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authorÓscar Nájera <hi@oscarnajera.com>2020-10-25 16:11:55 +0100
committerÓscar Nájera <hi@oscarnajera.com>2020-10-25 16:11:55 +0100
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+# -*- mode: conf-colon -*-
+### MATPLOTLIBRC FORMAT
+
+# This is a sample matplotlib configuration file - you can find a copy
+# of it on your system in
+# site-packages/matplotlib/mpl-data/matplotlibrc. If you edit it
+# there, please note that it will be overwritten in your next install.
+# If you want to keep a permanent local copy that will not be
+# overwritten, place it in the following location:
+# unix/linux:
+# $HOME/.config/matplotlib/matplotlibrc or
+# $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/matplotlib/matplotlibrc (if $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is set)
+# other platforms:
+# $HOME/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc
+#
+# See http://matplotlib.org/users/customizing.html#the-matplotlibrc-file for
+# more details on the paths which are checked for the configuration file.
+#
+# This file is best viewed in a editor which supports python mode
+# syntax highlighting. Blank lines, or lines starting with a comment
+# symbol, are ignored, as are trailing comments. Other lines must
+# have the format
+# key : val # optional comment
+#
+# Colors: for the color values below, you can either use - a
+# matplotlib color string, such as r, k, or b - an rgb tuple, such as
+# (1.0, 0.5, 0.0) - a hex string, such as ff00ff - a scalar
+# grayscale intensity such as 0.75 - a legal html color name, e.g., red,
+# blue, darkslategray
+
+#### CONFIGURATION BEGINS HERE
+
+# The default backend; one of GTK GTKAgg GTKCairo GTK3Agg GTK3Cairo
+# MacOSX Qt4Agg Qt5Agg TkAgg WX WXAgg Agg Cairo GDK PS PDF SVG
+# Template.
+# You can also deploy your own backend outside of matplotlib by
+# referring to the module name (which must be in the PYTHONPATH) as
+# 'module://my_backend'.
+backend : Qt5Agg
+
+# If you are using the Qt4Agg backend, you can choose here
+# to use the PyQt4 bindings or the newer PySide bindings to
+# the underlying Qt4 toolkit.
+#backend.qt4 : PyQt4 # PyQt4 | PySide
+
+# Note that this can be overridden by the environment variable
+# QT_API used by Enthought Tool Suite (ETS); valid values are
+# "pyqt" and "pyside". The "pyqt" setting has the side effect of
+# forcing the use of Version 2 API for QString and QVariant.
+
+# The port to use for the web server in the WebAgg backend.
+# webagg.port : 8888
+
+# If webagg.port is unavailable, a number of other random ports will
+# be tried until one that is available is found.
+# webagg.port_retries : 50
+
+# When True, open the webbrowser to the plot that is shown
+# webagg.open_in_browser : True
+
+# When True, the figures rendered in the nbagg backend are created with
+# a transparent background.
+# nbagg.transparent : False
+
+# if you are running pyplot inside a GUI and your backend choice
+# conflicts, we will automatically try to find a compatible one for
+# you if backend_fallback is True
+#backend_fallback: True
+
+#interactive : False
+#toolbar : toolbar2 # None | toolbar2 ("classic" is deprecated)
+#timezone : UTC # a pytz timezone string, e.g., US/Central or Europe/Paris
+
+# Where your matplotlib data lives if you installed to a non-default
+# location. This is where the matplotlib fonts, bitmaps, etc reside
+#datapath : /home/jdhunter/mpldata
+
+
+### LINES
+# See http://matplotlib.org/api/artist_api.html#module-matplotlib.lines for more
+# information on line properties.
+#lines.linewidth : 1.5 # line width in points
+#lines.linestyle : - # solid line
+#lines.color : C0 # has no affect on plot(); see axes.prop_cycle
+#lines.marker : None # the default marker
+#lines.markeredgewidth : 1.0 # the line width around the marker symbol
+#lines.markersize : 6 # markersize, in points
+#lines.dash_joinstyle : miter # miter|round|bevel
+#lines.dash_capstyle : butt # butt|round|projecting
+#lines.solid_joinstyle : miter # miter|round|bevel
+#lines.solid_capstyle : projecting # butt|round|projecting
+#lines.antialiased : True # render lines in antialiased (no jaggies)
+
+# The three standard dash patterns. These are scaled by the linewidth.
+#lines.dashed_pattern : 2.8, 1.2
+#lines.dashdot_pattern : 4.8, 1.2, 0.8, 1.2
+#lines.dotted_pattern : 1.1, 1.1
+#lines.scale_dashes : True
+
+#markers.fillstyle: full # full|left|right|bottom|top|none
+
+### PATCHES
+# Patches are graphical objects that fill 2D space, like polygons or
+# circles. See
+# http://matplotlib.org/api/artist_api.html#module-matplotlib.patches
+# information on patch properties
+#patch.linewidth : 1 # edge width in points.
