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From: John Hunter <jdh2358@gm...> - 2011-10-30 16:07:10
|
.draw() On Sun, Oct 30, 2011 at 10:51 AM, Daniel Welling <dantwelling@...> wrote: > Greetings, MatPlotLibbers. > > Since 1.1, pyplot.draw() in interactive mode only updates the current axis. > If I want to update many axes, I need to use sca() and draw() for each one. > Is there a way to update all axes? I'm not seeing this, and I'm not sure *why* it would be occurring for you. plt.draw triggers a call to fig.canvas.draw which calls draw on all axes. Here is some example code in ipython, which has 'ion". In [2]: fig, axes = plt.subplots(2) In [3]: axes[0].plot([1,2,3]) Out[3]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x4b90550>] In [4]: axes[1].plot([1,2,3]) Out[4]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x4b90610>] In [5]: plt.draw() The call to 'plt.draw' on line 5 triggers a draw to both axes. Can you provide an example which exposes your problem? Please also provide backend and OS information In [6]: !uname -a Linux pinchiepie 3.0.0-12-generic #20-Ubuntu SMP Fri Oct 7 14:56:25 UTC 2011 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux In [7]: import matplotlib; print matplotlib.__version__ 1.2.x In [8]: matplotlib.rcParams['backend'] Out[8]: 'WXAgg' JDH |
From: Daniel Welling <dantwelling@gm...> - 2011-10-30 15:51:24
|
Greetings, MatPlotLibbers. Since 1.1, pyplot.draw() in interactive mode only updates the current axis. If I want to update many axes, I need to use sca() and draw() for each one. Is there a way to update all axes? Thanks. -dw |
From: Brendan Barnwell <brenbarn@br...> - 2011-10-30 05:25:03
|
I encountered a strange error when trying to put some annotations on a graph. I was able to simplify it to this: pyplot.plot([1, 2, 3, 4], [0, -1, -2, 8]) pyplot.annotate("Blah", xy=(2, 2), xytext=(-20,-20), textcoords='offset points', bbox=dict(boxstyle='round,pad=0.5'), arrowprops=dict(arrowstyle='fancy', connectionstyle='arc3,rad=0')) On my system (matplotlib 1.1.0 with Python 2.6 on Windows XP), this causes a long traceback culminating in File "C:\Program Files\Python\lib\site-packages\matplotlib\bezier.py", line 129, in find_bezier_t_intersecting_with_closedpath raise ValueError("the segment does not seemed to intersect with the path") Increasing the xytext coordinates (in absolute value), to for instance (-50, -50) works with no error, and it also works without the special bbox style. Just guessing from the error message, it looks like certain combinations of fancy patches are causing problems because the shapes don't intersect in the way the drawing code assumes they should. I don't see anything in the docs about such edge cases, so this looks like a bug. Judging from the way that small tweaks to the code can cause the error to disappear, I imagine it could be tricky to fix, but at the least there should probably be a warning in the docs that some kinds of anootation boxes won't work with some kinds of arrows when the text is too close to the annotated point. Any ideas? Thanks. -- Brendan Barnwell "Do not follow where the path may lead. Go, instead, where there is no path, and leave a trail." --author unknown |