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



Showing 3 results of 3

From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2007年02月26日 21:09:13
On 2/26/07, Antonio Kanaan <ank...@gm...> wrote:
> I thought of drawing my own cursor, deleting it and moving to the next
> point . It seems this would take forever as (far as I understand)
> matplotlib will redo the entire plot each time I do this.
I forgot to mention in my previous post -- as long as you use the blit
techniques embodied in the Cursor class in the example above and
discussed here:
http://www.scipy.org/Cookbook/Matplotlib/Animations
matplotlib will not redraw you figure each time.
JDH
From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2007年02月26日 21:07:16
Attachments: data_cursor.py
On 2/26/07, Antonio Kanaan <ank...@gm...> wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I am planning to re-write a data viewer program I wrote ages ago using C + Xlib.
>
> This program allows me to plot on the same window several graphs (time
> versus brightness - I work on variable stars). They all share the
> same independent variable (time passes the same for everybody).
>
> I can scroll and zoom the graphs both in X and Y. When I scroll/zoom
> in X all plots suffer the same action. Y scrolling/zooming may be
> done for each plot.
>
> Now the question: I need a data cursor, by that I mean some marker
> that sits on top of a point and which may be moved forward/backward by
> pressing a key. Matplotlib has a mouse cursor that gives me the
> cursor coordinates, but it doesn't
This isn't too bad actually -- you can subclass the existing Cursor
class to override the xdata and ydata atrributes to insure that the
cursor sits only on your data points. The example below uses the
cursor class to overrride the toolbar formatting, and shows you how to
toggle the visibility of multiple cursors in multiple axes with shared
x axes. I'll also attach it in case the mail system mangles the
newlines. Take a look at the MultiCursor in
the widgets module, you might be able to do a similar trick there to
have common x cursoring across multiple axes.
from pylab import figure, show, nx
from matplotlib.widgets import Cursor
class DataCursor(Cursor):
 def __init__(self, t, y, ax, useblit=True, **lineprops):
 Cursor.__init__(self, ax, useblit=True, **lineprops)
 self.y = y
 self.t = t
 self.xstr = ''
 self.ystr = ''
 def onmove(self, event):
 """
 we override event.xdata to force it to snap-to nearest data
 item here we assume t is sorted and I'll use searchsorted
 since it is a little faster, but you can plug in your nearest
 neighbor routine, eg to grab the closest x,y point to the
 cursor
 """
 xdata = event.xdata
 ind = nx.searchsorted(self.t, xdata)
 ind = min(len(self.t)-1, ind)
 event.xdata = self.t[ind]
 event.ydata = self.y[ind]
 self.xstr = '%1.3f'%event.xdata
 self.ystr = '%1.3f'%event.ydata
 Cursor.onmove(self, event)
 def fmtx(self, x):
 return self.xstr
 def fmty(self, y):
 return self.ystr
fig = figure()
ax1 = fig.add_subplot(211)
ax2 = fig.add_subplot(212, sharex=ax1) # connect x pan/zoom events
t = nx.cumsum(nx.rand(20))
s1 = nx.mlab.rand(len(t))
s2 = nx.mlab.rand(len(t))
ax1.plot(t, s1, 'go')
ax2.plot(t, s2, 'bs')
ax1.set_title("Press 1 for upper cursor and 2 for lower cursor")
cursor1 = DataCursor(t, s1, ax1, useblit=True, color='red', linewidth=2 )
# we'll let the cursor do the toolbarformatting too.
ax1.fmt_xdata = cursor1.fmtx
ax1.fmt_ydata = cursor1.fmty
cursor2 = DataCursor(t, s2, ax2, useblit=True, color='red', linewidth=2 )
ax2.fmt_xdata = cursor2.fmtx
ax2.fmt_ydata = cursor2.fmty
# now we'll control the visibility of the cursor; turn off cursor2 by default
cursor2.visible = False
def keyevent(event):
 cursor1.visible = event.key=='1'
 cursor2.visible = event.key=='2'
 fig.canvas.draw()
fig.canvas.mpl_connect('key_press_event', keyevent)
show()
>
> - sit on top of my points and therefore doesn't give me the exact
> value of that point
> - allow me to move from one point to the next
> - allow me to change which graph I want the cursor sitting on
>
> I thought of drawing my own cursor, deleting it and moving to the next
> point . It seems this would take forever as (far as I understand)
> matplotlib will redo the entire plot each time I do this.
>
> How hard is it for the developers to include a built in data cursor in
> a similar fashion to the mouse cursor now available. I am affraid
> this isn't too easy, I don't know any plotting program that has one
> like what I need.
>
> thanks for your attention,
>
> Antonio Kanaan
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Take Surveys. Earn Cash. Influence the Future of IT
> Join SourceForge.net's Techsay panel and you'll get the chance to share your
> opinions on IT & business topics through brief surveys-and earn cash
> http://www.techsay.com/default.php?page=join.php&p=sourceforge&CID=DEVDEV
> _______________________________________________
> Matplotlib-devel mailing list
> Mat...@li...
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel
>
From: Antonio K. <ank...@gm...> - 2007年02月26日 20:31:45
Hi folks,
I am planning to re-write a data viewer program I wrote ages ago using C + Xlib.
This program allows me to plot on the same window several graphs (time
versus brightness - I work on variable stars). They all share the
same independent variable (time passes the same for everybody).
I can scroll and zoom the graphs both in X and Y. When I scroll/zoom
in X all plots suffer the same action. Y scrolling/zooming may be
done for each plot.
Now the question: I need a data cursor, by that I mean some marker
that sits on top of a point and which may be moved forward/backward by
pressing a key. Matplotlib has a mouse cursor that gives me the
cursor coordinates, but it doesn't
- sit on top of my points and therefore doesn't give me the exact
value of that point
- allow me to move from one point to the next
- allow me to change which graph I want the cursor sitting on
I thought of drawing my own cursor, deleting it and moving to the next
point . It seems this would take forever as (far as I understand)
matplotlib will redo the entire plot each time I do this.
How hard is it for the developers to include a built in data cursor in
a similar fashion to the mouse cursor now available. I am affraid
this isn't too easy, I don't know any plotting program that has one
like what I need.
thanks for your attention,
Antonio Kanaan

Showing 3 results of 3

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) /