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>>>>> "John" == John Hunter <jdh...@ac...> writes: John> I have tested a few backends (TkAgg, WX, QtAgg, GTK and John> GTKAgg) and am only seeing it on GTK and GTKAgg. My guess John> is that something ou did in adding the resize functionality John> to GTK is triggering this. You might want to look at a diff John> between the current svn and revision 2627 to see if you can John> find the source of this. Scratch that -- I reverted to 2627 and still see it... JDH
On Thursday 10 August 2006 11:17, John Hunter wrote: > >>>>> "Darren" == Darren Dale <dd...@co...> writes: > > Darren> I fixed that problem in the qt backends by telling the > Darren> label to ignore sizing hints. We could make the format > Darren> string shorter, but even then, depending on the size of > Darren> the window, this problem can occur. What format would you > Darren> prefer to be reported on the toolbar? > > I'm a little confused here because the default should be to use the > axis major formatter (eg in the Axes.format_xdata function). Why > would the default formatter return such a long string? I think it is to support for small ranges on top of very large numbers. I think the fix you suggest below will work for now (I had to make an additional change to format the offset label correctly, svn 2668), and I can clean up the default formatter later. I don't want to rush through that. People have asked for on more than one occassion for engineering notation: tick labels that read 2x10^-5, they would read 20x10^-6, and I think this would work with the shorter string formatting. > I don't know what the right answer is: using the default formatter is > usually irritating when plotting dates, since you often want a finer > resolution than you get with the tick formatting (eg if the ticks are > formatted to the nearest day, you may want to see H:M:S when > interacting). Clearly you can override this by using the fmt_xdata > and fmt_ydata attrs, but oftentimes I wish the defaults were better. > > As a quick solution, I added a default method to the Formatter base > class > > def format_data_short(self,value): > 'return a short string version' > return format_data(self,value) > > and overrode it for the scalar formatter > > def format_data_short(self,value): > 'return a short formatted string representation of a number' > return '%1.3g'%value > > > and used this to format the x and y coords. What do you think about > that (revision 2666)? > > JDH > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Using Tomcat but need to do more? Need to support web services, security? > Get stuff done quickly with pre-integrated technology to make your job > easier Download IBM WebSphere Application Server v.1.0.1 based on Apache > Geronimo > http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid=120709&bid=263057&dat=121642 > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel
>>>>> "Charlie" == Charlie Moad <cw...@gm...> writes: Charlie> I periodically am seeing it. But I can't figure out how Charlie> to cause it. I have tested a few backends (TkAgg, WX, QtAgg, GTK and GTKAgg) and am only seeing it on GTK and GTKAgg. My guess is that something ou did in adding the resize functionality to GTK is triggering this. You might want to look at a diff between the current svn and revision 2627 to see if you can find the source of this. peds-pc311:~/mpl> svn log lib/matplotlib/backends/backend_gtk.py | head -20 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ r2628 | cmoad | 2006年07月28日 12:58:58 -0500 (2006年7月28日) | 1 line fixed qt subplots button. added FigureManager.resize method ------------------------------------------------------------------------ r2502 | jdh2358 | 2006年06月21日 08:22:31 -0500 (2006年6月21日) | 1 line added custom figure class hook ------------------------------------------------------------------------ r2476 | efiring | 2006年06月12日 12:36:06 -0500 (2006年6月12日) | 2 lines GTK backend: don't draw line if linewidth==0. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ r2384 | stevech | 2006年05月08日 01:40:08 -0500 (2006年5月08日) | 2 lines
>>>>> "Darren" == Darren Dale <dd...@co...> writes: Darren> I just tried running backend_driver.py with numerix set to Darren> Numeric, and I'm repeatedly getting the following error: Darren> File Darren> "/usr/lib64/python2.4/site-packages/matplotlib/axes.py", Darren> line 2502, in bar yerr = asarray([yerr]*nbars, Float) # Darren> Float converts Nones to NANs File Darren> "/usr/lib64/python2.4/site-packages/Numeric/Numeric.py", Darren> line 134, in asarray return multiarray.array(a, typecode, Darren> copy=0, savespace=savespace) TypeError: a float is Darren> required driving image_demo.py That was in histogram_demo which called bar with xerr=None and yerr=None and bar was assuming a numpy-ism in converting None to nan. I just committed a change to fix it. JDH