+#patch.facecolor : C0
+#patch.edgecolor : black # if forced, or patch is not filled
+#patch.force_edgecolor : False # True to always use edgecolor
+#patch.antialiased : True # render patches in antialiased (no jaggies)
+
+### HATCHES
+#hatch.color : k
+#hatch.linewidth : 1.0
+
+### Boxplot
+#boxplot.notch : False
+#boxplot.vertical : True
+#boxplot.whiskers : 1.5
+#boxplot.bootstrap : None
+#boxplot.patchartist : False
+#boxplot.showmeans : False
+#boxplot.showcaps : True
+#boxplot.showbox : True
+#boxplot.showfliers : True
+#boxplot.meanline : False
+
+#boxplot.flierprops.color : 'k'
+#boxplot.flierprops.marker : 'o'
+#boxplot.flierprops.markerfacecolor : 'none'
+#boxplot.flierprops.markeredgecolor : 'k'
+#boxplot.flierprops.markersize : 6
+#boxplot.flierprops.linestyle : 'none'
+#boxplot.flierprops.linewidth : 1.0
+
+#boxplot.boxprops.color : 'k'
+#boxplot.boxprops.linewidth : 1.0
+#boxplot.boxprops.linestyle : '-'
+
+#boxplot.whiskerprops.color : 'k'
+#boxplot.whiskerprops.linewidth : 1.0
+#boxplot.whiskerprops.linestyle : '-'
+
+#boxplot.capprops.color : 'k'
+#boxplot.capprops.linewidth : 1.0
+#boxplot.capprops.linestyle : '-'
+
+#boxplot.medianprops.color : 'C1'
+#boxplot.medianprops.linewidth : 1.0
+#boxplot.medianprops.linestyle : '-'
+
+#boxplot.meanprops.color : 'C2'
+#boxplot.meanprops.marker : '^'
+#boxplot.meanprops.markerfacecolor : 'C2'
+#boxplot.meanprops.markeredgecolor : 'C2'
+#boxplot.meanprops.markersize : 6
+#boxplot.meanprops.linestyle : 'none'
+#boxplot.meanprops.linewidth : 1.0
+
+### FONT
+#
+# font properties used by text.Text. See
+# http://matplotlib.org/api/font_manager_api.html for more
+# information on font properties. The 6 font properties used for font
+# matching are given below with their default values.
+#
+# The font.family property has five values: 'serif' (e.g., Times),
+# 'sans-serif' (e.g., Helvetica), 'cursive' (e.g., Zapf-Chancery),
+# 'fantasy' (e.g., Western), and 'monospace' (e.g., Courier). Each of
+# these font families has a default list of font names in decreasing
+# order of priority associated with them. When text.usetex is False,
+# font.family may also be one or more concrete font names.
+#
+# The font.style property has three values: normal (or roman), italic
+# or oblique. The oblique style will be used for italic, if it is not
+# present.
+#
+# The font.variant property has two values: normal or small-caps. For
+# TrueType fonts, which are scalable fonts, small-caps is equivalent
+# to using a font size of 'smaller', or about 83%% of the current font
+# size.
+#
+# The font.weight property has effectively 13 values: normal, bold,
+# bolder, lighter, 100, 200, 300, ..., 900. Normal is the same as
+# 400, and bold is 700. bolder and lighter are relative values with
+# respect to the current weight.
+#
+# The font.stretch property has 11 values: ultra-condensed,
+# extra-condensed, condensed, semi-condensed, normal, semi-expanded,
+# expanded, extra-expanded, ultra-expanded, wider, and narrower. This
+# property is not currently implemented.
+#
+# The font.size property is the default font size for text, given in pts.
+# 10 pt is the standard value.
