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Showing results of 290

<< < 1 .. 8 9 10 11 12 > >> (Page 10 of 12)
From: George L. <ge...@le...> - 2007年08月06日 15:54:40
The attached MyContour.py generates ContourDemo.png (also attached).
My problem:
 The contours labels show 3 zeros beyond the decimal point. Is it
 possible to force these labels to integers? If so how? If not why not?
Ps.
 Is there a way to browse previous postings to matplotlib-users 
without looking month by month? For example can I bring up all postings 
regarding 'contour'?
thanks,
george
From: Zelakiewicz, S. (G. Research) <zel...@cr...> - 2007年08月06日 14:55:31
Hi,
I am trying to make a contour plot using custom labels that consist only
of text strings but can not figure it out. For example, if I do the
following:
A=3Darange(100)
A=3DA.reshape(10,10)
CS=3Dcontour(A,[50,])
clabel(CS)
I get one contour line as expected, but instead of printing the contour
level (50) I would like to print a simple string like "Some String." I
tried using the fmt option of clabel, but it requires a way to stuff in
the level value (ie. fmt=3D"Some String %f"). Is it possible to use a
simple string for these labels?
Thanks,
Scott.
From: Alexander B. <ale...@gm...> - 2007年08月06日 14:43:47
Hi all,
 I'm trying to display the histograms of lists of 2D vectors together with
their error ellipses in a 3D plot.
Plotting the histograms as 3D scatterplots is easy using
matplotlib.axes3d.Axes3D( ).scatter3D( x, y, h ),
but how do I draw the error ellipse in the ( x, y ) plane. I know how to
create a matplotlib.patches.Ellipse
object, but I'm pretty clueless on how to integrate it into the figure. Any
help?
-- 
Alex Borghgraef
From: fred <fr...@gm...> - 2007年08月06日 13:49:27
Angus McMorland a écrit :
> Since all sorts of data can be displayed in am mpl window (e.g. a
> plot, a contour...) you have to tell it how to access the correct
> scalar value to display. You could do this with the
> motion_notify_event. Register it during init, something like:
>
> self.canvas.mpl_connect('motion_notify_event', self.mouse_move_callback)
>
> then in mouse_move_callback:
>
> def mouse_move_callback(self, evt):
> xpos, ypos = evt.xdata, evt.ydata
> val = self.data[numpy.floor(xpos), numpy.floor(ypos)]
> status_str = "x: %4.2f y: %4.2f I:%4.2f" \
> % (xpos, ypos, val)
> self.SetStatusText(status_str)
>
> where data is your image variable. This works in a wx.Frame object,
> which has a SetStatusString method for displaying the values. I'm sure
> you could find an equivalent in your traits app.
>
> 
Thanks, I'll look at this asap (as I got other stuff "on fire").
BTW, I can't ever get (in fact, I don't know how) working
the coords to be displayed in my traits app.
I guess this is more related to traits, not to mpl.
But the "mpl embedded in traits app guru" is on holydays for now.
Let's wait...
Cheers,
-- 
http://scipy.org/FredericPetit
From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2007年08月06日 13:34:58
On 8/6/07, Michael Droettboom <md...@st...> wrote:
> from setupext import get_win32_compiler
> if sys.platform == 'win32' and get_win32_compiler() == 'mingw32':
> for module in ext_modules:
> module.libraries.append("msvcrt")
That message in setupext.py:
 NOTE, if you are building on python24 on win32, see
 http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2004-December/254826.html
refers to a patch for distutils to work around that bug. It now
appears this link is stale. Your approach is better anyway, because
it doesn't require patching distutils. I had assumed that because you
guys were following the build instructions closely, that this *was
not* the source of your problems. But it looks like the same bug, or
at least a closely related one. Haven't been able to find an active
link for that post, but your approach probably obviates it anyway.
From: Charlie M. <cw...@gm...> - 2007年08月06日 13:03:52
I'll give the build a try on windows tonight using my usual methods.