>>>>> "Darren" == Darren Dale <dd...@co...> writes: Darren> I fixed that problem in the qt backends by telling the Darren> label to ignore sizing hints. We could make the format Darren> string shorter, but even then, depending on the size of Darren> the window, this problem can occur. What format would you Darren> prefer to be reported on the toolbar? I'm a little confused here because the default should be to use the axis major formatter (eg in the Axes.format_xdata function). Why would the default formatter return such a long string? I don't know what the right answer is: using the default formatter is usually irritating when plotting dates, since you often want a finer resolution than you get with the tick formatting (eg if the ticks are formatted to the nearest day, you may want to see H:M:S when interacting). Clearly you can override this by using the fmt_xdata and fmt_ydata attrs, but oftentimes I wish the defaults were better. As a quick solution, I added a default method to the Formatter base class def format_data_short(self,value): 'return a short string version' return format_data(self,value) and overrode it for the scalar formatter def format_data_short(self,value): 'return a short formatted string representation of a number' return '%1.3g'%value and used this to format the x and y coords. What do you think about that (revision 2666)? JDH
On Thursday 10 August 2006 10:54, John Hunter wrote: > >>>>> "Charlie" == Charlie Moad <cw...@gm...> writes: > > Charlie> I periodically am seeing it. But I can't figure out how > > I just tested on TkAgg ( I usually use GTKAgg) and noticed another > problem. When you click "zoom to rect mode" the format string in the > toolbar becomes so long that it causes the window to resize to fit > it. As you move the mouse around, depending on the x and y > locations, the format string becomes longer or shorter and the window > resizes like mad. Very annoying. Let's hold off on a release until > we can sort these bugs out. I just tried running backend_driver.py with numerix set to Numeric, and I'm repeatedly getting the following error: File "/usr/lib64/python2.4/site-packages/matplotlib/axes.py", line 2502, in bar yerr = asarray([yerr]*nbars, Float) # Float converts Nones to NANs File "/usr/lib64/python2.4/site-packages/Numeric/Numeric.py", line 134, in asarray return multiarray.array(a, typecode, copy=0, savespace=savespace) TypeError: a float is required driving image_demo.py Darren
On Thursday 10 August 2006 10:54, John Hunter wrote: > >>>>> "Charlie" == Charlie Moad <cw...@gm...> writes: > > Charlie> I periodically am seeing it. But I can't figure out how > > I just tested on TkAgg ( I usually use GTKAgg) and noticed another > problem. When you click "zoom to rect mode" the format string in the > toolbar becomes so long that it causes the window to resize to fit > it. As you move the mouse around, depending on the x and y > locations, the format string becomes longer or shorter and the window > resizes like mad. Very annoying. Let's hold off on a release until > we can sort these bugs out. I fixed that problem in the qt backends by telling the label to ignore sizing hints. We could make the format string shorter, but even then, depending on the size of the window, this problem can occur. What format would you prefer to be reported on the toolbar?
>>>>> "Charlie" == Charlie Moad <cw...@gm...> writes: Charlie> I periodically am seeing it. But I can't figure out how I just tested on TkAgg ( I usually use GTKAgg) and noticed another problem. When you click "zoom to rect mode" the format string in the toolbar becomes so long that it causes the window to resize to fit it. As you move the mouse around, depending on the x and y locations, the format string becomes longer or shorter and the window resizes like mad. Very annoying. Let's hold off on a release until we can sort these bugs out. JDH
On 8/10/06, John Hunter <jdh...@ac...> wrote: > > I am experiencing some strangeness with the svn version of mpl, but I > don't know if it is the code or my connection. I am working over X11 > so it may have something to do with that. Could those of you with > local access to an svn install of mpl test something? > > When I open a plot (eg simple_plot.py) and zoom to rect, the plot > zooms in to the rect, and then strangely zooms back out to the > original view and then back in again. Anyone else seeing this? I periodically am seeing it. But I can't figure out how to cause it.
I am experiencing some strangeness with the svn version of mpl, but I don't know if it is the code or my connection. I am working over X11 so it may have something to do with that. Could those of you with local access to an svn install of mpl test something? When I open a plot (eg simple_plot.py) and zoom to rect, the plot zooms in to the rect, and then strangely zooms back out to the original view and then back in again. Anyone else seeing this? JDH