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From: Thomas K. <th...@kl...> - 2013-06-18 23:40:27
|
On 19 June 2013 00:09, Fernando Perez <fpe...@gm...> wrote: > I wish we could just fix this plugin issue. When we drop support for Python 2.6, I think we can use the expectedFailure mechanism included in unittest from 2.7 onwards. So long as nose recognises that, we should be able to drop our copy of the KnownFailure plugin. Thomas |
From: Fernando P. <fpe...@gm...> - 2013-06-18 23:18:39
|
Good point, I didn't know about that new mechanism. I think we should keep 2.6 support for IPython 1.0, but drop it afterwards. We can discuss that during the dev meeting... Cheers, f On Tue, Jun 18, 2013 at 4:16 PM, Thomas Kluyver <th...@kl...> wrote: > On 19 June 2013 00:09, Fernando Perez <fpe...@gm...> wrote: >> >> I wish we could just fix this plugin issue. > > > When we drop support for Python 2.6, I think we can use the expectedFailure > mechanism included in unittest from 2.7 onwards. So long as nose recognises > that, we should be able to drop our copy of the KnownFailure plugin. > > Thomas -- Fernando Perez (@fperez_org; http://fperez.org) fperez.net-at-gmail: mailing lists only (I ignore this when swamped!) fernando.perez-at-berkeley: contact me here for any direct mail |
From: Fernando P. <fpe...@gm...> - 2013-06-18 23:10:31
|
Hi Mike, On Tue, Jun 18, 2013 at 3:37 PM, Michael Droettboom <md...@st...> wrote: > This was an attempt to fix a bug that mpl's KnownFailure plugin wouldn't > load when running tests directly using the nosetests commandline > script. I see IPython has a testing wrapper script (iptest) -- is that > in part to solve that problem? Only in part. We wrote iptest because we need to start nose multiple times in different subprocesses for each chunk of IPython, as trying to load all of IPython into a single python process ends up producing tears (conflicts between things that don't like to live together in sys.modules like multiple gui toolkits, etc). > In any case, the revert should be simple -- can you try commenting out > the "entry_points" kwarg at the bottom of the setup.py script? (You'll > probably need to blitz the matplotlib installation directory and `build` > for good measure). I can't actually reproduce the bug myself, but I > suspect that's because this is somewhat dependent on the order in which > things are installed into the virtualenv or the phases of the moon... Yup, problem gone. With this change: ((v1.3.0rc3))longs[matplotlib]> git diff diff --git a/setup.py b/setup.py index 5f1b561..b4d1763 100644 --- a/setup.py +++ b/setup.py @@ -230,9 +230,9 @@ if __name__ == '__main__': zip_safe=False, # Install our nose plugin so it will always be found - entry_points={ - 'nose.plugins.0.10': [ - 'KnownFailure = matplotlib.testing.noseclasses:KnownFailure' - ] - }, + # entry_points={ + # 'nose.plugins.0.10': [ + # 'KnownFailure = matplotlib.testing.noseclasses:KnownFailure' + # ] + # }, ) I get as expected: ((v1.3.0rc3))longs[matplotlib]> iptest -vx IPython.core.tests.test_run [...] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 23 tests in 2.277s OK (KNOWNFAIL=1) > If that works for you, we can just take that out and require testers to > use our testing script (and unfortunately will have to make another > release candidate). Well, I wouldn't want to force mpl to have to ship a custom testing script, that's kind of an ugly kludge that we live with but that is really sub-optimal. I wish we could just fix this plugin issue. The problem, I suspect, is the presence of multiple KnownFailure classes in a way that trips an isisnstance() check somewhere. Cheers, f |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-18 22:52:21
|
This was an attempt to fix a bug that mpl's KnownFailure plugin wouldn't load when running tests directly using the nosetests commandline script. I see IPython has a testing wrapper script (iptest) -- is that in part to solve that problem? In any case, the revert should be simple -- can you try commenting out the "entry_points" kwarg at the bottom of the setup.py script? (You'll probably need to blitz the matplotlib installation directory and `build` for good measure). I can't actually reproduce the bug myself, but I suspect that's because this is somewhat dependent on the order in which things are installed into the virtualenv or the phases of the moon... If that works for you, we can just take that out and require testers to use our testing script (and unfortunately will have to make another release candidate). Mike On 06/18/2013 06:13 PM, Fernando Perez wrote: > Hi Ben, > > On Tue, Jun 18, 2013 at 1:29 PM, Benjamin Root <ben...@ou...