- Timestamp:
- Apr 8, 2008 7:08:56 AM (17 years ago)
- Branches:
- master, ESS_GUI, ESS_GUI_Docs, ESS_GUI_batch_fitting, ESS_GUI_bumps_abstraction, ESS_GUI_iss1116, ESS_GUI_iss879, ESS_GUI_iss959, ESS_GUI_opencl, ESS_GUI_ordering, ESS_GUI_sync_sascalc, costrafo411, magnetic_scatt, release-4.1.1, release-4.1.2, release-4.2.2, release_4.0.1, ticket-1009, ticket-1094-headless, ticket-1242-2d-resolution, ticket-1243, ticket-1249, ticket885, unittest-saveload
- Children:
- f52bea1
- Parents:
- 5789654
- File:
-
- 1 edited
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guitools/requirements.txt
r5789654 r8742751 25 25 [alina] is it fine if I delete the fit line from the graph 26 26 and remove it when I close the Fit Dialog window? 27 [Mathieu] That might work. I kind of like it. Let's do it like that and see what the users 28 need. 27 29 28 30 6-[QUESTION ] Do this: … … 31 33 c) The fit shown does not start from the first point and it's not a straight line. 32 34 [ALINA] then for transformation to log Do I have to transform x to log and set x linear? 35 [Mathieu] No. That would confuse the user, who expects a log scale. The answer here is to fit 36 y = A * log(x) + B, which is a straight line in the y vs log(x) representation. 37 33 38 34 39 - NOTES that might help for bugs … … 38 43 3- Make sure that you are filling the View of the fit result correctly. 39 44 [ALINA] not using the log of matplotlib anymore but the axis are never in the log scale by the value are in log10 x 45 [Mathieu] See my comment to point 6. The right answer is to go back to using the log scale of matplotlib. 40 46 41 47 - NEEDED IMPROVEMENTS
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