Added scrolling plot examples

This commit is contained in:
Luke Campagnola 2014-06-13 14:19:10 -06:00
parent 35856ccaee
commit 04f1b0e677
3 changed files with 120 additions and 1 deletions

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@ -31,6 +31,7 @@ examples = OrderedDict([
('Histograms', 'histogram.py'),
('Auto-range', 'PlotAutoRange.py'),
('Remote Plotting', 'RemoteSpeedTest.py'),
('Scrolling plots', 'scrollingPlots.py'),
('HDF5 big data', 'hdf5.py'),
('Demos', OrderedDict([
('Optics', 'optics_demos.py'),

118
examples/scrollingPlots.py Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,118 @@
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
Various methods of drawing scrolling plots.
"""
import initExample ## Add path to library (just for examples; you do not need this)
import pyqtgraph as pg
from pyqtgraph.Qt import QtCore, QtGui
import numpy as np
win = pg.GraphicsWindow()
win.setWindowTitle('pyqtgraph example: Scrolling Plots')
# 1) Simplest approach -- update data in the array such that plot appears to scroll
# In these examples, the array size is fixed.
p1 = win.addPlot()
p2 = win.addPlot()
data1 = np.random.normal(size=300)
curve1 = p1.plot(data1)
curve2 = p2.plot(data1)
ptr1 = 0
def update1():
global data1, curve1, ptr1
data1[:-1] = data1[1:] # shift data in the array one sample left
# (see also: np.roll)
data1[-1] = np.random.normal()
curve1.setData(data1)
ptr1 += 1
curve2.setData(data1)
curve2.setPos(ptr1, 0)
# 2) Allow data to accumulate. In these examples, the array doubles in length
# whenever it is full.
win.nextRow()
p3 = win.addPlot()
p4 = win.addPlot()
# Use automatic downsampling and clipping to reduce the drawing load
p3.setDownsampling(mode='peak')
p4.setDownsampling(mode='peak')
p3.setClipToView(True)
p4.setClipToView(True)
p3.setRange(xRange=[-100, 0])
p3.setLimits(xMax=0)
curve3 = p3.plot()
curve4 = p4.plot()
data3 = np.empty(100)
ptr3 = 0
def update2():
global data3, ptr3
data3[ptr3] = np.random.normal()
ptr3 += 1
if ptr3 >= data3.shape[0]:
tmp = data3
data3 = np.empty(data3.shape[0] * 2)
data3[:tmp.shape[0]] = tmp
curve3.setData(data3[:ptr3])
curve3.setPos(-ptr3, 0)
curve4.setData(data3[:ptr3])
# 3) Plot in chunks, adding one new plot curve for every 100 samples
chunkSize = 100
# Remove chunks after we have 10
maxChunks = 10
startTime = pg.ptime.time()
win.nextRow()
p5 = win.addPlot(colspan=2)
p5.setLabel('bottom', 'Time', 's')
p5.setXRange(-10, 0)
curves = []
data5 = np.empty((chunkSize+1,2))
ptr5 = 0
def update3():
global p5, data5, ptr5, curves
now = pg.ptime.time()
for c in curves:
c.setPos(-(now-startTime), 0)
i = ptr5 % chunkSize
if i == 0:
curve = p5.plot()
curves.append(curve)
last = data5[-1]
data5 = np.empty((chunkSize+1,2))
data5[0] = last
while len(curves) > maxChunks:
c = curves.pop(0)
p5.removeItem(c)
else:
curve = curves[-1]
data5[i+1,0] = now - startTime
data5[i+1,1] = np.random.normal()
curve.setData(x=data5[:i+2, 0], y=data5[:i+2, 1])
ptr5 += 1
# update all plots
def update():
update1()
update2()
update3()
timer = pg.QtCore.QTimer()
timer.timeout.connect(update)
timer.start(50)
## Start Qt event loop unless running in interactive mode or using pyside.
if __name__ == '__main__':
import sys
if (sys.flags.interactive != 1) or not hasattr(QtCore, 'PYQT_VERSION'):
QtGui.QApplication.instance().exec_()

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@ -546,7 +546,7 @@ class PlotDataItem(GraphicsObject):
if view is None or not view.autoRangeEnabled()[0]:
# this option presumes that x-values have uniform spacing
range = self.viewRect()
if range is not None:
if range is not None and len(x) > 1:
dx = float(x[-1]-x[0]) / (len(x)-1)
# clip to visible region extended by downsampling value
x0 = np.clip(int((range.left()-x[0])/dx)-1*ds , 0, len(x)-1)