From: \Jonathan H. http://JonathansCorner.com\
<jon...@po...> - 2008-07-22 21:28:07
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On the two routines I'm modifying from examples, boundaries and borders are generally a hefty black. How can I control color and/or thickness and/or turn off items like boundaries that are drawn in black? -- -- Jonathan Hayward, chr...@gm... ** To see an award-winning website with stories, essays, artwork, ** games, and a four-dimensional maze, why not visit my home page? ** All of this is waiting for you at http://JonathansCorner.com ++ Would you like to curl up with one of my hardcover books? ++ You can now get my books from http://CJSHayward.com |
From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2008-07-22 21:57:51
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On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 4:28 PM, Jonathan Hayward http://JonathansCorner.com <jon...@po...> wrote: > On the two routines I'm modifying from examples, boundaries and borders are > generally a hefty black. > > How can I control color and/or thickness and/or turn off items like > boundaries that are drawn in black? There are two borders in question, the figure border and the axes border. Both are rectangle instances. You can control the figure border with the figurePatch instance fig.figurePatch.set_edgecolor('white') fig.figurePatch.set_linewidth(0.5) and similarly for the axes axesFrame instance ax = axes([left, bottom, width, height]) ax.axesFrame.set_edgecolor('red') ax.axesFrame.set_linewidth(0.5) You can make the frame invisible in a few different ways: * set the edgecolor to be the same as the face color * set the linewidth to 0 * set the visible property to False (ax.axesFrame.set_visible(False)) JDH |
From: \Jonathan H. http://JonathansCorner.com\
<jon...@po...> - 2008-07-24 15:22:14
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Taking a step back: What should I be digging into so I'll have the concepts and tools to manipulate features like color and thickness of borders on a bar chart and on a pie graph and any parts that may have a border, whether the shadow on a pie graph is on the lower left or upper right, etc.? I'm looking at the tutorial<http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/tutorial.html>; I'd welcome suggestions or clarifications about what I should be reading. On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 4:57 PM, John Hunter <jd...@gm...> wrote: > On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 4:28 PM, Jonathan Hayward > http://JonathansCorner.com <jon...@po...> wrote: > > On the two routines I'm modifying from examples, boundaries and borders > are > > generally a hefty black. > > > > How can I control color and/or thickness and/or turn off items like > > boundaries that are drawn in black? > > There are two borders in question, the figure border and the axes > border. Both are rectangle instances. You can control the figure > border with the figurePatch instance > > fig.figurePatch.set_edgecolor('white') > fig.figurePatch.set_linewidth(0.5) > > and similarly for the axes axesFrame instance > > ax = axes([left, bottom, width, height]) > ax.axesFrame.set_edgecolor('red') > ax.axesFrame.set_linewidth(0.5) > > You can make the frame invisible in a few different ways: > > * set the edgecolor to be the same as the face color > * set the linewidth to 0 > * set the visible property to False (ax.axesFrame.set_visible(False)) > > JDH > -- -- Jonathan Hayward, chr...@gm... ** To see an award-winning website with stories, essays, artwork, ** games, and a four-dimensional maze, why not visit my home page? ** All of this is waiting for you at http://JonathansCorner.com ++ Would you like to curl up with one of my hardcover books? ++ You can now get my books from http://CJSHayward.com |
From: John H. <jd...@gm...> - 2008-07-24 15:29:21
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On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 10:22 AM, Jonathan Hayward http://JonathansCorner.com > I'm looking at the tutorial ; I'd welcome suggestions or clarifications > about what I should be reading. The tutorial is a good start, as is the user's guide http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/users_guide_0.98.1.pdf some of the user's guide is dated, and the neww docs we are working on (still in beta) are at http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/doc/html/index.html. The screenshots (http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/screenshots.html) and examples (http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/examples/) are good places to go for inspiration. You will probably also want to read the artist tutorial at http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/doc/html/users/artists.html Good luck! JDH |
From: \Jonathan H. http://JonathansCorner.com\
<jon...@po...> - 2008-07-24 15:51:07
|
Thank you; on to digging... On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 10:29 AM, John Hunter <jd...@gm...> wrote: > On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 10:22 AM, Jonathan Hayward > http://JonathansCorner.com > > I'm looking at the tutorial ; I'd welcome suggestions or clarifications > > about what I should be reading. > > The tutorial is a good start, as is the user's guide > > http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/users_guide_0.98.1.pdf > > some of the user's guide is dated, and the neww docs we are working on > (still in beta) are at > http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/doc/html/index.html. The > screenshots (http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/screenshots.html) and > examples (http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/examples/) are good places > to go for inspiration. You will probably also want to read the artist > tutorial at http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/doc/html/users/artists.html > > Good luck! > > JDH > -- -- Jonathan Hayward, chr...@gm... ** To see an award-winning website with stories, essays, artwork, ** games, and a four-dimensional maze, why not visit my home page? ** All of this is waiting for you at http://JonathansCorner.com ++ Would you like to curl up with one of my hardcover books? ++ You can now get my books from http://CJSHayward.com |