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Numpy Beginner's Guide (Update)

Numpy Beginner's Guide (Update)

By : Ivan Idris
2 (1)
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Numpy Beginner's Guide (Update)

Numpy Beginner's Guide (Update)

2 (1)
By: Ivan Idris

Overview of this book

This book is for the scientists, engineers, programmers, or analysts looking for a high-quality, open source mathematical library. Knowledge of Python is assumed. Also, some affinity, or at least interest, in mathematics and statistics is required. However, I have provided brief explanations and pointers to learning resources.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
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14
C. NumPy Functions' References
15
Index

Time for action – drawing a filled contour plot

We will draw a filled contour plot of the three-dimensional mathematical function in the previous Time for action section. The code is also pretty similar. One key difference is that we don't need the 3D projection parameter any more. To draw the filled contour plot, use the following line of code:

ax.contourf(x, y, z)

This gives us the following filled contour plot:

Time for action – drawing a filled contour plot

What just happened?

We created a filled contour plot of a three-dimensional mathematical function (see contour.py):

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
from matplotlib import cm

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(111)

u = np.linspace(-1, 1, 100)

x, y = np.meshgrid(u, u)
z = x ** 2 + y ** 2
ax.contourf(x, y, z)

plt.show()
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