> wrote: > >> Does the same thing happen with the v1.3.x branch? You said you tested >> master, but that isn't exactly the same as v1.3.x. > I just tested with the v1.3.0rc3, and the problem is present there: > > ((v1.3.0rc3))longs[matplotlib]> iptest -vx IPython.core.tests.test_run > Check that %run doesn't damage __builtins__ ... ok > Check that the type of __builtins__ doesn't change with %run. ... ok > Test that prompts correctly generate after %run ... ok > Test that the option -p, which invokes the profiler, do not ... ok > Test that namespace cleanup is not too aggressive GH-238 ... ERROR > > ====================================================================== > ERROR: Test that namespace cleanup is not too aggressive GH-238 > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/nose/case.py", line 197, in runTest > self.test(*self.arg) > File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/numpy/testing/decorators.py", > line 213, in knownfailer > raise KnownFailureTest(msg) > KnownFailureTest: This test is known to fail > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > Ran 5 tests in 0.006s > > FAILED (errors=1) > > > Cheers, > > f > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: > > Build for Windows Store. > > http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel |
From: Fernando P. <fpe...@gm...> - 2013-06-18 22:14:35
|
Hi Ben, On Tue, Jun 18, 2013 at 1:29 PM, Benjamin Root <ben...@ou...> wrote: > Does the same thing happen with the v1.3.x branch? You said you tested > master, but that isn't exactly the same as v1.3.x. I just tested with the v1.3.0rc3, and the problem is present there: ((v1.3.0rc3))longs[matplotlib]> iptest -vx IPython.core.tests.test_run Check that %run doesn't damage __builtins__ ... ok Check that the type of __builtins__ doesn't change with %run. ... ok Test that prompts correctly generate after %run ... ok Test that the option -p, which invokes the profiler, do not ... ok Test that namespace cleanup is not too aggressive GH-238 ... ERROR ====================================================================== ERROR: Test that namespace cleanup is not too aggressive GH-238 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/nose/case.py", line 197, in runTest self.test(*self.arg) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/numpy/testing/decorators.py", line 213, in knownfailer raise KnownFailureTest(msg) KnownFailureTest: This test is known to fail ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ran 5 tests in 0.006s FAILED (errors=1) Cheers, f |
From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2013-06-18 20:29:44
|
On Tue, Jun 18, 2013 at 4:19 PM, Fernando Perez <fpe...@gm...>wrote: > Hi folks, > > <snip> > > Since SciPy'13 is coming and I know Mike will be there, I'm happy to > try to debug this face to face in Austin. I just wanted to put it on > your radar, in case it's an easy fix (esp. if it's one you can apply > before 1.3.0 goes out). > > Cheers, > > Fernando, Does the same thing happen with the v1.3.x branch? You said you tested master, but that isn't exactly the same as v1.3.x. Cheers! Ben Root |
From: Fernando P. <fpe...@gm...> - 2013-06-18 20:20:22
|
Hi folks, I'm wondering if the following rings any bells for you... Right now, on an ubuntu 13.04 machine, if I install mpl master (say to my home directory), the IPython test suite fails here: iptest -vx IPython.core.tests.test_run ... ====================================================================== ERROR: Test that namespace cleanup is not too aggressive GH-238 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/nose/case.py", line 197, in runTest self.test(*self.arg) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/numpy/testing/decorators.py", line 213, in knownfailer raise KnownFailureTest(msg) KnownFailureTest: This test is known to fail If I uninstall mpl from master and revert to the system version (1.2.1), then it's all OK. We'd seen this problem a few years ago, but in that case it was the opposite: mpl master was OK and the issue was mis-packaging by Ubuntu: https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/823 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/matplotlib/+bug/871176 But now the problem appears to be caused by mpl master. Can you think of any recent changes to mpl in how you load your nose plugins that could be causing this? Since SciPy'13 is coming and I know Mike will be there, I'm happy to try to debug this face to face in Austin. I just wanted to put it on your radar, in case it's an easy fix (esp. if it's one you can apply before 1.3.0 goes out). Cheers, f -- Fernando Perez (@fperez_org; http://fperez.org) fperez.net-at-gmail: mailing lists only (I ignore this when swamped!) fernando.perez-at-berkeley: contact me here for any direct mail |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-18 19:20:35
|
