SourceForge logo
SourceForge logo
Menu

matplotlib-devel — matplotlib developers

You can subscribe to this list here.

2003 Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
(1)
Nov
(33)
Dec
(20)
2004 Jan
(7)
Feb
(44)
Mar
(51)
Apr
(43)
May
(43)
Jun
(36)
Jul
(61)
Aug
(44)
Sep
(25)
Oct
(82)
Nov
(97)
Dec
(47)
2005 Jan
(77)
Feb
(143)
Mar
(42)
Apr
(31)
May
(93)
Jun
(93)
Jul
(35)
Aug
(78)
Sep
(56)
Oct
(44)
Nov
(72)
Dec
(75)
2006 Jan
(116)
Feb
(99)
Mar
(181)
Apr
(171)
May
(112)
Jun
(86)
Jul
(91)
Aug
(111)
Sep
(77)
Oct
(72)
Nov
(57)
Dec
(51)
2007 Jan
(64)
Feb
(116)
Mar
(70)
Apr
(74)
May
(53)
Jun
(40)
Jul
(519)
Aug
(151)
Sep
(132)
Oct
(74)
Nov
(282)
Dec
(190)
2008 Jan
(141)
Feb
(67)
Mar
(69)
Apr
(96)
May
(227)
Jun
(404)
Jul
(399)
Aug
(96)
Sep
(120)
Oct
(205)
Nov
(126)
Dec
(261)
2009 Jan
(136)
Feb
(136)
Mar
(119)
Apr
(124)
May
(155)
Jun
(98)
Jul
(136)
Aug
(292)
Sep
(174)
Oct
(126)
Nov
(126)
Dec
(79)
2010 Jan
(109)
Feb
(83)
Mar
(139)
Apr
(91)
May
(79)
Jun
(164)
Jul
(184)
Aug
(146)
Sep
(163)
Oct
(128)
Nov
(70)
Dec
(73)
2011 Jan
(235)
Feb
(165)
Mar
(147)
Apr
(86)
May
(74)
Jun
(118)
Jul
(65)
Aug
(75)
Sep
(162)
Oct
(94)
Nov
(48)
Dec
(44)
2012 Jan
(49)
Feb
(40)
Mar
(88)
Apr
(35)
May
(52)
Jun
(69)
Jul
(90)
Aug
(123)
Sep
(112)
Oct
(120)
Nov
(105)
Dec
(116)
2013 Jan
(76)
Feb
(26)
Mar
(78)
Apr
(43)
May
(61)
Jun
(53)
Jul
(147)
Aug
(85)
Sep
(83)
Oct
(122)
Nov
(18)
Dec
(27)
2014 Jan
(58)
Feb
(25)
Mar
(49)
Apr
(17)
May
(29)
Jun
(39)
Jul
(53)
Aug
(52)
Sep
(35)
Oct
(47)
Nov
(110)
Dec
(27)
2015 Jan
(50)
Feb
(93)
Mar
(96)
Apr
(30)
May
(55)
Jun
(83)
Jul
(44)
Aug
(8)
Sep
(5)
Oct
Nov
(1)
Dec
(1)
2016 Jan
Feb
Mar
(1)
Apr
May
Jun
(2)
Jul
Aug
(3)
Sep
(1)
Oct
(3)
Nov
Dec
2017 Jan
Feb
(5)
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
(3)
Aug
Sep
(7)
Oct
Nov
Dec
2018 Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
(2)
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
S M T W T F S


1
(13)
2
(16)
3
(5)
4
(6)
5
(4)
6
7
(8)
8
(4)
9
(8)
10
(14)
11
(20)
12
(3)
13
(7)
14
(1)
15
(1)
16
(5)
17
(9)
18
(5)
19
20
21
(5)
22
(7)
23
(4)
24
25
26
27
(3)
28
(2)
29
(8)
30
(6)



