You can plot them all individually; e.g.

rec = ([1,2,.5], [0.5, 3, 1.1], [5, 7, .2])
for r in rec:
     pylab.plot( r[:2], [r[2]]*2)

On Dec 10, 2010, at 12:13 PM, John Salvatier wrote:

> I have a set of records with (start, end, value) values. Basically  
> they represent "we had this value between these two times". The end  
> of one record is not necessarily the end of another record.
>
> I would like to plot a set of line segments with end points  
> (x=start, y= value)  and (x=end, y=value), so I will have time on  
> the x axis and value on the y axis.
>
> Does anyone have any ideas on how I could do this? I would really  
> like my line segments not to be connected, so I don't want to use a  
> line plot or xyplot.
>
> Best Regards,
> John Salvatier
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Oracle to DB2 Conversion Guide: Learn learn about native support for  
> PL/SQL,
> new data types, scalar functions, improved concurrency, built-in  
> packages,
> OCI, SQL*Plus, data movement tools, best practices and more.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/oracle-sfdev2dev  
> _______________________________________________
> Matplotlib-users mailing list
> Matplotlib-users@lists.sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/matplotlib-users


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OCI, SQL*Plus, data movement tools, best practices and more.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/oracle-sfdev2dev 
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