I have tagged a 1.3.0rc3 and uploaded a tarball to Sourceforge. We may not get all the binaries up in the next little while, so I'll wait for those and then make an announcement on matplotlib-users. After a couple of weeks, assuming no serious problems, we'll be ready for 1.3.0 final. Thanks again to everyone for their help with this release! Mike On 06/17/2013 02:53 PM, Damon McDougall wrote: > > > > On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 9:50 AM, Michael Droettboom <md...@st... > <mailto:md...@st...>> wrote: > > We're a little behind schedule for 1.3.0 -- held up by the > distribute/setuptools upgrade debacle. I'd like to put out a 1.3.0rc3 > late tonight or tomorrow, and hopefully get a final release out early > next week in advance of Scipy if all goes well. Any objections? > > > I'm too far behind on my email to be apprised of the state of > distribute vs setuptools. I trust your judgement :) > > > Mike > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: > > Build for Windows Store. > > http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > <mailto:Mat...@li...> > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel > > > > > -- > Damon McDougall > http://www.damon-is-a-geek.com > Institute for Computational Engineering Sciences > 201 E. 24th St. > Stop C0200 > The University of Texas at Austin > Austin, TX 78712-1229 |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-18 01:45:44
|
On 06/17/2013 02:10 PM, Benjamin Root wrote: > > > In the meantime, a "bug" I have noticed. In the list of markers: > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/markers_api.html, we have things like > "TICKLEFT", "CARETUP" and such. These seem to be some sort of > placeholder for the numerical values and is quite confusing. I > suspect this has been this way for a while now. Yes -- these are numeric enumerations defined in matplotlib.markers. That should be made clearer, or we should add string aliases for these things. Mike |
From: Damon M. <dam...@gm...> - 2013-06-17 18:53:49
|
On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 9:50 AM, Michael Droettboom <md...@st...> wrote: > We're a little behind schedule for 1.3.0 -- held up by the > distribute/setuptools upgrade debacle. I'd like to put out a 1.3.0rc3 > late tonight or tomorrow, and hopefully get a final release out early > next week in advance of Scipy if all goes well. Any objections? > I'm too far behind on my email to be apprised of the state of distribute vs setuptools. I trust your judgement :) > > Mike > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: > > Build for Windows Store. > > http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel > -- Damon McDougall http://www.damon-is-a-geek.com Institute for Computational Engineering Sciences 201 E. 24th St. Stop C0200 The University of Texas at Austin Austin, TX 78712-1229 |
From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2013-06-17 18:10:49
|
On Mon, Jun 17, 2013 at 10:05 AM, Michael Droettboom <md...@st...>wrote: > It might be a good idea to add some of these recommendations to MEP10, > which serves somewhat as a guide to those that are going through and > updating the docstrings. > > Will do. I will try to put something together prior to SciPy 2013 so that they can be discussed. > > On 06/15/2013 02:34 PM, Benjamin Root wrote: > > As I continue to put together my tutorial for SciPy 2013, I have come > to realize several things that are lacking with our documentation. First > of all, while the pyplot summary table: > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/pyplot_summary.html is a great addition, > it is still a huge mis-mash of different kinds of functions. Some > functions are for plotting, others are for figure and axes prep, and others > are for decorating the plot. I am just about done with my reorganized list > and will post it for others to comment and possibly include for that page. > > > Sounds good. > > > Second, if there is one thing that Matlab gets right, it is its > documentation. Let's compare the doc page for the hist() function: > > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/pyplot_api.html#matplotlib.pyplot.hist > http://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/hist.html > (for those with NoScript, you will want javascript turned on for the > mathworks page) > > First off, I think there is some sort of error in the docstring because > the sphinx rendering is a bit messed up. Second, in the matlab doc page, > there is a dead simple, complete, concise example for each call signature, > and an image of the plot to go with it. > > I think this is key. I am finding some functions that have examples that > demonstrate more than just the plotting function, i.e., hexbin(), or are > missng examples altogether, i.e., matshow() and pie(). > > So, my proposal is this. For every plotting function, there should be a > minimalist, complete example available to demonstrate it. Further, that > example and its result should be easily viewable from the function's > documentation. For organization's sake, I would suggest having a > consistent naming scheme for this kind of example. Lastly, such an example > should be required as part of any pull request to