Showing 5 results of 5

From: Ondrej C. <on...@ce...> - 2010年06月16日 23:42:12
Hi William,
On Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 4:33 PM, william ratcliff
<wil...@gm...> wrote:
> I have a student here trying to make a webapp for data reduction. To add
> interactivity, we've been using the FLOT package, and may later consider
> protovis. We had thought about making a javascript backend for MPL, but to
> just get something running, we went with FLOT for the time being...We're
> using EXTJS as the web framework (it's a bit heavy, but has a rich widget
> toolkit and documentation). We use Django on the backend and Orbited to
> deal with some communications between the browser and the server (for
> example if we get new data from an instrument and want to update it on the
> server and update plots that are viewing that data..). Over the next couple
> of weeks (with the arrival of another student), we will be working more with
> the plotting aspect of the project (adding legends, zooming, etc).  Also,
> for other parts of the app, we're just using the HTML5 canvas...I'd be happy
> to work on making the plotting addons as generic as possible so they can be
> used outside of our problem domain. What I'm not sure is whether one wants
> to truly use MPL as a backend, or rather to use the MPL philosophy of a
> javascript package.
That would be exactly what I could reuse. Is the code available as
opensource somewhere?
Ondrej
From: william r. <wil...@gm...> - 2010年06月16日 23:33:36
I have a student here trying to make a webapp for data reduction. To add
interactivity, we've been using the FLOT package, and may later consider
protovis. We had thought about making a javascript backend for MPL, but to
just get something running, we went with FLOT for the time being...We're
using EXTJS as the web framework (it's a bit heavy, but has a rich widget
toolkit and documentation). We use Django on the backend and Orbited to
deal with some communications between the browser and the server (for
example if we get new data from an instrument and want to update it on the
server and update plots that are viewing that data..). Over the next couple
of weeks (with the arrival of another student), we will be working more with
the plotting aspect of the project (adding legends, zooming, etc). Also,
for other parts of the app, we're just using the HTML5 canvas...I'd be happy
to work on making the plotting addons as generic as possible so they can be
used outside of our problem domain. What I'm not sure is whether one wants
to truly use MPL as a backend, or rather to use the MPL philosophy of a
javascript package.
Cheers,
William
On Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 6:45 PM, Andrew Straw <str...@as...> wrote:
> Hi Ondrej,
>
> If I was in your shoes, the first thing I'd do is emit your data to plot
> as a json object and then plot that data using javascript with one of
> the libraries you've listed. Then, after gaining some familiarity with
> Python->json->javascript I'd think about how such an MPL backend might
> work. A usecase I could imagine is some Django app that uses MPL to plot
> stuff into a javascript canvas element complete with zooming and so on.
>
> I think there are a lot of open questions in this domain... For example,
> presumably one doesn't want the server involved when the client browser
> zooms. But then if you implement something that allows the client
> browser to zoom without the server MPL process, you're no longer using
> the normal MPL callback system. So, interactivity would probably be
> different than in the traditional backends.
>
> You could also start with the svg backend, as browsers do render svg.
>
> -Andrew
>
> Ondrej Certik wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > could someone please point me to the latest status of the web gui?
> >
> > I am now in LLNL and I don't have a root access to my computer
> > (running rhel5), and there is no Tk, nor Tkinter Python modules. I
> > have installed femhub, so I have the whole python stack, but I don't
> > have any gui. Mpl can save figures to a file, so at least something.
> > But I am missing the zoom feature.
> >
> > I found the following cool libraries:
> >
> > http://www.sencha.com/
> > http://raphaeljs.com/
> > http://g.raphaeljs.com/
> >
> > that work perfectly in my browser (FF3). So I wondered how hard it
> > would be to use them as an mpl backend? All I need, I think, is just
> > simple plotting, and zoom (+pan).
> >
> > I could adapt for example:
> >
> > lib/matplotlib/backends/backend_tkagg.py
> >
> > but it seems quite involved. Is there some simple thing, that would
> > "just work" for me, that I could start adapting for the web gui? I
> > would imagine that show() would launch a web server and tell the user
> > to go to localhost:8080 or something and then the gui would be in the
> > browser. The browser can even be opened automatically.
> >
> > Ondrej
> >
> >
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > ThinkGeek and WIRED's GeekDad team up for the Ultimate
> > GeekDad Father's Day Giveaway. ONE MASSIVE PRIZE to the
> > lucky parental unit. See the prize list and enter to win:
> > http://p.sf.net/sfu/thinkgeek-promo
> > _______________________________________________
> > Matplotlib-devel mailing list
> > Mat...@li...
> > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel
> >
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ThinkGeek and WIRED's GeekDad team up for the Ultimate
> GeekDad Father's Day Giveaway. ONE MASSIVE PRIZE to the
> lucky parental unit. See the prize list and enter to win:
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/thinkgeek-promo
> _______________________________________________
> Matplotlib-devel mailing list
> Mat...@li...
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel
>
From: Andrew S. <str...@as...> - 2010年06月16日 23:07:16
Hi Ondrej,
If I was in your shoes, the first thing I'd do is emit your data to plot
as a json object and then plot that data using javascript with one of
the libraries you've listed. Then, after gaining some familiarity with
Python->json->javascript I'd think about how such an MPL backend might
