From: Jim V. <Jim...@no...> - 2008-01-31 20:13:22
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John Prince wrote: > First off, thanks for matplotlib. It really is amazing. > > I can't seem to figure out an acceptable sequence of dashes per the > documentation: > 'dashes: sequence of on/off ink in points' > > This is what I'm trying: > > > mydashes = ['- ', '--', '- ', '--', '- '] > > lines = plot(*triplets) > > for i in range(len(lines)): > setp(lines[i], dashes=mydashes[i]) > > > I'm getting errors like: > > ValueError: invalid literal for float(): - > > or a message about even numbers in the dash sequence being required > when I don't use even-length strings. > > I really need about 5-10 different dash sequences to lines in a > publication and the defaults are not quite enough. Hello John, I found this in the online documentation of the pylab.plot() function: The following line styles are supported: - : solid line -- : dashed line -. : dash-dot line : : dotted line . : points , : pixels o : circle symbols ^ : triangle up symbols v : triangle down symbols < : triangle left symbols > : triangle right symbols s : square symbols + : plus symbols x : cross symbols D : diamond symbols d : thin diamond symbols 1 : tripod down symbols 2 : tripod up symbols 3 : tripod left symbols 4 : tripod right symbols h : hexagon symbols H : rotated hexagon symbols p : pentagon symbols | : vertical line symbols _ : horizontal line symbols steps : use gnuplot style 'steps' # kwarg only The following color abbreviations are supported b : blue g : green r : red c : cyan m : magenta y : yellow k : black w : white In addition, you can specify colors in many weird and wonderful ways, including full names 'green', hex strings '#008000', RGB or RGBA tuples (0,1,0,1) or grayscale intensities as a string '0.8'. Of these, the string specifications can be used in place of a fmt group, but the tuple forms can be used only as kwargs. Line styles and colors are combined in a single format string, as in 'bo' for blue circles. The **kwargs can be used to set line properties (any property that has a set_* method). You can use this to set a line label (for auto legends), linewidth, anitialising, marker face color, etc. Here is an example: plot <http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.pyplot.html#-plot>([1,2,3], [1,2,3], 'go-', label='line 1', linewidth=2) plot <http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.pyplot.html#-plot>([1,2,3], [1,4,9], 'rs', label='line 2') axis <http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.pyplot.html#-axis>([0, 4, 0, 10]) legend <http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.pyplot.html#-legend>() HTH, -- jv > > Thanks, > John > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Microsoft > Defy all challenges. Microsoft(R) Visual Studio 2008. > http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/vse0120000070mrt/direct/01/ > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Matplotlib-users mailing list > Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users > |