+#
+#font.family : sans-serif
+#font.style : normal
+#font.variant : normal
+#font.weight : medium
+#font.stretch : normal
+# note that font.size controls default text sizes. To configure
+# special text sizes tick labels, axes, labels, title, etc, see the rc
+# settings for axes and ticks. Special text sizes can be defined
+# relative to font.size, using the following values: xx-small, x-small,
+# small, medium, large, x-large, xx-large, larger, or smaller
+font.size : 14.0
+#font.serif : DejaVu Serif, Bitstream Vera Serif, New Century Schoolbook, Century Schoolbook L, Utopia, ITC Bookman, Bookman, Nimbus Roman No9 L, Times New Roman, Times, Palatino, Charter, serif
+#font.sans-serif : DejaVu Sans, Bitstream Vera Sans, Lucida Grande, Verdana, Geneva, Lucid, Arial, Helvetica, Avant Garde, sans-serif
+#font.cursive : Apple Chancery, Textile, Zapf Chancery, Sand, Script MT, Felipa, cursive
+#font.fantasy : Comic Sans MS, Chicago, Charcoal, Impact, Western, Humor Sans, xkcd, fantasy
+#font.monospace : DejaVu Sans Mono, Bitstream Vera Sans Mono, Andale Mono, Nimbus Mono L, Courier New, Courier, Fixed, Terminal, monospace
+
+### TEXT
+# text properties used by text.Text. See
+# http://matplotlib.org/api/artist_api.html#module-matplotlib.text for more
+# information on text properties
+
+#text.color : black
+
+### LaTeX customizations. See http://wiki.scipy.org/Cookbook/Matplotlib/UsingTex
+#text.usetex : False # use latex for all text handling. The following fonts
+ # are supported through the usual rc parameter settings:
+ # new century schoolbook, bookman, times, palatino,
+ # zapf chancery, charter, serif, sans-serif, helvetica,
+ # avant garde, courier, monospace, computer modern roman,
+ # computer modern sans serif, computer modern typewriter
+ # If another font is desired which can loaded using the
+ # LaTeX \usepackage command, please inquire at the
+ # matplotlib mailing list
+#text.latex.unicode : False # use "ucs" and "inputenc" LaTeX packages for handling
+ # unicode strings.
+#text.latex.preamble : # IMPROPER USE OF THIS FEATURE WILL LEAD TO LATEX FAILURES
+ # AND IS THEREFORE UNSUPPORTED. PLEASE DO NOT ASK FOR HELP
+ # IF THIS FEATURE DOES NOT DO WHAT YOU EXPECT IT TO.
+ # preamble is a comma separated list of LaTeX statements
+ # that are included in the LaTeX document preamble.
+ # An example:
+ # text.latex.preamble : \usepackage{bm},\usepackage{euler}
+ # The following packages are always loaded with usetex, so
+ # beware of package collisions: color, geometry, graphicx,
+ # type1cm, textcomp. Adobe Postscript (PSSNFS) font packages
+ # may also be loaded, depending on your font settings
+
+#text.dvipnghack : None # some versions of dvipng don't handle alpha
+ # channel properly. Use True to correct
+ # and flush ~/.matplotlib/tex.cache
+ # before testing and False to force
+ # correction off. None will try and
+ # guess based on your dvipng version
+
+#text.hinting : auto # May be one of the following:
+ # 'none': Perform no hinting
+ # 'auto': Use FreeType's autohinter
+ # 'native': Use the hinting information in the
+ # font file, if available, and if your
+ # FreeType library supports it
+ # 'either': Use the native hinting information,
+ # or the autohinter if none is available.
+ # For backward compatibility, this value may also be
+ # True === 'auto' or False === 'none'.
+#text.hinting_factor : 8 # Specifies the amount of softness for hinting in the
+ # horizontal direction. A value of 1 will hint to full
+ # pixels. A value of 2 will hint to half pixels etc.
+
+#text.antialiased : True # If True (default), the text will be antialiased.
+ # This only affects the Agg backend.
+
+# The following settings allow you to select the fonts in math mode.
+# They map from a TeX font name to a fontconfig font pattern.
+# These settings are only used if mathtext.fontset is 'custom'.
+# Note that this "custom" mode is unsupported and may go away in the
+# future.
+#mathtext.cal : cursive
+#mathtext.rm : serif
+#mathtext.tt : monospace
+#mathtext.it : serif:italic
+#mathtext.bf : serif:bold
+#mathtext.sf : sans
+mathtext.fontset : cm # Should be 'dejavusans' (default),
+ # 'dejavuserif', 'cm' (Computer Modern), 'stix',
+ # 'stixsans' or 'custom'
+#mathtext.fallback_to_cm : True # When True, use symbols from the Computer Modern
+ # fonts when a symbol can not be found in one of
+ # the custom math fonts.
+
+#mathtext.default : it # The default font to use for math.
+ # Can be any of the LaTeX font names, including
+ # the special name "regular" for the same font
+ # used in regular text.