add new plotting > functions. > > Also sounds good. Let's add that to the pull request checklist here: > > http://matplotlib.org/devel/coding_guide.html > > I'll put together a PR with a proposed naming scheme and a first pass at creating a bunch of these examples. I was thinking that it might be nice to put together a "gallery" of some sort that showcases the plotting functions that are available using these simple examples, and clicking on the image would take you to the documentation for that function. > > As a side note related to "easily viewable example code", one thing I > don't like about the examples in the doc strings is that they don't provide > me a link to one of these pages: > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/examples/pie_and_polar_charts/pie_demo_features.html. > Those pages are nice because I can see the code and the image it produces > at the same time. Instead, those API doc pages just gives me a link to > download the source code, or to view the image. Is it at all possible to > have the example sphinx directive include a link to those example pages > when rendering the API documentation? > > > It is possible -- it's not really how it works now. The example pages are > generated from python source files in the examples/ tree, whereas the > docstring examples are inserted inline into the docstring (or sometimes > referencing external files). But with a little tweaking of the plot > directive extension, it should be possible. > > We can certainly flesh out the idea some more during SciPy2013. In the meantime, a "bug" I have noticed. In the list of markers: http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/markers_api.html, we have things like "TICKLEFT", "CARETUP" and such. These seem to be some sort of placeholder for the numerical values and is quite confusing. I suspect this has been this way for a while now. Cheers! Ben Root |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-17 14:58:40
|
We're a little behind schedule for 1.3.0 -- held up by the distribute/setuptools upgrade debacle. I'd like to put out a 1.3.0rc3 late tonight or tomorrow, and hopefully get a final release out early next week in advance of Scipy if all goes well. Any objections? Mike |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-17 14:08:06
|
It might be a good idea to add some of these recommendations to MEP10, which serves somewhat as a guide to those that are going through and updating the docstrings. On 06/15/2013 02:34 PM, Benjamin Root wrote: > As I continue to put together my tutorial for SciPy 2013, I have come > to realize several things that are lacking with our documentation. > First of all, while the pyplot summary table: > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/pyplot_summary.html is a great > addition, it is still a huge mis-mash of different kinds of > functions. Some functions are for plotting, others are for figure and > axes prep, and others are for decorating the plot. I am just about > done with my reorganized list and will post it for others to comment > and possibly include for that page. Sounds good. > > Second, if there is one thing that Matlab gets right, it is its > documentation. Let's compare the doc page for the hist() function: > > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/pyplot_api.html#matplotlib.pyplot.hist > http://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/hist.html > (for those with NoScript, you will want javascript turned on for the > mathworks page) > > First off, I think there is some sort of error in the docstring > because the sphinx rendering is a bit messed up. Second, in the > matlab doc page, there is a dead simple, complete, concise example for > each call signature, and an image of the plot to go with it. > > I think this is key. I am finding some functions that have examples > that demonstrate more than just the plotting function, i.e., hexbin(), > or are missng examples altogether, i.e., matshow() and pie(). > > So, my proposal is this. For every plotting function, there should be > a minimalist, complete example available to demonstrate it. Further, > that example and its result should be easily viewable from the > function's documentation. For organization's sake, I would suggest > having a consistent naming scheme for this kind of example. Lastly, > such an example should be required as part of any pull request to add > new plotting functions. Also sounds good. Let's add that to the pull request checklist here: http://matplotlib.org/devel/coding_guide.html > > As a side note related to "easily viewable example code", one thing I > don't like about the examples in the doc strings is that they don't > provide me a link to one of these pages: > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/examples/pie_and_polar_charts/pie_demo_features.html. > Those pages are nice because I can see the code and the image it > produces at