api
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matplotlib API ============== These examples use the matplotlib api rather than the pylab/pyplot procedural state machine. For robust, production level scripts, or for applications or web application servers, we recommend you use the matplotlib API directly as it gives you the maximum control over your figures, axes and plottng commands. There are a few documentation resources for the API - the matplotlib artist tutorial : http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/pycon/artist_api_tut.pdf - the "leftwich tutorial" : http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/leftwich_tut.txt The example agg_oo.py is the simplest example of using the Agg backend which is readily ported to other output formats. This example is a good starting point if your are a web application developer. Many of the other examples in this directory use matplotlib.pyplot just to create the figure and show calls, and use the API for everything else. This is a good solution for production quality scripts. For full fledged GUI applications, see the user_interfaces examples. Example style guide =================== If you are creating new examples, you cannot import pylab or import * from any module in your examples. The only three functions allowed from pyplot are "figure", "show" and "close", which you can use as convenience functions for managing figures. All other matplotlib functionality must illustrate the API. A simple example of the recommended style is:: import numpy as np import matplotlib.pyplot as plt fig = plt.figure() ax = fig.add_subplot(111) # or add_axes ax.plot(np.random.rand(10)) ax.set_xlabel('some x data') ax.set_ylabel('some y data') ax.set_title('some title') ax.grid(True) fig.savefig('myfig') plt.show()