st the state boundary are you seeing? If it is never more than
one cell past the boundary, it might be an offset issue.
On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 1:30 PM, Maria Liukis
mailto:liu...@usc.edu>> wrote:
Eric,
Yes, my data is exactly how you understood it. I thought, as you are
suggesting,
PM, Maria Liukis wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I have a problem plotting data which is defined on a grid other than
>> rectangular mesh, and would greatly appreciate any advise. My data is
>> defined for 0.1degree grid for the state of California, and I don’t
>> want to int
tangular grid post interpolation.
—
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On Fri, Nov 21, 2014 at 2:12 AM, Maria Liukis
mailto:liu...@usc.edu>> wrote:
Hello,
I have a problem plotting data which is defined on a grid other than
rectangular mesh, and would greatly ap
Hello,
I have a problem plotting data which is defined on a grid other than
rectangular mesh, and would greatly appreciate any advise. My data is defined
for 0.1degree grid for the state of California, and I don’t want to interpolate
my data outside of the defined grid when plotting it. I used
Hello,
I was wondering if there is an option in basemap to put “fancy“ (white and
black skinny rectangles) map border like the one is available in GMT?
Many thanks,
Masha
--
liu...@usc.edu
--
Ben,
Many thanks! Will try to use shapely package then.
Masha
liu...@usc.edu
On Jan 30, 2013, at 6:59 AM, Benjamin Root wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 29, 2013 at 5:55 PM, Maria Liukis wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I tested the following code on my Mac laptop
Hello,
I tested the following code on my Mac laptop and our production Linux server
both running matplotlib V1.0.1. Both machines observe the same output from the
code, so I was wondering if somebody is aware of the problem or if it's some
undocumented feature of "pnpoly()" function from matplo