Thanks for the reply!
Do you know what makes X climb? And can you control its on some way?
// Tim
> From: jdh2...@gmail.com
> Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2010 05:55:04 -0600
> Subject: Re: [Matplotlib-users] Formatter dates
> To: qw...@hotmail.com
> CC: matplotlib-users@lists.sourcefo
Solved it, was thinking backwards again.
From: qw...@hotmail.com
To: matplotlib-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Date: Mon, 22 Nov 2010 09:00:38 +
Subject: Re: [Matplotlib-users] Formatter dates
Thanks for the reply!
I have been looking into it now and thinks i have get the hang of how it
g" is i could get the ratio and then
plot the dates by indexing the ratio times X eg. (Xmax / listlength) * X.
// Tim
> From: jdh2...@gmail.com
> Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2010 05:55:04 -0600
> Subject: Re: [Matplotlib-users] Formatter dates
> To: qw...@hotmail.com
On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 2:29 AM, Tim Åberg wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I have now been tampering with a custom formatter and the more i think about
> it the more i feel there must be a more easy soulution. I have a set of
> values that are plotted over time (i use date2num, to get the conversion
> from da
Nov 2010 09:55:13 +0100
Subject: Re: [Matplotlib-users] Formatter dates
From: pgmdevl...@gmail.com
To: qw...@hotmail.com
Tim, have you tried the scikits.timeseries package? Its plotting capacities,
albeit limited, may be helpful in your case...
On Nov 17, 2010 9:31 AM, "Tim Åberg&qu