Hallo Pierre,
prettyfy is great. It will save many people a lot of time and trouble. I
do not often use a legend. Leaving it out produces an error and using an
empty one looks ugly. So that's my suggestion.
Kind regards
Jens
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Am 08.03.2017 18:28, schrieb Pierre Vuillemin:
I may complete the script over time if you have some suggestions.
Until then, I don't see any difference when changing the value of the
anti-aliasing option, does someone know if it is still functional?
Regards,
Pierre
Le 08/03/2017 à 16:29, Claus Futtrup a écrit :
Hi Pierre and Antoine
Thank you very much for your help. This is very inspiring and
encouraging.
Best regards,
Claus
On 08-03-2017 11:41, Pierre Vuillemin wrote:
Following Antoine's idea, find enclosed an example on how you can
automate the process of improving your plots. This is obviously
incomplete but it gives a general idea.
Hope it helps,
Pierre
Le 08.03.2017 10:08, Antoine Monmayrant a écrit :
It's definetly possible to do it.
In my group, we usually:
- set decent default values for the default figure ( hd=gdf() ):
increase font size, ...
- fix the ticks madness (ie replace [0. 0.167 0.333 0.5 0.667 0.833 1.
] ticks by [0. 0.25 0.5 0.75 1.])
- use the latex rendering for all the text, including ticks labels:
- for ticks¹, just prepend & append "$" to the labels: ["0"; "0.25";
"0.5"; "0.75"; "1"]->["$0$"; "$0.25$"; "$0.5$"; "$0.75$"; "$1$"].
- for text, use "$\text{" and "}$" : "$\text{Your fancy text rendered
in Latex: \lambda^\beta}$"
- Export in a vectorial format, I prefer svg.
- Apply some cosmetic changes, add arrows, "(a)", "(b)", ... using
Inkscape
- Generate a pdf version.
Hope it helps,
Antoine
¹ We have a script to clean up the ticks: it sets a decent number of
ticks, and automate the prepend/append of "$".
Le Mardi, Mars 07, 2017 20:35 CET, Claus Futtrup
<cfutt...@gmail.com> a écrit:
Hi
I'm using Python matplotlib for some graphs for scientific papers.
The
reason is that the font and all seems to fit very well with the LaTeX
document.
I know that Scilab can accept MathML (or LaTeX) expressions. Is
there a
simple way to configure Scilab for similar high-quality plots? ...
I'd
like all text to be nice looking, i.e. the title, the x-axis and
y-axis
labels, the legend, etc.
Best regards,
Claus
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