We read every piece of feedback, and take your input very seriously.
To see all available qualifiers, see our documentation.
There was an error while loading. Please reload this page.
1 parent ffeb9f2 commit 8e10d1bCopy full SHA for 8e10d1b
examples/pylab_examples/load_converter.py
@@ -4,11 +4,13 @@
4
import matplotlib.cbook as cbook
5
import matplotlib.dates as mdates
6
7
+
8
# Note: matplotlib.dates doesn't have bytespdate2num.
9
# This function was copied off the internet.
10
# Source: http://pythonprogramming.net/colors-fills-matplotlib-tutorial/
11
def bytespdate2num(fmt, encoding='utf-8'):
12
strconverter = mdates.strpdate2num(fmt)
13
14
def bytesconverter(b):
15
s = b.decode(encoding)
16
return strconverter(s)
@@ -17,10 +19,9 @@ def bytesconverter(b):
17
19
datafile = cbook.get_sample_data('msft.csv', asfileobj=False)
18
20
print('loading', datafile)
21
-dates, closes = np.loadtxt(
- datafile, delimiter=',',
22
- converters={0: bytespdate2num('%d-%b-%y')},
23
- skiprows=1, usecols=(0, 2), unpack=True)
+dates, closes = np.loadtxt(datafile, delimiter=',',
+ converters={0: bytespdate2num('%d-%b-%y')},
24
+ skiprows=1, usecols=(0, 2), unpack=True)
25
26
fig = plt.figure()
27
ax = fig.add_subplot(111)
0 commit comments