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MatLab

MatPlotLib

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Loglog plot of one array vs. another

Code Block
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a1 = subplot(121);
loglog(channels(:,1),channels(:,2),'o')
xlabel('CH0')
ylabel('CH1')
a2 = subplot(122);
loglog(channels(:,3),channels(:,4),'o')
xlabel('CH2')
ylabel('CH3')

Loglog plot of one array vs. another

Code Block
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np

a1 = plt.subplot(221)
plt.loglog(channels[:,0],channels[:,1], 'o' )
plt.xlabel('CH0')
plt.ylabel('CH1')
a2 = plt.subplot(222)
plt.loglog(channels[:,2],channels[:,3], 'o' )
plt.xlabel('CH2')
plt.ylabel('CH3')

channels is a 4xN array of floats, where N is the number of events. Each column corresponds to one out of four Ipimb channels.

Note that the arrays are indexed with 1,2,3,4 in MatLab and 0,1,2,3 in MatPlotLib/NumPy/Python.

<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="b9b2429522e15263-cba047ad-492941a2-88079e64-14a1c2cc1f3efe6d64150cdc"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[Note also the use of paranthesis, array() in MatLab, array[] in MatPlotLib.

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

test

test

Test

array of limits from graphical input

array of limits from graphical input

 

Code Block
axes(a1)
hold on
lims(1:2,:) = ginput(2);

axes(a2)
hold on
lims(3:4,:) = ginput(2);
Code Block
plt.axes(a1)
plt.hold(True)
limslista = plt.ginput(2)
# list: (x0,y0),(x1,y1)

plt.axes(a2)
plt.hold(True)

limslistb = plt.ginput(2)
# list: (x2,y2),(x3,y3)

limsa = np.array(limslista)
#[ x0   y0
#  x1   y1 ]

limsb = np.array(limslistb)
#[ x2   y2
#  x3   y3 ]

lims = np.hstack( [limsa, limsb] )
# [ x0  y0  x2  y2       =   [ ch0  ch1  ch2  ch3 ]
#   x1  y1  x3  y3 ]
# now each column corresponds to one channel.

fbools0 = (channels[:,0]>lims[:,0].min())&(channels[:,0]<lims[:,0].max())
fbools1 = (channels[:,1]>lims[:,1].min())&(channels[:,1]<lims[:,1].max())
fbools = fbools0 & fbools1

fbools2 = (channels[:,2]>lims[:,2].min())&(channels[:,2]<lims[:,2].max())
fbools3 = (channels[:,3]>lims[:,3].min())&(channels[:,3]<lims[:,3].max())
fbools = fbools2&fbools3

In MatLab, lims is an expandable array that holds limits as set by input from mouse click on the plot (ginput).
NumPy arrays cannot be expanded, so I've chosen to append to a python list first, then fill a NumPy array for the usage to look the same.

The exact usage of the lims array depends on where you place each limit. I think perhaps I've done it differently from the MatLab version.

 

 

 

filter

filter

 

Code Block
 


fbool1 = (channels(:,1)>min(lims(1:2,1)))&(channels(:,1)<max(lims(1:2,1)))
fbool2 = (channels(:,2)>min(lims(1:2,2)))&(channels(:,2)<max(lims(1:2,2)));
fbool = fbool1&fbool2
loglog(channels(fbool,1),channels(fbool,2),'or')

fbool3 = (channels(:,3)>min(lims(3:4,3)))&(channels(:,3)<max(lims(3:4,3)))
fbool4 = (channels(:,4)>min(lims(3:4,4)))&(channels(:,4)<max(lims(3:4,4)));
fbool = fbool3&fbool4
loglog(channels(fbool,3),channels(fbool,4),'or') 
Code Block
 bla bla  fbools0 = (channels[:,0]>lims[:,0].min())&(channels[:,0]<lims[:,0].max())
fbools1 = (channels[:,1]>lims[:,1].min())&(channels[:,1]<lims[:,1].max())
fbools = fbools0 & fbools1

fbools2 = (channels[:,2]>lims[:,2].min())&(channels[:,2]<lims[:,2].max())
fbools3 = (channels[:,3]>lims[:,3].min())&(channels[:,3]<lims[:,3].max())
fbools = fbools2&fbools3

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