the same time. Instead, those API doc pages just gives me > a link to download the source code, or to view the image. Is it at > all possible to have the example sphinx directive include a link to > those example pages when rendering the API documentation? It is possible -- it's not really how it works now. The example pages are generated from python source files in the examples/ tree, whereas the docstring examples are inserted inline into the docstring (or sometimes referencing external files). But with a little tweaking of the plot directive extension, it should be possible. Mike > > Cheers! > Ben Root > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: > > Build for Windows Store. > > http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev > > > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel |
From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2013-06-15 18:35:00
|
As I continue to put together my tutorial for SciPy 2013, I have come to realize several things that are lacking with our documentation. First of all, while the pyplot summary table: http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/pyplot_summary.html is a great addition, it is still a huge mis-mash of different kinds of functions. Some functions are for plotting, others are for figure and axes prep, and others are for decorating the plot. I am just about done with my reorganized list and will post it for others to comment and possibly include for that page. Second, if there is one thing that Matlab gets right, it is its documentation. Let's compare the doc page for the hist() function: http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/api/pyplot_api.html#matplotlib.pyplot.hist http://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/hist.html (for those with NoScript, you will want javascript turned on for the mathworks page) First off, I think there is some sort of error in the docstring because the sphinx rendering is a bit messed up. Second, in the matlab doc page, there is a dead simple, complete, concise example for each call signature, and an image of the plot to go with it. I think this is key. I am finding some functions that have examples that demonstrate more than just the plotting function, i.e., hexbin(), or are missng examples altogether, i.e., matshow() and pie(). So, my proposal is this. For every plotting function, there should be a minimalist, complete example available to demonstrate it. Further, that example and its result should be easily viewable from the function's documentation. For organization's sake, I would suggest having a consistent naming scheme for this kind of example. Lastly, such an example should be required as part of any pull request to add new plotting functions. As a side note related to "easily viewable example code", one thing I don't like about the examples in the doc strings is that they don't provide me a link to one of these pages: http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/examples/pie_and_polar_charts/pie_demo_features.html. Those pages are nice because I can see the code and the image it produces at the same time. Instead, those API doc pages just gives me a link to download the source code, or to view the image. Is it at all possible to have the example sphinx directive include a link to those example pages when rendering the API documentation? Cheers! Ben Root |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-11 14:54:38
|
Thank you for the contribution. Would you mind creating this as a pull request so we can comment on it and keep track of its progress? (Visit your forks' page -- there should be a "pull request" button for your "topic;voronoi" branch there). And also, just to note I have some immediate commitments and may not get to this for a while personally -- which isn't to say any of the other fine folks here won't :) Mike On 06/11/2013 08:28 AM, Eduard Bopp wrote: > Dear matplotlib devs, > > I've been working on an implementation of Voronoi diagrams in > matplotlib. It is based on the Delaunay triangulation and simply creates > a PatchCollection of Voronoi cells. > > I added a function/method to the pyplot module and the Axes class, > respectively, which is called like this: > > voronoi(X, Y, ...) > voronoi(X, Y, C, ...) > > where X, Y are coordinates of an unstructured grid and C an optional > mappable scalar. > > The topic branch in my fork is in a fully operational state now and I > would like to ask you to review it. > > Check it out here: > https://github.com/aepsil0n/matplotlib/compare/topic;voronoi > > Kind regards, > Eduard Bopp > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: > > Build for Windows Store. > > http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel |
From: Eduard B. <edu...@ae...> - 2013-06-11 12:46:34
|