- Charlie
On 8/6/07, Michael Droettboom <md...@st...> wrote:
> william ratcliff wrote:
> > No, with whatever is in the current version of svn, it now works on the
> > intel quad as well. Thanks!
>
> That's great news! While it's great to hear that it's working, it would
> be even better to track down the cause of the failure, if possible.
>
> Do you mean the current version of SVN of numpy or matplotlib? It
> doesn't like there were any commits to matplotlib over the weekend.
>
> Do you happen to know what SVN revision was breaking before you updated
> and everything worked? When you finally updated and things worked, did
> you clean the build directory by any chance? Python distutils doesn't
> always track dependencies correctly and rebuild enough stuff, which can
> sometimes be the cause of problems.
>
> > I just tried following Michael's build
> > instructions (incidentally, could his last additions to setup.py be
> > checked in to svn, along with a profile25.bat file?)
>
> I was wary of committing that change until it had been reviewed by
> someone else with more mingw32 experience. It worked for me, but it has
> the feel of something slightly hackish...
>
> For review, in case some other Windows guys are listening, I adding the
> following right before the final "distrib = setup(..." in setup.py:
>
> from setupext import get_win32_compiler
> if sys.platform == 'win32' and get_win32_compiler() == 'mingw32':
> for module in ext_modules:
> module.libraries.append("msvcrt")
>
> As for profile25.bat, I can't find it in SVN. Maybe whoever is
> responsible for win32_static.tar.gz needs to do it. Not sure...
>
> Cheers,
> Mike
>
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2007年08月06日 12:24:06
william ratcliff wrote:
 > No, with whatever is in the current version of svn, it now works on the
 > intel quad as well. Thanks!
That's great news! While it's great to hear that it's working, it would 
be even better to track down the cause of the failure, if possible.
Do you mean the current version of SVN of numpy or matplotlib? It 
doesn't like there were any commits to matplotlib over the weekend.
Do you happen to know what SVN revision was breaking before you updated 
and everything worked? When you finally updated and things worked, did 
you clean the build directory by any chance? Python distutils doesn't 
always track dependencies correctly and rebuild enough stuff, which can 
sometimes be the cause of problems.
> I just tried following Michael's build
> instructions (incidentally, could his last additions to setup.py be
> checked in to svn, along with a profile25.bat file?)
I was wary of committing that change until it had been reviewed by 
someone else with more mingw32 experience. It worked for me, but it has 
the feel of something slightly hackish...
For review, in case some other Windows guys are listening, I adding the 
following right before the final "distrib = setup(..." in setup.py:
 from setupext import get_win32_compiler
 if sys.platform == 'win32' and get_win32_compiler() == 'mingw32':
 for module in ext_modules:
 module.libraries.append("msvcrt")
As for profile25.bat, I can't find it in SVN. Maybe whoever is 
responsible for win32_static.tar.gz needs to do it. Not sure...
Cheers,
Mike
From: william r. <wil...@gm...> - 2007年08月05日 23:48:14
No, with whatever is in the current version of svn, it now works on the
intel quad as well. Thanks!
On 8/5/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
>
> One more datapoint--I am becoming suspicious that this could be an arch
> problem. A colleague was able to build from source under cygwin on his
> rather old laptop. However, another colleague and myself have rather new
> computers and both failed (with different errors in the verbose mode). I
> just tried following Michael's build instructions (incidentally, could his
> last additions to setup.py be checked in to svn, along with a
> profile25.bat file?) on an old windows box that we have lying around here
> and it also worked well and I was able to run the embedding_in_wx4.py
> example without any problems.
>
> The computer that I've been having all of the problems on also was
> relatively clean--so, there are only two things I can think of--either some
> bizarre clash with the version of numpy that I built from source off of svn
> (which passed all of its tests, so I doubt it), or an arch dependence. I
> have an intel quad and my colleage has a duo, so perhaps there's a problem
> with computers with multiple processors? I will check the numpy issue later
> today.
