You can subscribe to this list here.
| 2003 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
(3) |
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
(12) |
Sep
(12) |
Oct
(56) |
Nov
(65) |
Dec
(37) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 |
Jan
(59) |
Feb
(78) |
Mar
(153) |
Apr
(205) |
May
(184) |
Jun
(123) |
Jul
(171) |
Aug
(156) |
Sep
(190) |
Oct
(120) |
Nov
(154) |
Dec
(223) |
| 2005 |
Jan
(184) |
Feb
(267) |
Mar
(214) |
Apr
(286) |
May
(320) |
Jun
(299) |
Jul
(348) |
Aug
(283) |
Sep
(355) |
Oct
(293) |
Nov
(232) |
Dec
(203) |
| 2006 |
Jan
(352) |
Feb
(358) |
Mar
(403) |
Apr
(313) |
May
(165) |
Jun
(281) |
Jul
(316) |
Aug
(228) |
Sep
(279) |
Oct
(243) |
Nov
(315) |
Dec
(345) |
| 2007 |
Jan
(260) |
Feb
(323) |
Mar
(340) |
Apr
(319) |
May
(290) |
Jun
(296) |
Jul
(221) |
Aug
(292) |
Sep
(242) |
Oct
(248) |
Nov
(242) |
Dec
(332) |
| 2008 |
Jan
(312) |
Feb
(359) |
Mar
(454) |
Apr
(287) |
May
(340) |
Jun
(450) |
Jul
(403) |
Aug
(324) |
Sep
(349) |
Oct
(385) |
Nov
(363) |
Dec
(437) |
| 2009 |
Jan
(500) |
Feb
(301) |
Mar
(409) |
Apr
(486) |
May
(545) |
Jun
(391) |
Jul
(518) |
Aug
(497) |
Sep
(492) |
Oct
(429) |
Nov
(357) |
Dec
(310) |
| 2010 |
Jan
(371) |
Feb
(657) |
Mar
(519) |
Apr
(432) |
May
(312) |
Jun
(416) |
Jul
(477) |
Aug
(386) |
Sep
(419) |
Oct
(435) |
Nov
(320) |
Dec
(202) |
| 2011 |
Jan
(321) |
Feb
(413) |
Mar
(299) |
Apr
(215) |
May
(284) |
Jun
(203) |
Jul
(207) |
Aug
(314) |
Sep
(321) |
Oct
(259) |
Nov
(347) |
Dec
(209) |
| 2012 |
Jan
(322) |
Feb
(414) |
Mar
(377) |
Apr
(179) |
May
(173) |
Jun
(234) |
Jul
(295) |
Aug
(239) |
Sep
(276) |
Oct
(355) |
Nov
(144) |
Dec
(108) |
| 2013 |
Jan
(170) |
Feb
(89) |
Mar
(204) |
Apr
(133) |
May
(142) |
Jun
(89) |
Jul
(160) |
Aug
(180) |
Sep
(69) |
Oct
(136) |
Nov
(83) |
Dec
(32) |
| 2014 |
Jan
(71) |
Feb
(90) |
Mar
(161) |
Apr
(117) |
May
(78) |
Jun
(94) |
Jul
(60) |
Aug
(83) |
Sep
(102) |
Oct
(132) |
Nov
(154) |
Dec
(96) |
| 2015 |
Jan
(45) |
Feb
(138) |
Mar
(176) |
Apr
(132) |
May
(119) |
Jun
(124) |
Jul
(77) |
Aug
(31) |
Sep
(34) |
Oct
(22) |
Nov
(23) |
Dec
(9) |
| 2016 |
Jan
(26) |
Feb
(17) |
Mar
(10) |
Apr
(8) |
May
(4) |
Jun
(8) |
Jul
(6) |
Aug
(5) |
Sep
(9) |
Oct
(4) |
Nov
|
Dec
|
| 2017 |
Jan
(5) |
Feb
(7) |
Mar
(1) |
Apr
(5) |
May
|
Jun
(3) |
Jul
(6) |
Aug
(1) |
Sep
|
Oct
(2) |
Nov
(1) |
Dec
|
| 2018 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
(1) |
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
| 2020 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
(1) |
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
| 2025 |
Jan
(1) |
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
1
(7) |
2
(3) |
3
(2) |
4
(2) |
|
5
(2) |
6
(3) |
7
(1) |
8
(9) |
9
(1) |
10
(9) |
11
(2) |
|
12
|
13
(1) |
14
(11) |
15
(8) |
16
(7) |
17
(10) |
18
(2) |
|
19
(3) |
20
(9) |
21
(3) |
22
(3) |
23
(1) |
24
(12) |
25
(1) |
|
26
(3) |
27
(3) |
28
(6) |
29
(1) |
30
(6) |
31
(1) |
|
|
From: Moore, E. (NIH/N. [F] <eri...@ni...> - 2014-10-27 21:12:21
|
Hi, Is it ever possible to edit the text produced by matplotlib when saving to ps, eps or pdf? No matter the combination of setting I try the text always imports as outlines rather than text. If it makes a difference, I'm using CorelDraw. Does this work for anyone? Eric |
|
From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2014-10-27 18:07:24
|
Which version of matplotlib are you running? I could have sworn this was fixed awhile ago. If I understand the problem correctly, essentially, the autoscalling was clipping empty patches out. Ben Root On Sun, Oct 26, 2014 at 2:57 AM, Matthew Brett <mat...@gm...> wrote: > Hi, > > I just noticed that this: > > >>> x = np.arange(10) > >>> y = np.zeros(10) > >>> y[5] = 1 > >>> plt.bar(x, y) > > Will generate a big box for x = 5 with x 0:5 and 6: stripped, whereas this: > > >>> y += 0.000001 > >>> plt.bar(x, y) > > Will generate a bar plot going from x = 0 to 9 with a bar at 5 as I > was expecting. > > If I make a zeros vector with two discontiguous 1 values, then I also > get the full x range, with two spikes. > > >>> y = np.zeros(10) > >>> y[2] = 1 > >>> y[5] = 1 > >>> plt.bar(x, y) > > Is this expected? It certainly surprised me... > > Matthew > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-users mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users > |
|
From: Andy B. <an...@in...> - 2014-10-27 14:36:03
|
Hi, I'm using MPL to implement a new plotter for a project has so far been using a custom-written LaTeX+pstricks script. Despite being slow and a bit hacky, the output is really quite nice and I want to try and emulate it as closely as possible via MPL; for example: https://users.hepforge.org/~buckley/atlas-py8-shower-e/ATLAS_2012_I1094568/d03-x02-y01.pdf I more or less have this working, but would really like to be able to use the "old-style figures" (OSF) numerals with variable baseline (aka lower-case or text figures cf. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_figures), which give those plots quite a bit of their character. Probably this will anyway be possible only with the TeX or PGF backend to MPL, but what would be the best way to enable OSF figures from MPL? If I correctly understand the backend, the rc params font.family & e.g. font.serif are passed to the LaTeX fontspec package -- and in the fontspec documentation http://mirror.utexas.edu/ctan/macros/latex/contrib/fontspec/fontspec.pdf it seems that passing the Numbers=(OldStyle) option to the \fontspec command (or as the arg to \addfontfeature) would be the fontspec version of, for example, \usepackage[osf]{mathpazo}. Is there a way to pass options like this to fontspec? In general this would seem a useful thing to be able to do, since fontspec controls far more than OSFs, but I couldn't find a discussion of it in the docs. Hope you can help; thanks! Andy -- Dr Andy Buckley, Royal Society University Research Fellow Particle Physics Expt Group, University of Glasgow / PH Dept, CERN |