work. A usecase I could imagine is some Django app that uses MPL to plot
stuff into a javascript canvas element complete with zooming and so on.
I think there are a lot of open questions in this domain... For example,
presumably one doesn't want the server involved when the client browser
zooms. But then if you implement something that allows the client
browser to zoom without the server MPL process, you're no longer using
the normal MPL callback system. So, interactivity would probably be
different than in the traditional backends.
You could also start with the svg backend, as browsers do render svg.
-Andrew
Ondrej Certik wrote:
> Hi,
>
> could someone please point me to the latest status of the web gui?
>
> I am now in LLNL and I don't have a root access to my computer
> (running rhel5), and there is no Tk, nor Tkinter Python modules. I
> have installed femhub, so I have the whole python stack, but I don't
> have any gui. Mpl can save figures to a file, so at least something.
> But I am missing the zoom feature.
>
> I found the following cool libraries:
>
> http://www.sencha.com/
> http://raphaeljs.com/
> http://g.raphaeljs.com/
>
> that work perfectly in my browser (FF3). So I wondered how hard it
> would be to use them as an mpl backend? All I need, I think, is just
> simple plotting, and zoom (+pan).
>
> I could adapt for example:
>
> lib/matplotlib/backends/backend_tkagg.py
>
> but it seems quite involved. Is there some simple thing, that would
> "just work" for me, that I could start adapting for the web gui? I
> would imagine that show() would launch a web server and tell the user
> to go to localhost:8080 or something and then the gui would be in the
> browser. The browser can even be opened automatically.
>
> Ondrej
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ThinkGeek and WIRED's GeekDad team up for the Ultimate 
> GeekDad Father's Day Giveaway. ONE MASSIVE PRIZE to the 
> lucky parental unit. See the prize list and enter to win: 
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/thinkgeek-promo
> _______________________________________________
> Matplotlib-devel mailing list
> Mat...@li...
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel
> 
From: Eric F. <ef...@ha...> - 2010年06月16日 22:36:02
On 06/16/2010 12:06 PM, Ondrej Certik wrote:
> Hi,
>
> could someone please point me to the latest status of the web gui?
>
> I am now in LLNL and I don't have a root access to my computer
> (running rhel5), and there is no Tk, nor Tkinter Python modules. I
> have installed femhub, so I have the whole python stack, but I don't
> have any gui. Mpl can save figures to a file, so at least something.
> But I am missing the zoom feature.
>
> I found the following cool libraries:
>
> http://www.sencha.com/
> http://raphaeljs.com/
> http://g.raphaeljs.com/
>
> that work perfectly in my browser (FF3). So I wondered how hard it
> would be to use them as an mpl backend? All I need, I think, is just
> simple plotting, and zoom (+pan).
I doubt that you could make zoom/pan fast while going through a web 
interface, without substantial changes to mpl.
As an alternative, can you install gtk and pygtk from tarballs, in 
locations you control? I haven't tried it, so I have no idea how 
painful it would be; but if it works, you would have a fully-functional mpl.
Actually, on RH, I'm sure the gtk libraries are already there, so it 
would be a question of whether the -devel rpms are also installed. If 
so, all you need would be pygtk, and that should be easy.
I presume you have already tried to get IT support to install things 
like pygtk.
Eric
>
> I could adapt for example:
>
> lib/matplotlib/backends/backend_tkagg.py
>
> but it seems quite involved. Is there some simple thing, that would
> "just work" for me, that I could start adapting for the web gui? I
> would imagine that show() would launch a web server and tell the user
> to go to localhost:8080 or something and then the gui would be in the
> browser. The browser can even be opened automatically.
>
> Ondrej
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ThinkGeek and WIRED's GeekDad team up for the Ultimate
> GeekDad Father's Day Giveaway. ONE MASSIVE PRIZE to the
> lucky parental unit. See the prize list and enter to win:
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/thinkgeek-promo
> _______________________________________________
> Matplotlib-devel mailing list
> Mat...@li...
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel
From: Ondrej C. <on...@ce...> - 2010年06月16日 22:06:13
Hi,
could someone please point me to the latest status of the web gui?
I am now in LLNL and I don't have a root access to my computer
(running rhel5), and there is no Tk, nor Tkinter Python modules. I
have installed femhub, so I have the whole python stack, but I don't
have any gui. Mpl can save figures to a file, so at least something.
But I am missing the zoom feature.
I found the following cool libraries:
http://www.sencha.com/
http://raphaeljs.com/
http://g.raphaeljs.com/
that work perfectly in my browser (FF3). So I wondered how hard it
would be to use them as an mpl backend? All I need, I think, is just
simple plotting, and zoom (+pan).
I could adapt for example:
lib/matplotlib/backends/backend_tkagg.py
but it seems quite involved. Is there some simple thing, that would
"just work" for me, that I could start adapting for the web gui? I
would imagine that show() would launch a web server and tell the user
to go to localhost:8080 or something and then the gui would be in the
browser. The browser can even be opened automatically.
Ondrej

Showing 5 results of 5

Want the latest updates on software, tech news, and AI?
Get latest updates about software, tech news, and AI from SourceForge directly in your inbox once a month.
Thanks for helping keep SourceForge clean.
X





Briefly describe the problem (required):
Upload screenshot of ad (required):
Select a file, or drag & drop file here.
Screenshot instructions:

Click URL instructions:
Right-click on the ad, choose "Copy Link", then paste here →
(This may not be possible with some types of ads)

More information about our ad policies

Ad destination/click URL:

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /