Chao,
>From your description, it is clear that you are using a very customized
>application of axes placement and design. The only method that I see for
>replacing your current setup with Subplots (I use the upper case to denote the
>instances of the class, which do respond to the left/right/w
Hi, thanks.
the attached is what I achieved so far. Looks quite nice.
each subplot visible now actually contains two mat.axes.Axes object (with
bottom and top spines invisible)
which is created by using the fig.add_axes, before the place occupied by
the two axes now is actually
only one single su
Chao,
You are right, fig.add_subplot does not support precise positioning. Why don't
you send a picture of a sample layout you have obtained with add_axes?
-Sterling
On Jul 26, 2013, at 1:26AM, ChaoYue wrote:
> Dear Sterling,
>
> thanks for your answer. The idea is that I would like to add a
Dear Sterling,
thanks for your answer. The idea is that I would like to add a subplot with
precise position, as in the method of fig.add_axes?
Does fig.add_subplot support this, I tried
fig.add_subplot(position=(0.2,0.2,0.1,0.1)) but it does not work...
thanks!
Chao
On Thu, Jul 25, 2013 at 8:09
Chao,
plt.subplots returns a figure instance. Can you use the add_subplot method of
that figure instance to make your new axes? If so, then I think that they
should respond to the new requests for left/right/bottom/wspace space.
-Sterling
On Jul 25, 2013, at 10:06AM, Chao YUE wrote:
> Dear
Dear all,
First I make some subplots using the plt.subplots command,
then I use mat.figure.Figure.delaxes to delete the axes, and add some small
new ones
in the same space by using mat.figure.Figure.add_axes, but I find after
rendering the
figure in the interative window, I cannot adjust the
left/