>>>>> "Enigma" == Enigma Curry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Enigma> I'm playing around with matplotlib for the first time. I'm Enigma> trying to make a very simple histogram of values 1-6 and Enigma> how many times they occur in a sequence. However, after Enigma> about an hour of searching I cannot make the histogram Enigma> stay within the bounds of the grid lines. Enigma> Here is my example: Enigma> pylab.grid() x_values=[1,1,2,2,2,3,3,3,4,4,4,5,5,6,6,6] Enigma> pylab.hist(x_values,6) pylab.show() Enigma> This produced the following image: Enigma> http://enigmacurry.com/usenet/historgram-bars-not-in-grid-lines.png Enigma> Starting with bar number 2, it creeps into grid 1.. and Enigma> finally with bar number 5 it's almost entirely in grid Enigma> 4.. how do I make the bars stay in their own grid lines? While exactly what you want is something of an enigma to me, I can offer some advice and terminology. The bars of hist make no attempt to stay within the bounds of the grid lines... The bars have as their left most boundary the bins you choose for the histogram. As a first step, I suggest setting these bins explicitly, rather than letting the hist command choose them automatically from pylab import hist, xlim, nx, show x_values= [1,1,2,2,2,3,3,3,4,4,4,5,5,6,6,6] bins = nx.arange(0.5, 7.) hist(x_values, bins) xlim(0,6.5) show() The grid line locations are determined by the xtick locations, which you can set with the xticks command. Good luck! JDH -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list