From: Jon P. <jw...@ps...> - 2004-01-21 19:09:42
|
> > >We have started on this over the past month, and hope to have some >simple >functionality available within a month (though when we make it public >may >take a bit longer). It will be open source and we hope significantly >simpler >than chaco. It will not focus on speed (well, we want fairly fast >display times >for plots of a reasonable number of points, but we don't need video >refresh >rates). If your interest in plotting matches ours, then this may be for >you. >We will welcome contributions and comments once we get it off the >ground. >(We are calling it pyxis by the way). > I agree with the sentiment that chaco is a very heavy and confusing package for the average scientist (but maybe great for the full-time programmer) but I'm really concerned about the idea that we need *another* solution started from scratch. There are already so many including scipy.gplt, scipy.plt, dislin, biggles, pychart, piddle, pgplot, pyx (new)... In particular MatPlotLib looks promising - check out its examples: http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/screenshots.html *Many* plotting types already , simple syntax, a few different backends. And already has something of a following. So is it really not possible for STScI to push its resources into aiding the development of something that's already begun? Would be great if we could develop a single package really well rather than everyone making their own. -- Jon Peirce Nottingham University +44 (0)115 8467176 (tel) +44 (0)115 9515324 (fax) http://www.psychology.nottingham.ac.uk/staff/jwp/ |