Dear matplotlib devs, I've been working on an implementation of Voronoi diagrams in matplotlib. It is based on the Delaunay triangulation and simply creates a PatchCollection of Voronoi cells. I added a function/method to the pyplot module and the Axes class, respectively, which is called like this: voronoi(X, Y, ...) voronoi(X, Y, C, ...) where X, Y are coordinates of an unstructured grid and C an optional mappable scalar. The topic branch in my fork is in a fully operational state now and I would like to ask you to review it. Check it out here: https://github.com/aepsil0n/matplotlib/compare/topic;voronoi Kind regards, Eduard Bopp |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-10 12:37:56
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I think I may just have messed up a commit to the doc repository. It should be fixed once the documentation updates again in a few minutes. Mike On 06/08/2013 05:11 PM, Benjamin Root wrote: > Just noticed that in the Annotation Guide for 1.3: > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/users/annotations_guide.html > > There is a dead link to the source code for one of the examples: > http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/mpl_examples/pylab_examples/fancyarrow_demo.py > > In fact, the source code links to just about all of those examples are > 404's. > > Ben > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > How ServiceNow helps IT people transform IT departments: > 1. A cloud service to automate IT design, transition and operations > 2. Dashboards that offer high-level views of enterprise services > 3. A single system of record for all IT processes > http://p.sf.net/sfu/servicenow-d2d-j > > > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel |
From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2013-06-08 21:11:28
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Just noticed that in the Annotation Guide for 1.3: http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/users/annotations_guide.html There is a dead link to the source code for one of the examples: http://matplotlib.org/1.3.0/mpl_examples/pylab_examples/fancyarrow_demo.py In fact, the source code links to just about all of those examples are 404's. Ben |
From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2013-06-08 13:47:39
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So, I tried all of that without much useful insight gained. I decided to grep around for that unicode character, but it doesn't exist in any of the sources (only images and font files). I am now wondering if it is an obscure issue with sphinx. Looks like I am going to have to crack open that mercurial book... Ben Root |
From: Matthias B. <mat...@gm...> - 2013-06-08 08:48:32
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Hi there I am not 100% sure whether this is a bug or whether I do something wrong. However, I have the problem that the __init__ of NavigationToolbar2Wx does not take the parent of the wx.ToolBar as an input parameter. Instead it takes a canvas, and assumes that the parent of the canvas is the parent of the toolbar as well. In my attached example however, the parent of the wx.ToolBar should be PlotFrame, whereas the parent of the canvas should be PlotWindow. As a result, the NavigationToolbar is not placed correctly in the frame, and sometimes invisible. The same problem was already reported here: http://matplotlib.1069221.n5.nabble.com/NavigationToolbar2WxAgg-Buttons-Disappear-td38516.html My python version is 2.7.5 and matplotlib version is 1.1.1rc2. A simple backward compatible solution to this problem is adding an optional frame parameter to the NavigationToolbar2Wx __init__ like this: class NavigationToolbar2Wx(NavigationToolbar2, wx.ToolBar): def __init__(self, canvas, frame=None, can_kill=False): if frame=None: wx.ToolBar.__init__(self, canvas.GetParent(), -1) else: wx.ToolBar.__init__(self, frame, -1) NavigationToolbar2.__init__(self, canvas) Could someone tell me whether this should be included into matplotlib like this? With best regards Matthias Baur |
From: Gayathri J. <gja...@gm...> - 2013-06-07 16:56:52
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I have a series of streamlines that need to be animated... animation.Artistanimation() does not allow since it says Streamplotset is not iterable. So I tried animation.Funcanimation() and seems like this doesnt work easily too, Have any of you tried this earlier...? I am unable to get the velocity lines and arrows to point to the updated values in the call back functin -- View this message in context: http://matplotlib.1069221.n5.nabble.com/plt-streamplot-and-animation-Funcanimation-tp41234.html Sent from the matplotlib - devel mailing list archive at Nabble.com. |
From: Nelle V. <nel...@gm...> - 2013-06-03 20:54:20
