From: Scott R. <ra...@sp...> - 2002-01-17 16:00:46
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Hi Joe, There are C and Python wrappers around the very nice PGPLOT library that do exactly what you want (and a whole lot more). You can find them here: ftp://cfa-ftp.harvard.edu/pub/ransom The files you need are: ppgplot-0.11.tar.gz (the C wrappers) Pgplot.py (the Python wrappers around the C wrappers) Lots of additional information about the capabilities of PGPLOT can be found at its web page: http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~tjp/pgplot/ With my current setup, you can do a lot of plotting (except 3D stuff) in a manner that is very much like IDL (a single function call with lots of optional keyword arguments). I haven't modified it in quite awhile, but still use it in my own work almost every day. As for reading netCDF, I would recommend Konrad Hinsen's Scientific Python: http://starship.python.net/crew/hinsen/scientific.html Good luck, Scott On Thu, Jan 17, 2002 at 07:46:52AM -0700, Joe Van Andel wrote: > Can anyone recommend a visualization package that would display arrays > of numbers by mapping values to a set of colors? That is, we define 32 > colors, where the first color represents values 0-10, the second color > represents 10-20, etc, and then each input value gets displayed as its > corresponding color. > > I'd like to read netCDF files, if possible. > > Thanks much! > > -- > Joe VanAndel > National Center for Atmospheric Research > http://www.atd.ucar.edu/~vanandel/ > Internet: van...@uc... > > _______________________________________________ > Numpy-discussion mailing list > Num...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/numpy-discussion -- -- Scott M. Ransom Address: McGill Univ. Physics Dept. Phone: (514) 398-6492 3600 University St., Rm 338 email: ra...@ph... Montreal, QC Canada H3A 2T8 GPG Fingerprint: 06A9 9553 78BE 16DB 407B FFCA 9BFA B6FF FFD3 2989 |