>
> Thanks again,
> William
>
> On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> >
> > Oh--sorry I didn't read carefully--I don't need to install from sourceif there is a binary of the current svn version.
> >
> > Thanks!!
> >
> > William
> >
> >
> > On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> > >
> > > One of my colleagues, Paul Kienzle has made a number of additions to
> > > matplotlib for interacting with artists. I need to use some of those
> > > additions--which are not included in the stable release. Paul's on
> > > vacation, so I am trying to start from source.
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > William
> > >
> > > On 8/2/07, John Hunter < jd...@gm...> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> > > > > Thanks again for all your work on this. I moved my old minGW and
> > > > installed
> > > > > MinGW-5.1.3 , and was already running the others--except numpy, I
> > > > have the
> > > > > latest version from svn, which I compiled and built fine after
> > > > building
> > > > > atlas. I checked out matplotlib from svn and did the same as you
> > > > > --I didn't try using the importlib batch file--I have a
> > > > libpython25.a--so,
> > > > > after changing the profile24.bat to profile25.bat with appropriate
> > > > path
> > > > > changes and your modifications to setup.py, I built it. I then
> > > > installed
> > > > > it--no problems yet. I then tried to use it with
> > > > embedding_in_wx4.py and
> > > > > python crashes and burns. I find that it crashes with the same
> > > > LazyValue
> > > > > error. Something similar happened to one of my colleagues who
> > > > tried building
> > > > > with visual studio instead of mingw. He's given up and is now
> > > > running it on
> > > > > his Mac. Sadly, I don't have that option. Does anyone else have
> > > > any ideas?
> > > >
> > > > Charlie Moad does our win32 builds for releases -- Charlie if you
> > > > get
> > > > a minute could you see if your build pipeline is still working OK
> > > > with
> > > > the recent svn changes, and if so take pity on poor William and send
> > > > him an installer?
> > > >
> > > > Or is there some reason you *need* to be building from src William?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > > JDH
> > > >
> > >
> > >
> >
>
From: Eric F. <ef...@ha...> - 2007年08月05日 18:09:24
Tommy,
The easiest way is probably to provide contourf with x and y arguments 
corresponding to the bin centers. The x vector would have an entry for 
each column in your Z(x,y), and the y vector an entry for each row.
In [1]:z = rand(10,20)
In [2]:x = 2*arange(20)
In [3]:y = 2*arange(10)
In [4]:contourf(x,y,z)
Eric
Tommy Grav wrote:
> I am creating a 2 dimensional histogram that I would like to plot as 
> a contourf plot with
> matplotlib. I am using numpy to generate the histogram, but when I 
> plot it the tick marks
> are of course the index of the histogram array. How do I change these 
> tick labels to
> the value of the bins used to generate the histogram?
> 
> Cheers
> Tommy
> 
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: william r. <wil...@gm...> - 2007年08月05日 15:46:26
One more datapoint--I am becoming suspicious that this could be an arch
problem. A colleague was able to build from source under cygwin on his
rather old laptop. However, another colleague and myself have rather new
computers and both failed (with different errors in the verbose mode). I
just tried following Michael's build instructions (incidentally, could his
last additions to setup.py be checked in to svn, along with a
profile25.batfile?) on an old windows box that we have lying around
here and it also
worked well and I was able to run the embedding_in_wx4.py example without
any problems.
The computer that I've been having all of the problems on also was
relatively clean--so, there are only two things I can think of--either some
bizarre clash with the version of numpy that I built from source off of svn
(which passed all of its tests, so I doubt it), or an arch dependence. I
have an intel quad and my colleage has a duo, so perhaps there's a problem
with computers with multiple processors? I will check the numpy issue later
today.
Thanks again,
William
On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
>
> Oh--sorry I didn't read carefully--I don't need to install from source if
> there is a binary of the current svn version.
>
> Thanks!!