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> No, there was no such message. That is all that was displayed to my > screen. > I've seen this error before, and I think cleaning up all sphinx caching and temporary files "fixed" it. Try running a python make.py clean before building the documention. Cheers, N > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Get 100% visibility into Java/.NET code with AppDynamics Lite > It's a free troubleshooting tool designed for production > Get down to code-level detail for bottlenecks, with <2% overhead. > Download for free and get started troubleshooting in minutes. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/appdyn_d2d_ap2 > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel > > |
From: Chris B. - N. F. <chr...@no...> - 2013-06-03 20:27:03
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On Thu, May 30, 2013 at 11:29 PM, Nicolas Rougier <Nic...@in...> wrote: >> I'm also concerned about the overhead of >> ctypes, given that there are already so many required optimizations in >> the matplotlib freetype wrapper to make it fast enough. But I'm willing >> to hold judgement on that until some measurements have been made. >> > > I would never have thought ctypes would be a problem for speed/optimization and I never benchmarked the freetype-py. Well, I see it this way -- for high performing Python code, you often need to "vectorize" operations one way or another. i.e. if you need to do a given operation on a bunch of numbers, objects, whatever, you need to be able to pass the collection in to lower-level code, so you dont have all the overhead of python funciton calls, dynamic typing, etc, inside your loop. Many (most) C libraries are not designed this way. So when writing python wrappers, you need to loop though a sequence in python, and call the underlying c function for each item. With ctypes, you write that code inPython, with cython, it's easy to write that code in cython, which gets compiled down to C -- you can get major performance benefits from this. And Cython is almost at easy to write as Python. How this applied to freetype, I don't know. >> 2) It's not Numpy-aware. For example, it loads image buffers into >> regular Python lists. This really should use Numpy for speed. you can do this with ctypes, and would work fine for image buffers, by many not as well as Cython for say, a large sequence of characters... -Chris -- Christopher Barker, Ph.D. Oceanographer Emergency Response Division NOAA/NOS/OR&R (206) 526-6959 voice 7600 Sand Point Way NE (206) 526-6329 fax Seattle, WA 98115 (206) 526-6317 main reception Chr...@no... |
From: Benjamin R. <ben...@ou...> - 2013-06-03 14:36:15
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No, there was no such message. That is all that was displayed to my screen. |
From: Michael D. <md...@st...> - 2013-06-03 14:29:36
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Any chance you can get the full traceback? I've always seen Sphinx say "for the full traceback, see this file..." Is it not displaying anything like that for you? Mike On 06/01/2013 02:22 PM, Benjamin Root wrote: > Just tried building the docs for the tip of the v1.3.x branch, and it > errors out fairly quickly with some sort of ascii codec error. This > is for python 2.7 on ubuntu 12.04. > > ben@tigger:~/Programs/matplotlib/doc$ python make.py html > Running Sphinx v1.2b1 > Initializing GitHub plugin > loading pickled environment... not yet created > [autosummary] generating autosummary for: api/afm_api.rst, > api/animation_api.rst, api/api_changes.rst, api/artist_api.rst, > api/axes_api.rst, api/axis_api.rst, api/backend_bases_api.rst, > api/backend_gtkagg_api.rst, api/backend_pdf_api.rst, > api/backend_qt4agg_api.rst, ..., users/pyplot_tutorial.rst, > users/recipes.rst, users/screenshots.rst, users/shell.rst, > users/text_intro.rst, users/text_props.rst, > users/tight_layout_guide.rst, users/transforms_tutorial.rst, > users/usetex.rst, users/whats_new.rst > animation, api, axes_grid, color, event_handling, > images_contours_and_fields, lines_bars_and_markers, misc, mplot3d, > old_animation, pie_and_polar_charts, pylab_examples, > shapes_and_collections, showcase, specialty_plots, statistics, > subplots_axes_and_figures, tests, text_labels_and_annotations, > ticks_and_spines, units, user_interfaces, widgets, > building [html]: targets for 111 source files that are out of date > updating environment: 587 added, 0 changed, 0 removed > reading sources... [ 0%] api/artist_api > Sphinx error: > 'ascii' codec can't encode character u'\xe9' in position 168: ordinal > not in range(128) > Building HTML failed. > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Get 100% visibility into Java/.NET code with AppDynamics Lite > It's a free troubleshooting tool designed for production > Get down to code-level detail for bottlenecks, with <2% overhead. > Download for free and get started troubleshooting in minutes. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/appdyn_d2d_ap2 > > > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-devel mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-devel |