On Aug 17, 3:10 pm, kj wrote:
> I'm looking for a good Python package for visualizing
> scientific/statistical data. (FWIW, the OS I'm interested in is
> Mac OS X).
Please take a look at the amcharts embedding in WHIFF
http://aaron.oirt.rutgers.edu/myapp/amcharts/doc
WHIFF is a collection
Am 2009-08-17 21:10, schrieb kj:
I'm looking for a good Python package for visualizing
scientific/statistical data. (FWIW, the OS I'm interested in is
Mac OS X).
The users of this package will be experimental biologists with
little programming experience (but currently learning Python).
SciDA
On Aug 17, 12:10 pm, kj wrote:
> I'm looking for a good Python package for visualizing
> scientific/statistical data. (FWIW, the OS I'm interested in is
> Mac OS X).
>
> The users of this package will be experimental biologists with
> little programming experience (but currently learning Python).
On 17 ago, 21:10, kj wrote:
> I'm looking for a good Python package for visualizing
> scientific/statistical data. (FWIW, the OS I'm interested in is
> Mac OS X).
>
> The users of this package will be experimental biologists with
> little programming experience (but currently learning Python).
>
On 2009-08-17, Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2009-08-17, kj wrote:
>
>> I'm looking for a good Python package for visualizing
>> scientific/statistical data. (FWIW, the OS I'm interested in
>> is Mac OS X).
>
> Both matplotlib and gnuplot-py can produce pretty good results
> with a minimum of effort
On 2009-08-17, kj wrote:
> I'm looking for a good Python package for visualizing
> scientific/statistical data. (FWIW, the OS I'm interested in
> is Mac OS X).
Both matplotlib and gnuplot-py can produce pretty good results
with a minimum of effort:
http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/
http:/
I'm looking for a good Python package for visualizing
scientific/statistical data. (FWIW, the OS I'm interested in is
Mac OS X).
The users of this package will be experimental biologists with
little programming experience (but currently learning Python).
(I normally visualize data using R or