>
> William
>
>
> On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> >
> > One of my colleagues, Paul Kienzle has made a number of additions to
> > matplotlib for interacting with artists. I need to use some of those
> > additions--which are not included in the stable release. Paul's on
> > vacation, so I am trying to start from source.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > William
> >
> > On 8/2/07, John Hunter < jd...@gm...> wrote:
> > >
> > > On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> > > > Thanks again for all your work on this. I moved my old minGW and
> > > installed
> > > > MinGW-5.1.3 , and was already running the others--except numpy, I
> > > have the
> > > > latest version from svn, which I compiled and built fine after
> > > building
> > > > atlas. I checked out matplotlib from svn and did the same as you
> > > > --I didn't try using the importlib batch file--I have a
> > > libpython25.a--so,
> > > > after changing the profile24.bat to profile25.bat with appropriate
> > > path
> > > > changes and your modifications to setup.py, I built it. I then
> > > installed
> > > > it--no problems yet. I then tried to use it with
> > > embedding_in_wx4.py and
> > > > python crashes and burns. I find that it crashes with the same
> > > LazyValue
> > > > error. Something similar happened to one of my colleagues who tried
> > > building
> > > > with visual studio instead of mingw. He's given up and is now
> > > running it on
> > > > his Mac. Sadly, I don't have that option. Does anyone else have
> > > any ideas?
> > >
> > > Charlie Moad does our win32 builds for releases -- Charlie if you get
> > > a minute could you see if your build pipeline is still working OK with
> > >
> > > the recent svn changes, and if so take pity on poor William and send
> > > him an installer?
> > >
> > > Or is there some reason you *need* to be building from src William?
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > JDH
> > >
> >
> >
>
From: Tommy G. <tg...@ma...> - 2007年08月05日 15:23:50
I am creating a 2 dimensional histogram that I would like to plot as 
a contourf plot with
matplotlib. I am using numpy to generate the histogram, but when I 
plot it the tick marks
are of course the index of the histogram array. How do I change these 
tick labels to
the value of the bins used to generate the histogram?
Cheers
 Tommy
From: Angus M. <am...@gm...> - 2007年08月03日 23:34:51
Hi fred,
On 04/08/07, fred <fr...@gm...> wrote:
> Well, running mpl examples (say image_demo.py),
> you can see the point coordinates under the pointer.
> Good point ;-)
>
> I would like to have the scalar value under the pointer to be displayed
> too.
>
> How could I do this ?
Since all sorts of data can be displayed in am mpl window (e.g. a
plot, a contour...) you have to tell it how to access the correct
scalar value to display. You could do this with the
motion_notify_event. Register it during init, something like:
self.canvas.mpl_connect('motion_notify_event', self.mouse_move_callback)
then in mouse_move_callback:
def mouse_move_callback(self, evt):
 xpos, ypos = evt.xdata, evt.ydata
 val = self.data[numpy.floor(xpos), numpy.floor(ypos)]
 status_str = "x: %4.2f y: %4.2f I:%4.2f" \
 % (xpos, ypos, val)
 self.SetStatusText(status_str)
where data is your image variable. This works in a wx.Frame object,
which has a SetStatusString method for displaying the values. I'm sure
you could find an equivalent in your traits app.
Hope that helps,
Gus.
-- 
AJC McMorland, PhD Student
Physiology, University of Auckland
From: Jouni K <jk...@ik...> - 2007年08月03日 15:37:09
John Hunter <jdh2358@...> writes:
> On 8/3/07, fred <fredmfp@...> wrote:
>
> > >>> Is there any tarball for ml archives ?
> 
> Unfortunately a lot of the mail archive search algorithms are pretty
> poor. I subscribe over gmail, which has decent search, but I do not
> have the entire archives. I have a lot of the archives, particularly
> the earlier years when I was using a UNIX mail server and client, but
> now that I have moved over to gmail I do not have the recent archives
> in flat file or tarball.
