Glossary
- AGG
- The Anti-Grain Geometry (Agg) rendering
engine, capable of rendering high-quality images
- Cairo
- The Cairo graphics engine
- dateutil
- The dateutil library
provides extensions to the standard datetime module
- EPS
- Encapsulated Postscript (EPS)
- FreeType
- FreeType is a font rasterization
library used by matplotlib which supports TrueType, Type 1, and
OpenType fonts.
- GDK
- The Gimp Drawing Kit for GTK+
- GTK
- The GIMP Toolkit (GTK) graphical user interface
library
- JPG
- The Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) compression method and
file format for photographic images
- numpy
- numpy is the standard numerical
array library for python, the successor to Numeric and numarray.
numpy provides fast operations for homogeneous data sets and
common mathematical operations like correlations, standard
deviation, fourier transforms, and convolutions.
- PDF
- Adobe's Portable Document Format (PDF)
- PNG
- Portable Network Graphics (PNG), a raster
graphics format that employs lossless data compression which is more
suitable for line art than the lossy jpg format. Unlike the gif format,
png is not encumbered by requirements for a patent license.
- PS
- Postscript (PS) is a
vector graphics ASCII text language widely used in printers and
publishing. Postscript was developed by adobe systems and is
starting to show its age: for example is does not have an alpha
channel. PDF was designed in part as a next-generation document
format to replace postscript
- pgi
pgi
exists as a relatively
new Python wrapper to GTK3 and acts as a pure python alternative to
PyGObject. pgi still exists in its infancy, currently missing many
features of PyGObject. However Matplotlib does not use any of these
missing features.
- PyGObject
- PyGObject provides Python wrappers for the
GTK widgets library
- pyqt
- pyqt provides python
wrappers for the Qt widgets library and is required by
the matplotlib Qt5Agg and Qt4Agg backends. Widely used on linux
and windows; many linux distributions package this as
'python-qt5' or 'python-qt4'.
- python
- python is an object oriented interpreted
language widely used for scripting, application development, web
application servers, scientific computing and more.
- Qt
- Qt is a cross-platform
application framework for desktop and embedded development.
- Qt4
- Qt4 is the previous,
but most widely used, version of Qt cross-platform application
framework for desktop and embedded development.
- Qt5
- Qt5 is the current
version of Qt cross-platform application
framework for desktop and embedded development.
- raster graphics
- Raster graphics, or bitmaps,
represent an image as an array of pixels which is resolution
dependent. Raster graphics are generally most practical for
photo-realistic images, but do not scale easily without loss of
quality.
- SVG
- The Scalable Vector Graphics format (SVG). An XML based vector
graphics format supported by many web browsers.
- TIFF
- Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) is a
file format for storing images, including photographs and line
art.
- Tk
- Tk is a graphical user interface for Tcl
and many other dynamic languages. It can produce rich, native
applications that run unchanged across Windows, Mac OS X, Linux
and more.
- vector graphics
- vector graphics use geometrical
primitives based upon mathematical equations to represent images
in computer graphics. Primitives can include points, lines,
curves, and shapes or polygons. Vector graphics are scalable,
which means that they can be resized without suffering from
issues related to inherent resolution like are seen in raster
graphics. Vector graphics are generally most practical for
typesetting and graphic design applications.
- wxpython
- wxpython provides python wrappers
for the wxWidgets library for use with the WX and WXAgg
backends. Widely used on linux, OS-X and windows, it is often
packaged by linux distributions as 'python-wxgtk'
- wxWidgets
- WX is cross-platform GUI and
tools library for GTK, MS Windows, and MacOS. It uses native
widgets for each operating system, so applications will have the
look-and-feel that users on that operating system expect.