Hi,
I guess the problem was mostly mine. To my eyes, the Bitstream Vera
Serif doesn't look very "serif" to me (figure attached), but I am
probably just not used to that font. Changing font.serif as suggested
produced much more similar output. Thanks and sorry for the unnecessary
confusion.
How
I thought you said the normal text looked sans-serif. The debugging
output seems to suggest otherwise. Maybe you can send me the generated
plot as well.
The default serif font, Bitstream Vera Serif, is not an identical match
to the STIX fonts. The STIX fonts are designed to match Times. If
Hi,
The output from using debug-annoying is attached. It all looks
relatively normal to me, but perhaps you will see something I don't. I
am thinking that the problem is the difference between Bitstream Serif
and the STIX fonts - they are just different. Perhaps you can suggest a
way to change
I'm surprised. That works for me. Can you (again) set verbose.level to
"debug-annoying" and send the output?
Cheers,
Mike
David M. Kaplan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for the suggestions. I have stopped using the usetex option. To
> make math and normal text match, I tried the following:
>
> rcPa
Hi,
Thanks for the suggestions. I have stopped using the usetex option. To
make math and normal text match, I tried the following:
rcParams['font.family'] = 'serif'
rcParams['mathtext.fontset'] = 'stix'
This didn't make them match - normal text looked to me like it was still
sans-serif, while
Sorry -- I forgot to mention that you need to put the verbose.level
argument in your matplotlibrc file -- it can't be changed once
matplotlib has been imported.
Thanks,
Mike
David M. Kaplan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I gave this a shot, but it didn't print anything out. Attached is an
> example of a plo
Hi,
I gave this a shot, but it didn't print anything out. Attached is an
example of a plot where the fonts don't match.
In [4]: rcParams['verbose.level']='debug-annoying'
In [5]: rcParams['mathtext.fontset'] = 'stix'
In [6]: rcParams['font.family'] = 'serif'
In [7]: plot(arange(10))
Out[7]:
This works for me. Could you set the rcParam verbose.level to
debug-annoying and send the output -- that will print some information
about where it's looking for fonts and what it can and can not find.
Cheers,
Mike
David M. Kaplan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for the suggestions. I have stopped us
Hi,
Thanks for the suggestions. I have stopped using the usetex option. To
make math and normal text match, I tried the following:
rcParams['font.family'] = 'serif'
rcParams['mathtext.fontset'] = 'stix'
This didn't make them match - normal text looked to me like it was still
sans-serif, while
Hi David,
On Thursday 10 July 2008 11:15:37 am David M. Kaplan wrote:
> 2) I have noticed that the font used for the xticklabels and the font
> used for the xlabel and contour labels appears to be different (example
> attached). One appears to be serif and the other sans-serif. This
> seems to b
David M. Kaplan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just upgraded to matplotlib 0.98.1 on a ubuntu hardy heron system. I
> have noticed two problems since the upgrade:
>
> 1) For any plot, if I try to look at the properties of a text object I
> get an error related to FontProperties having no attribute 'items'. S
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