You can download the recent archives from gmane.org (though all email 
addresses are encrypted):
http://gmane.org/export.php
I wonder if there is any similar possibility at sourceforge?
The gmane archives only go back to 2004 or so, so it would be
nice if you (or other early developers) could upload older
archives to gmane. The instructions are at 
http://gmane.org/import.php 
but basically all you have to do is put up a unix-style mbox file
somewhere and send the URL to the gmane administrators. Importing
does have the effect that old article numbers are no longer
valid, and thus the read/unread status in newsreader programs is
reset; thus it would be a good idea to gather all old archives
first and then do just one upload, and warn readers in advance.
-- 
Jouni
From: fred <fr...@gm...> - 2007年08月03日 15:17:57
John Hunter a écrit :
> But you can just ask us -- maybe we can help.
> 
Ok.
Well, running mpl examples (say image_demo.py),
you can see the point coordinates under the pointer.
Good point ;-)
I would like to have the scalar value under the pointer to be displayed
too.
How could I do this ?
In fact, I use mpl in a traits app,
which looks like this:
http://fredantispam.free.fr/mpl.png
In my traits app, no point coords under pointer are displayed.
Am I missing something obvious ?
snippet code:
 da = self.display.axes
 self.img = da.imshow(self.current_data.array,
 vmin=self.vmin, vmax=self.vmax,
 cmap=self.cmap,
 interpolation=self.interpolate_colormap_method,
 extent=extent,
 origin=self.origin,
 alpha=self.opacity)
 self.display.figure.canvas.draw()
TIA.
Cheers,
-- 
http://scipy.org/FredericPetit
From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2007年08月03日 14:19:14
On 8/3/07, fred <fr...@gm...> wrote:
> >>> Is there any tarball for ml archives ?
> >>>
> >>>
> >> You can search the user and developer archives here:
> >>
> >> http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=80706
> >>
> Yes, but with "probing" keyword,
> results are not relevant:
> "Could not fire up pylab in Japanese XP"
>
> I can't believe that no one has asked before about this issue ;-)
Unfortunately a lot of the mail archive search algorithms are pretty
poor. I subscribe over gmail, which has decent search, but I do not
have the entire archives. I have a lot of the archives, particularly
the earlier years when I was using a UNIX mail server and client, but
now that I have moved over to gmail I do not have the recent archives
in flat file or tarball.
But you can just ask us -- maybe we can help.
JDH
From: fred <fr...@gm...> - 2007年08月03日 12:51:22
Michael Droettboom a écrit :
> Darren Dale wrote:
> 
>> On Friday 03 August 2007 08:03:31 am fred wrote:
>> 
>> 
>>> Is there any tarball for ml archives ?
>>> 
>>> 
>> You can search the user and developer archives here:
>>
>> http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=80706
>> 
Yes, but with "probing" keyword,
results are not relevant:
"Could not fire up pylab in Japanese XP"
I can't believe that no one has asked before about this issue ;-)
-- 
http://scipy.org/FredericPetit
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2007年08月03日 12:16:22
Darren Dale wrote:
> On Friday 03 August 2007 08:03:31 am fred wrote:
> 
>> Is there any tarball for ml archives ?
>> 
>
> You can search the user and developer archives here:
>
> http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=80706
> 
It's also archived on gmane, which has a different interface that some 
prefer:
http://dir.gmane.org/gmane.comp.python.matplotlib.general
Or, in a bind, sometimes using Google with "matplotlib-users" in the 
search string can return different results.
Cheers,
Mike
From: Darren D. <dd...@co...> - 2007年08月03日 12:11:50
On Friday 03 August 2007 08:03:31 am fred wrote:
> Is there any tarball for ml archives ?
You can search the user and developer archives here:
http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=80706
From: fred <fr...@gm...> - 2007年08月03日 12:03:41
Hi,
Is there any tarball for ml archives ?
In fact, I'm looking for something related to values probing (with a 
pointer,
for example).
So I want, before asking, to have a look in the archives.
