When I display a timeseries with pyplot I get horizontal lines crossing the chart. it is like the raster lines in old CRT displays. I looked at the data and teh timestamps could not find a reason why this happens in the spline graph. The timeseries is energy demand data. I tried to display other energy data from the web and displayed OK. Any insights? Thanks
Shorter timeseries:
Longer timeseries:
The problem solved by removing other columns that are not needed. I am sorry I could not inspect all data and I wished to dig up the problem further. It sounds these unneeded columns were confusing the plotter.
Related
I'm looking for a way to have interactive "circular panning" with matplotlib: when
interactively moving the axes to the left or the right, I want the data
(and axes labels) to "wrap around". (An (silly) example application would
be e.g. plotting annual average temperatures, and wanting to look at
whether anything special is happening around New Year.)
Is there a simple way to achieve this?
Please help me out for drawing grouped bar chart in dimple js.
I have to draw the graph where x-axis is timeAxis and y-axis is measureAxis.
I have seen many code snippets when they have done this. But, i am unable to do this with x-axis as timeAxis.
Any help would be appreciated.
I'm afraid the time axis doesn't support grouping. If you want to use dimple the only way is to use a category axis (which does work with time dimensions, but will evenly space and size each time value regardless of real interval).
Goal
I want to display data into a chart control. Like so:
Current Problem
My issue is the data (blue line) goes out of the chart. As seen above, it seems as if my data exceeds the viewing pane... I'd like to be able to view the whole thing.
Is it possible to create some sort of padding? Keep in mind, not all values will be in percentage...
The solution I used is multiplying the YAxis maximum by 5%.
This creates a small padding over my maximum values which enables me to view it correctly. Not very elegant but it does the job for now.
Perhaps there are better answers but this worked great.
I have a time series data being plotted with Highstock API, as a scatter. When I am plotting it for a period of 5 days or more... my scatter points generated in very close proximity are getting totally overlapped. I have to close in my time frame to see that there are actually two points close by(which were overlapping).
so please help me on how i can improve display on this issue.
From what I've read and observed, this is one of the reasons to use a scatter plot: to see where data sets overlap, group together, and to show possible correlation (see the formal definition over at Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scatter_plot).
You may wish to add a note to the chart that encourages your users to zoom in to see more detail. The zoom function is a native part of Highcharts/Highstock, but isn't immediately obvious to many users.
It's worth noting that you can limit the zoom to either one axis (zoomType: 'x') or both axes (zoomType: 'xy'); see http://api.highcharts.com/highcharts#chart.zoomType. That may offer you a bit more control over how you want your users to view the parts of the chart with a larger number of overlapping points.
I have a Core-Plot Graph within a Mac Application. But the inside table is appearing shifted down and to the left of the containing "frame/border" so that neither of the axis' are showing. I cannot figure out how to change this does anyone know what parameters I need to change to fix this?
Update: Sorry I did not realize I could upload an image, I have done so know and will try your suggestions in the mean-time.
Not sure what you mean by "inside table". It would be easier to offer suggestions if you could post a screenshot.
Without seeing what's wrong, here are some common areas to look at:
If you haven't already done so, look at the example apps included with Core Plot for ideas. The Plot Gallery app has many sample plots and the others are useful, too.
You may need to add padding (paddingLeft, paddingBottom, etc.) on the graph and/or plot area frame. Padding the graph pushes everything in away from the edges of the graph. Padding the plot area frame pushes the plot area in so the axes and titles can hang outside the plot area (the area where the plots are drawn).
If you want to keep an axes pinned to a specific place, e.g., the edge of the graph, set up a floating axis. Otherwise make sure the orthogonal coordinate is set (it defaults to 0). For example, the orthogonal coordinate for the x-axis is the y-value where the x-axis crosses the y-axis.