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207

answers:

1

When I plot data sampled per month with bars, their width is very thin. If I set X axis minor locator to DayLocator(), I can see the bars width is adjusted to 1 day, but I would like them to fill a whole month.

I tried to set the minor ticks locator to MonthLocator() without effect.

[edit]

Maybe an example will be more explicit, here is an ipython -pylab example of what I mean :

x = [datetime.datetime(2008, 1, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 2, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 3, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 4, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 5, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 6, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 7, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 8, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 9, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 10, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 11, 1, 0, 0),
    datetime.datetime(2008, 12, 1, 0, 0)]

y = cos(numpy.arange(12) * 2)

bar(x, y)

This gives 12 2 pixels wide bars, I would like them to be wider and extend from month to month.

+1  A: 

Just use the width keyword argument:

bar(x, y, width=30)

Or, since different months have different numbers of days, to make it look good you can use a sequence:

bar(x, y, width=[(x[j+1]-x[j]).days for j in range(len(x)-1)] + [30])
Jouni K. Seppänen
Thanks I didn't even think that width could take values larger than 1 :)
Luper Rouch