From: neurino <ne...@gm...> - 2011-02-09 12:47:07
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Well, not that automatic... I wonder why matplotlib takes care of settings limits on data but fails in a common situation so I'm forced to override it every time because I don't know in advance what data I get... Thanks anyway. Cheers neurino 2011/2/9 Thomas Lecocq <thl...@ms...> > This will do : > > pyplot.xlim(-5,15) > pyplot.ylim(-5,5) > > > HTH. > > Thomas > > ********************** > Thomas Lecocq > Geologist > Ph.D.Student (Seismology) > Royal Observatory of Belgium > ********************** > > > > ------------------------------ > Date: Wed, 9 Feb 2011 11:53:17 +0100 > From: ne...@gm... > To: mat...@li... > Subject: [Matplotlib-users] Best way to set scales bounds to appropriate > values > > > Hi, I'm a matplotlib newbie. > > An example is worth a thousand words: > > In [1]: matplotlib.__version__ > Out[1]: '0.99.3' > > In [2]: a, b, x = np.zeros(10), np.ones(10), np.arange(10) > > In [3]: plot(x, a); plot(x, b) > > Well all I see is an empty plot with the two horizontal lines at y=0 and > y=1 covered by the upper and lower frame lines. > > Why aren't bounds set a little more larger so the two lines can show > properly??? > I guess this is a common situation, for example 2 or more stable > temperatures: the higher and the lower never show... > > How can I fix it? > > Thanks for your support. > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > The ultimate all-in-one performance toolkit: Intel(R) Parallel Studio XE: > Pinpoint memory and threading errors before they happen. Find and fix more > than 250 security defects in the development cycle. Locate bottlenecks in > serial and parallel code that limit performance. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/intel-dev2devfeb > _______________________________________________ Matplotlib-users mailing > list Mat...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users > |