Cheers,
-- 
http://scipy.org/FredericPetit
From: Jeff W. <js...@fa...> - 2007年08月02日 23:05:05
Ted Drain wrote:
> I don't think so. We always manually check for horizontal and 
> vertical axis crossings and split the line as many times as necessary.
> 
One other solution might be to not plot a line, but use scatter to plot 
the individual points. If there are enough of them, it will look OK.
-Jeff
> At 03:31 PM 8/2/2007, James Boyle wrote:
> 
>> This is probably for Jeff but maybe someone else has an answer.
>> If I plot a satellite orbit on the globe when the groundtrack passes
>> the edge of the map - in this case the Greenwich meridian - the
>> line 'snaps back ' across the plot where the line picks up on the
>> other side of the globe.
>> The attached plot shows the problem, note the line across the
>> northern polar regions. I have encountered this before. In this case
>> I can break the ground track into two segments, one up to and
>> including Greenwich and the other from Greenwich eastward.
>>
>> My question: Is there a more elegant way to deal with this situation
>> in Basemap? I have a nagging feeling that Jeff has addressed this
>> issue but I cannot find anything in the examples.
>>
>> --Jim
>>
>>
>>
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>> 
>
>
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-- 
Jeffrey S. Whitaker Phone : (303)497-6313
Meteorologist FAX : (303)497-6449
NOAA/OAR/PSD R/PSD1 Email : Jef...@no...
325 Broadway Office : Skaggs Research Cntr 1D-124
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From: Ted D. <ted...@jp...> - 2007年08月02日 22:38:02
I don't think so. We always manually check for horizontal and 
vertical axis crossings and split the line as many times as necessary.
At 03:31 PM 8/2/2007, James Boyle wrote:
>This is probably for Jeff but maybe someone else has an answer.
>If I plot a satellite orbit on the globe when the groundtrack passes
>the edge of the map - in this case the Greenwich meridian - the
>line 'snaps back ' across the plot where the line picks up on the
>other side of the globe.
>The attached plot shows the problem, note the line across the
>northern polar regions. I have encountered this before. In this case
>I can break the ground track into two segments, one up to and
>including Greenwich and the other from Greenwich eastward.
>
>My question: Is there a more elegant way to deal with this situation
>in Basemap? I have a nagging feeling that Jeff has addressed this
>issue but I cannot find anything in the examples.
>
>--Jim
>
>
>
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------
>This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc.
>Still grepping through log files to find problems? Stop.
>Now Search log events and configuration files using AJAX and a browser.
>Download your FREE copy of Splunk now >> http://get.splunk.com/
>_______________________________________________
>Matplotlib-users mailing list
>Mat...@li...
>https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users
From: James B. <bo...@ll...> - 2007年08月02日 22:31:46
Attachments: orbit_00784.png
This is probably for Jeff but maybe someone else has an answer.
If I plot a satellite orbit on the globe when the groundtrack passes 
the edge of the map - in this case the Greenwich meridian - the 
line 'snaps back ' across the plot where the line picks up on the 
other side of the globe.
The attached plot shows the problem, note the line across the 
northern polar regions. I have encountered this before. In this case 
I can break the ground track into two segments, one up to and 
including Greenwich and the other from Greenwich eastward.
My question: Is there a more elegant way to deal with this situation 
in Basemap? I have a nagging feeling that Jeff has addressed this 
issue but I cannot find anything in the examples.
--Jim
From: william r. <wil...@gm...> - 2007年08月02日 21:38:51
Oh--sorry I didn't read carefully--I don't need to install from source if
there is a binary of the current svn version.
Thanks!!
William
On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
>
> One of my colleagues, Paul Kienzle has made a number of additions to
> matplotlib for interacting with artists. I need to use some of those
> additions--which are not included in the stable release. Paul's on
> vacation, so I am trying to start from source.
