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Showing 3 results of 3

From: Jeff W. <js...@fa...> - 2005年10月03日 14:40:10
John Hunter wrote:
>>>>>>"Jeff" == Jeff Whitaker <js...@fa...> writes:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>
>
> Jeff> Anyone know how the default axes rectangle is set? The
> Jeff> default width and height are apparently not the same
>
> >>>> from pylab import * ax=axes() ax.get_position()
> Jeff> [0.125, 0.099999999999999978, 0.77500000000000002,
> Jeff> 0.80000000000000004]
>
>
> Jeff> I'd like the last two numbers to be identical (say 0.8),
> Jeff> that way I can be sure that a plot will have a certain
> Jeff> aspect ratio if the figure dimensions have that aspect
> Jeff> ratio.
>
>If no args are passed to axes, a subplot(111) is created. If you want
>to control the rectangle, just pass in the l,b,w,h args
>
> ax = axes([0.1, 0.1, 0.8, 0.8])
>
>If you want to see how the default subplots are created, see
>axes.Subplot and the subplot params
>
> left 	: 0.125 # the left side of the subplots of the figure
> right 	: 0.9 # the right side of the subplots of the figure
> bottom 	: 0.1 # the bottom of the subplots of the figure
> top 	: 0.9 # the top of the subplots of the figure
> wspace 	: 0.2 # the amount of width reserved for blank space between subplots
> hspace 	: 0.2 # the amount of height reserved for white space between subplots 
>
>JDH
>
>PS: thanks for the basemap notes -- I presented them at scipy and
>there appeared to be a fair amount of interest in it.
> 
>
John: Thanks - I knew about setting the rect manually, but I didn't 
know the defaults were in subplot.params. I want to override those 
defaults in basemap so that the width and height are both 0.8 (they are 
0.775 and 0.8 now). That way the map will have the right aspect ratio 
without the user having to set the axes rect manually. I've set it up 
so that rcParams['subplot.params.left'] is set to 0.1 when basemap is 
imported (a warning is printed notifying the user that the defaults have 
been changed, and rcdefaults() can be used to get the old ones back).
Thanks a lot for presenting that material at SciPy - I've noticed an 
upswing in downloads since your talk.
-Jeff
-- 
Jeffrey S. Whitaker Phone : (303)497-6313
Meteorologist FAX : (303)497-6449
NOAA/OAR/CDC R/CDC1 Email : Jef...@no...
325 Broadway Office : Skaggs Research Cntr 1D-124
Boulder, CO, USA 80303-3328 Web : http://tinyurl.com/5telg
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2005年10月03日 13:12:11
>>>>> "Michael" == Michael Brady <mb...@jp...> writes:
 Michael> Hi John, I've been making spacecraft trajectory "Pork
 Michael> Chop Plots", a contour plot of a z-value (such amount of
 Michael> fuel required) over a range of Earth departure date
 Michael> x-values and Mars arrival date y-values.
 Michael> Since I needed dates on both x and y axes, it was useful
 Michael> for me to factor out the date locator/formatter selection
 Michael> code from plot_date() into two Axes methods: xaxis_date()
 Michael> and yaxis_date().
 Michael> The plot_date() implementation then becomes just a call
 Michael> to plot() followed by a call to xaxis_date().
I think this is a good idea. A few suggestions
matplotlib 0.84 / CVS already has the guts of plot_date factored out
in date_ticker_factory
 locator, formatter = date_ticker_factory(span, tz)
which appears to be the same thing as your chooseDateFmt. So you'll
want to use that instead. Note also that matplotlib naming
conventions for functions and methods is lower case and underscore
separated.
I think it would be useful to add the following kwargs to plot_date to
support your funcitonality
 def plot_date(self, d, y, fmt='bo', tz=None, 
 xdate=True, ydate=False, **kwargs):
 Michael> My current implementation is below. Is this
 Michael> general-purpose enough for me to submit? If so, I'll
 Michael> make up some diff files and mail them in.
Yep, with the changes above this would be great.
Thanks!
JDH
From: John H. <jdh...@ac...> - 2005年10月03日 13:09:22
>>>>> "Jeff" == Jeff Whitaker <js...@fa...> writes:
 Jeff> Anyone know how the default axes rectangle is set? The
 Jeff> default width and height are apparently not the same
 >>>> from pylab import * ax=axes() ax.get_position()
 Jeff> [0.125, 0.099999999999999978, 0.77500000000000002,
 Jeff> 0.80000000000000004]
 Jeff> I'd like the last two numbers to be identical (say 0.8),
 Jeff> that way I can be sure that a plot will have a certain
 Jeff> aspect ratio if the figure dimensions have that aspect
 Jeff> ratio.
If no args are passed to axes, a subplot(111) is created. If you want
to control the rectangle, just pass in the l,b,w,h args
 ax = axes([0.1, 0.1, 0.8, 0.8])
If you want to see how the default subplots are created, see
axes.Subplot and the subplot params
 left 	: 0.125 # the left side of the subplots of the figure
 right 	: 0.9 # the right side of the subplots of the figure
 bottom 	: 0.1 # the bottom of the subplots of the figure
 top 	: 0.9 # the top of the subplots of the figure
 wspace 	: 0.2 # the amount of width reserved for blank space between subplots
 hspace 	: 0.2 # the amount of height reserved for white space between subplots 
JDH
PS: thanks for the basemap notes -- I presented them at scipy and
there appeared to be a fair amount of interest in it.

Showing 3 results of 3

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