How to make 3D plots in Python?
This is the MATLAB version of the 3D plotting code: EDIT: This is the current code:
plt.figure(2)
fig_b = Axes3D(fig2)
xx2 = np.arange(0, L+h_grid*L, h_grid*L)
yy2 = np.arange(-b, b+h_grid*b, h_grid*b)
X, Y = np.meshgrid(xx2, yy2)
W = np.zeros((41,21)开发者_Go百科, float)
mx = len(xx2)*len(yy2)
X = np.reshape(X, (1, mx))
Y = np.reshape(Y, (1, mx))
W = np.reshape(W, (1, mx))
for j in range(0, mx):
W[0][j] = np.sin(np.pi*X[0][j]/L)
surf = fig_b.plot_surface(X, Y, W, rstride=1, cstride=1, cmap=cm.jet, linewidth=0, antialiased=False) # This is the line number 168
plt.xlabel('x')
plt.ylabel('y')
This is the error message I get:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "nonhomog.py", line 247, in <module>
main()
File "nonhomog.py", line 245, in main
nonhomog(nu)
File "nonhomog.py", line 168, in nonhomog
surf = fig_b.plot_surface(X, Y, W, rstride=1, cstride=1, cmap=cm.jet, linewidth=0, antialiased=False)
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/mpl_toolkits/mplot3d/axes3d.py", line 618, in plot_surface
polyc = art3d.Poly3DCollection(polys, *args, **kwargs)
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/mpl_toolkits/mplot3d/art3d.py", line 290, in __init__
PolyCollection.__init__(self, verts, *args, **kwargs)
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/matplotlib/collections.py", line 668, in __init__
self.set_verts(verts, closed)
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/mpl_toolkits/mplot3d/art3d.py", line 312, in set_verts
self.get_vector(verts)
File "/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/mpl_toolkits/mplot3d/art3d.py", line 305, in get_vector
xs, ys, zs = zip(*points)
ValueError: need more than 0 values to unpack
After setting up the mesh grid for X and Y, you need to come up with a grid for Z values.
The way I currently do this in my code is:
# [ (x1, y1, z1), (x2, y2, z2), ... (xN, yN, zN) ]
all_vals = ...
# (x1, x2, ... xN) , (y1, y2, ... yN) , (z1, z2, ... zN)
all_xvals, all_yvals, all_zvals = zip(*all_vals)
fig = plt.figure()
ax = Axes3D(fig)
X, Y = np.meshgrid(xvals, yvals)
# This is the part you want:
Z1 = np.zeros(X.shape, float)
for (x, y, z) in all_vals:
x = find_in_sorted_list(x, xvals)
y = find_in_sorted_list(y, yvals)
Z1[y,x] = z
surf = ax.plot_surface(X, Y, Z1, rstride=1, cstride=1, cmap=cm.jet,
linewidth=0, antialiased=False)
plt.xlabel('Blur standard deviation')
plt.ylabel('JPEG quality')
ax.w_zaxis.set_major_locator(LinearLocator(10))
ax.w_zaxis.set_major_formatter(FormatStrFormatter('%.03f'))
fig.colorbar(surf, shrink=0.5, aspect=5)
plt.show()
This gives me a plot that looks like this:
I've saved it as a file, but when you call plt.show()
, you get an interactive window where you can change the viewpoint to anything you want.
What's wrong? You are trying to make a non-number negative. In other words: AxesSubplot (whatever that is) doesn't implement the unary - operator.
So, that code can not reasonably be "what you have done", as you don't even define b
in that code, yet it exists and is of some custom type called AxesSubplot
. If you explain what AxesSubplot is, then that would help. Try including code that actually demonstrates the problem, if possible.
Edit: As DSM points out, you overwrite your b variable. The problem is that you are stuck in "maths mode" and use non-descriptive variable names like "a", "b" and "M". Use longer descriptive names instead.
Instead of:
a = fig.add_subplot(2,2,i)
b = fig2.add_subplot(2,2,i)
do:
x_subplot = fig.add_subplot(2,2,i)
y_subplot = fig2.add_subplot(2,2,i)
Or something like that (I'm not sure what the variable actually is, so that's just an example).
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