|
From: <mme...@us...> - 2008-09-24 09:21:45
|
Revision: 6120
http://matplotlib.svn.sourceforge.net/matplotlib/?rev=6120&view=rev
Author: mmetz_bn
Date: 2008-09-24 09:21:41 +0000 (Wed, 24 Sep 2008)
Log Message:
-----------
minor typo
Modified Paths:
--------------
trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
Modified: trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
===================================================================
--- trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2008-09-24 08:58:16 UTC (rev 6119)
+++ trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2008-09-24 09:21:41 UTC (rev 6120)
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@
* Use the setter methods of the ``Line2D`` instance. ``plot`` returns a list
of lines; eg ``line1, line2 = plot(x1,y1,x2,x2)``. Below I have only
- one line so it is a list of7 length 1. I use tuple unpacking in the
+ one line so it is a list of length 1. I use tuple unpacking in the
``line, = plot(x, y, 'o')`` to get the first element of the list::
line, = plt.plot(x, y, 'o')
@@ -134,9 +134,9 @@
.. sourcecode:: ipython
- In [69]: lines = plot([1,2,3])
+ In [69]: lines = plt.plot([1,2,3])
- In [70]: setp(lines)
+ In [70]: plt.setp(lines)
alpha: float
animated: [True | False]
antialiased or aa: [True | False]
This was sent by the SourceForge.net collaborative development platform, the world's largest Open Source development site.
|
|
From: <mme...@us...> - 2008-12-01 14:07:05
|
Revision: 6460
http://matplotlib.svn.sourceforge.net/matplotlib/?rev=6460&view=rev
Author: mmetz_bn
Date: 2008-12-01 14:06:49 +0000 (Mon, 01 Dec 2008)
Log Message:
-----------
typo, close bug #2358133
Modified Paths:
--------------
trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
Modified: trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
===================================================================
--- trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2008-12-01 10:10:39 UTC (rev 6459)
+++ trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2008-12-01 14:06:49 UTC (rev 6460)
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
You may be wondering why the x-axis ranges from 0-2 and the y-axis
from 1-3. If you provide a single list or array to the
-:func:`~matplotlib.pyplot.plot` command, matplotlib assumes it a
+:func:`~matplotlib.pyplot.plot` command, matplotlib assumes it is a
sequence of y values, and automatically generates the x values for
you. Since python ranges start with 0, the default x vector has the
same length as y but starts with 0. Hence the x data are
This was sent by the SourceForge.net collaborative development platform, the world's largest Open Source development site.
|
|
From: <jd...@us...> - 2009-06-07 14:10:58
|
Revision: 7191
http://matplotlib.svn.sourceforge.net/matplotlib/?rev=7191&view=rev
Author: jdh2358
Date: 2009-06-07 13:46:10 +0000 (Sun, 07 Jun 2009)
Log Message:
-----------
fixed a doc tutorial url
Modified Paths:
--------------
trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
Modified: trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
===================================================================
--- trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2009-06-07 13:08:34 UTC (rev 7190)
+++ trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2009-06-07 13:46:10 UTC (rev 7191)
@@ -271,4 +271,4 @@
variety of other coordinate systems one can choose -- see
:ref:`annotations-tutorial` for details. More examples can be found
in the `annotations demo
-<http://matplotlib.sf.net/examples/pylab_examples/annotation_demo.py>`_
+<http://matplotlib.sf.net/examples/pylab_examples/annotation_demo.html>`_
This was sent by the SourceForge.net collaborative development platform, the world's largest Open Source development site.
|
|
From: <ef...@us...> - 2010-05-30 18:35:49
|
Revision: 8343
http://matplotlib.svn.sourceforge.net/matplotlib/?rev=8343&view=rev
Author: efiring
Date: 2010-05-30 18:35:42 +0000 (Sun, 30 May 2010)
Log Message:
-----------
pyplot_tutorial: add note about pyplot.close, add TM to first Matlab ref
Modified Paths:
--------------
trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
Modified: trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
===================================================================
--- trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2010-05-28 18:53:48 UTC (rev 8342)
+++ trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2010-05-30 18:35:42 UTC (rev 8343)
@@ -5,7 +5,8 @@
***************
:mod:`matplotlib.pyplot` is a collection of command style functions
-that make matplotlib work like matlab. Each ``pyplot`` function makes
+that make matplotlib work like `Matlab™ <http://www.mathworks.com>`_.
+Each ``pyplot`` function makes
some change to a figure: eg, create a figure, create a plotting area
in a figure, plot some lines in a plotting area, decorate the plot
with labels, etc.... :mod:`matplotlib.pyplot` is stateful, in that it
@@ -29,10 +30,10 @@
plt.plot([1,2,3,4], [1,4,9,16])
-For every x, y pair of arguments, there is a optional third argument
+For every x, y pair of arguments, there is an optional third argument
which is the format string that indicates the color and line type of
the plot. The letters and symbols of the format string are from
-matlab, and you concatenate a color string with a line style string.
+Matlab, and you concatenate a color string with a line style string.
The default format string is 'b-', which is a solid blue line. For
example, to plot the above with red circles, you would issue
@@ -86,7 +87,7 @@
lines = plt.plot(x1, y1, x2, y2)
# use keyword args
plt.setp(lines, color='r', linewidth=2.0)
- # or matlab style string value pairs
+ # or Matlab style string value pairs
plt.setp(lines, 'color', 'r', 'linewidth', 2.0)
@@ -204,6 +205,15 @@
stateful wrapper around an object oriented API, which you can use
instead (see :ref:`artist-tutorial`)
+If you are making a long sequence of figures, you need to be aware of one
+more thing: the memory required for a figure is not completely
+released until the figure is explicitly closed with
+:func:`~matplotlib.pyplot.close`. Deleting all references to the
+figure, and/or using the window manager to kill the window in which
+the figure appears on the screen, is not enough, because pyplot
+maintains internal references until :func:`~matplotlib.pyplot.close`
+is called.
+
.. _working-with-text:
Working with text
@@ -270,3 +280,4 @@
:ref:`annotations-tutorial` and :ref:`plotting-guide-annotation` for
details. More examples can be found in
:ref:`pylab_examples-annotation_demo`.
+
This was sent by the SourceForge.net collaborative development platform, the world's largest Open Source development site.
|
|
From: <ef...@us...> - 2010-06-13 23:04:37
|
Revision: 8428
http://matplotlib.svn.sourceforge.net/matplotlib/?rev=8428&view=rev
Author: efiring
Date: 2010-06-13 23:04:30 +0000 (Sun, 13 Jun 2010)
Log Message:
-----------
[2922266] pyplot_tutorial.rst: remove tabs from code (patch by Ori Avtalion)
Modified Paths:
--------------
trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
Modified: trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst
===================================================================
--- trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2010-06-13 22:53:25 UTC (rev 8427)
+++ trunk/matplotlib/doc/users/pyplot_tutorial.rst 2010-06-13 23:04:30 UTC (rev 8428)
@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@
one line so it is a list of length 1. I use tuple unpacking in the
``line, = plot(x, y, 'o')`` to get the first element of the list::
- line, = plt.plot(x, y, '-')
+ line, = plt.plot(x, y, '-')
line.set_antialiased(False) # turn off antialising
* Use the :func:`~matplotlib.pyplot.setp` command. The example below
This was sent by the SourceForge.net collaborative development platform, the world's largest Open Source development site.
|