I'm using wxagg, but actually it's working now... I put show()s a bit
everywhere in my code so I must confess I don't really know how it's
working, though I'll probably have to go back and clean the mess at some
point.
Antony
2010/4/22 Michiel de Hoon mjldeh...@yahoo.com
Actually which backend
Actually which backend are you using? I'd like to try this to see what happens
if show() is called more than once.
--Michiel.
--- On Tue, 4/20/10, Antony Lee antony@ensmp.fr wrote:
That would be a solution, indeed. However, is there really no way of coming
back to a pre-plt.show() state
Hello,
I'm currently writing a specialized image processing package using
Matplotlib. The goal would be to let users use it interactively from an
ipython console.
So I have some functions for selecting points on plots (via
button_press_event), and others for data plotting (and also for data
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 11:38 AM, Antony Lee antony@ensmp.fr wrote:
Hello,
I'm currently writing a specialized image processing package using
Matplotlib. The goal would be to let users use it interactively from an
ipython console.
So I have some functions for selecting points on plots
That would be a solution, indeed. However, is there really no way of coming
back to a pre-plt.show() state once all windows are closed? What kind of
irreversible things does plt.show() do?
Thanks,
Antony
2010/4/20 Ryan May rma...@gmail.com
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 11:38 AM, Antony Lee
2010/4/20 Ryan May rma...@gmail.com
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at 4:44 PM, Antony Lee antony@ensmp.fr wrote:
That would be a solution, indeed. However, is there really no way of
coming
back to a pre-plt.show() state once all windows are closed? What kind of
irreversible things does
Antony Lee wrote:
Well, the problem isn't there (I believe). The workflow I'd like to
implement is that, for example the user does some data processing (in
ipython), plots some data (I need a show() here), closes the plot
window, does some other data processing (in ipython),
I'm bit
--- On Tue, 4/20/10, Ryan May rma...@gmail.com wrote:
Antony Lee antony@ensmp.fr wrote:
That would be a solution, indeed. However, is there
really no way of coming back to a pre-plt.show() state
once all windows are closed? What kind of
irreversible things does plt.show() do?
It
http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/faq/howto_faq.html#use-show
hth,
Alan Isaac
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Well, the example with the comment WARNING : illustrating how NOT to use show:
for i in range(10):
# make figure i
show()
works perfectly fine with the Mac OS X backend, and I doubt that there is some
fundamental reason why this can work with the Mac OS X backend but not with
other
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