>
> Thanks,
> William
>
> On 8/2/07, John Hunter <jd...@gm...> wrote:
> >
> > On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> > > Thanks again for all your work on this. I moved my old minGW and
> > installed
> > > MinGW-5.1.3 , and was already running the others--except numpy, I have
> > the
> > > latest version from svn, which I compiled and built fine after
> > building
> > > atlas. I checked out matplotlib from svn and did the same as you
> > > --I didn't try using the importlib batch file--I have a
> > libpython25.a--so,
> > > after changing the profile24.bat to profile25.bat with appropriate
> > path
> > > changes and your modifications to setup.py, I built it. I then
> > installed
> > > it--no problems yet. I then tried to use it with embedding_in_wx4.py
> > and
> > > python crashes and burns. I find that it crashes with the same
> > LazyValue
> > > error. Something similar happened to one of my colleagues who tried
> > building
> > > with visual studio instead of mingw. He's given up and is now running
> > it on
> > > his Mac. Sadly, I don't have that option. Does anyone else have any
> > ideas?
> >
> > Charlie Moad does our win32 builds for releases -- Charlie if you get
> > a minute could you see if your build pipeline is still working OK with
> > the recent svn changes, and if so take pity on poor William and send
> > him an installer?
> >
> > Or is there some reason you *need* to be building from src William?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > JDH
> >
>
>
From: william r. <wil...@gm...> - 2007年08月02日 21:35:29
One of my colleagues, Paul Kienzle has made a number of additions to
matplotlib for interacting with artists. I need to use some of those
additions--which are not included in the stable release. Paul's on
vacation, so I am trying to start from source.
Thanks,
William
On 8/2/07, John Hunter <jd...@gm...> wrote:
>
> On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> > Thanks again for all your work on this. I moved my old minGW and
> installed
> > MinGW-5.1.3, and was already running the others--except numpy, I have
> the
> > latest version from svn, which I compiled and built fine after building
> > atlas. I checked out matplotlib from svn and did the same as you
> > --I didn't try using the importlib batch file--I have a
> libpython25.a--so,
> > after changing the profile24.bat to profile25.bat with appropriate path
> > changes and your modifications to setup.py, I built it. I then
> installed
> > it--no problems yet. I then tried to use it with embedding_in_wx4.py
> and
> > python crashes and burns. I find that it crashes with the same
> LazyValue
> > error. Something similar happened to one of my colleagues who tried
> building
> > with visual studio instead of mingw. He's given up and is now running
> it on
> > his Mac. Sadly, I don't have that option. Does anyone else have any
> ideas?
>
> Charlie Moad does our win32 builds for releases -- Charlie if you get
> a minute could you see if your build pipeline is still working OK with
> the recent svn changes, and if so take pity on poor William and send
> him an installer?
>
> Or is there some reason you *need* to be building from src William?
>
> Thanks,
> JDH
>
From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2007年08月02日 21:33:26
On 8/2/07, william ratcliff <wil...@gm...> wrote:
> Thanks again for all your work on this. I moved my old minGW and installed
> MinGW-5.1.3, and was already running the others--except numpy, I have the
> latest version from svn, which I compiled and built fine after building
> atlas. I checked out matplotlib from svn and did the same as you
> --I didn't try using the importlib batch file--I have a libpython25.a--so,
> after changing the profile24.bat to profile25.bat with appropriate path
> changes and your modifications to setup.py, I built it. I then installed
> it--no problems yet. I then tried to use it with embedding_in_wx4.py and
> python crashes and burns. I find that it crashes with the same LazyValue
> error. Something similar happened to one of my colleagues who tried building
> with visual studio instead of mingw. He's given up and is now running it on
> his Mac. Sadly, I don't have that option. Does anyone else have any ideas?
Charlie Moad does our win32 builds for releases -- Charlie if you get
a minute could you see if your build pipeline is still working OK with
the recent svn changes, and if so take pity on poor William and send
him an installer?
Or is there some reason you *need* to be building from src William?
Thanks,
JDH
2 messages has been excluded from this view by a project administrator.

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