn, I >> would like a reference guide that I could easily print out or >> a tutorial of sorts, or possibly this book. Hi John, (sorry for the tardy reply) > Have you tried the official docs? While they are not complete, they do > cover a number of things you mention that you have not seen before > (ion, draw, tutorial, etc.) > > HTML: http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/users/index.html > PDF: http://matplotlib.sf.net/Matplotlib.pdf Thanks for these links, I don't have a problem looking up stuff once I see it used (like I did once I examined the sample code), but the problem is unless I see it used, I really don't know that it's available :-) I guess looking over the various APIs will help. > The book you refer to was recently reviewed on slashdot, BTW > > http://books.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/05/27/1327255&from=rss > > I've browsed some chapters on Amazon, and it looks well done, but have > not read it myself. I read the ./ review, and there was a post on the general python mailing list too - it looks promising. I'll have to see if I can find a copy to browse it myself. I've really been impressed with this software (usually I'm a big fan of gnuplot). By the way, any idea how different the MayaVi interface is? I understand that matplotlib doesn't do 3D plots and I may want to plot some. Thanks again, Esmail |