+
+### AXES
+# default face and edge color, default tick sizes,
+# default fontsizes for ticklabels, and so on. See
+# http://matplotlib.org/api/axes_api.html#module-matplotlib.axes
+#axes.facecolor : white # axes background color
+#axes.edgecolor : black # axes edge color
+#axes.linewidth : 0.8 # edge linewidth
+axes.grid : True # display grid or not
+#axes.titlesize : large # fontsize of the axes title
+#axes.titlepad : 6.0 # pad between axes and title in points
+#axes.labelsize : medium # fontsize of the x any y labels
+#axes.labelpad : 4.0 # space between label and axis
+#axes.labelweight : normal # weight of the x and y labels
+#axes.labelcolor : black
+#axes.axisbelow : 'line' # draw axis gridlines and ticks below
+ # patches (True); above patches but below
+ # lines ('line'); or above all (False)
+
+#axes.formatter.limits : -7, 7 # use scientific notation if log10
+ # of the axis range is smaller than the
+ # first or larger than the second
+#axes.formatter.use_locale : False # When True, format tick labels
+ # according to the user's locale.
+ # For example, use ',' as a decimal
+ # separator in the fr_FR locale.
+#axes.formatter.use_mathtext : False # When True, use mathtext for scientific
+ # notation.
+#axes.formatter.useoffset : True # If True, the tick label formatter
+ # will default to labeling ticks relative
+ # to an offset when the data range is
+ # small compared to the minimum absolute
+ # value of the data.
+#axes.formatter.offset_threshold : 4 # When useoffset is True, the offset
+ # will be used when it can remove
+ # at least this number of significant
+ # digits from tick labels.
+
+# axes.spines.left : True # display axis spines
+# axes.spines.bottom : True
+# axes.spines.top : True
+# axes.spines.right : True
+
+
+#axes.unicode_minus : True # use unicode for the minus symbol
+ # rather than hyphen. See
+ # http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plus_and_minus_signs#Character_codes
+#axes.prop_cycle : cycler('color',
+# ['1f77b4', 'ff7f0e', '2ca02c', 'd62728',
+# '9467bd', '8c564b', 'e377c2', '7f7f7f',
+# 'bcbd22', '17becf'])
+ # color cycle for plot lines
+ # as list of string colorspecs:
+ # single letter, long name, or
+ # web-style hex
+#axes.autolimit_mode : data # How to scale axes limits to the data.
+ # Use "data" to use data limits, plus some margin
+ # Use "round_number" move to the nearest "round" number
+#axes.xmargin : .05 # x margin. See `axes.Axes.margins`
+#axes.ymargin : .05 # y margin See `axes.Axes.margins`
+
+#polaraxes.grid : True # display grid on polar axes
+#axes3d.grid : True # display grid on 3d axes
+
+### DATES
+# These control the default format strings used in AutoDateFormatter.
+# Any valid format datetime format string can be used (see the python
+# `datetime` for details). For example using '%%x' will use the locale date representation
+# '%%X' will use the locale time representation and '%%c' will use the full locale datetime
+# representation.
+# These values map to the scales:
+# {'year': 365, 'month': 30, 'day': 1, 'hour': 1/24, 'minute': 1 / (24 * 60)}
+
+# date.autoformatter.year : %Y
+# date.autoformatter.month : %Y-%m
+# date.autoformatter.day : %Y-%m-%d
+# date.autoformatter.hour : %m-%d %H
+# date.autoformatter.minute : %d %H:%M
+# date.autoformatter.second : %H:%M:%S
+# date.autoformatter.microsecond : %M:%S.%f
+
+### TICKS
+# see http://matplotlib.org/api/axis_api.html#matplotlib.axis.Tick
+#xtick.top : False # draw ticks on the top side
+#xtick.bottom : True # draw ticks on the bottom side
+#xtick.major.size : 3.5 # major tick size in points
+#xtick.minor.size : 2 # minor tick size in points
+#xtick.major.width : 0.8 # major tick width in points
+#xtick.minor.width : 0.6 # minor tick width in points
+#xtick.major.pad : 3.5 # distance to major tick label in points
+#xtick.minor.pad : 3.4 # distance to the minor tick label in points
+#xtick.color : k # color of the tick labels
+#xtick.labelsize : medium # fontsize of the tick labels
+#xtick.direction : out # direction: in, out, or inout
+xtick.minor.visible : True # visibility of minor ticks on x-axis
+#xtick.major.top : True # draw x axis top major ticks
+#xtick.major.bottom : True # draw x axis bottom major ticks
+#xtick.minor.top : True # draw x axis top minor ticks
+#xtick.minor.bottom : True # draw x axis bottom minor ticks
+
+#ytick.left : True # draw ticks on the left side
+#ytick.right : False # draw ticks on the right side
+#ytick.major.size : 3.5 # major tick size in points
+#ytick.minor.size : 2 # minor tick size in points
+#ytick.major.width : 0.8 # major tick width in points
+#ytick.minor.width : 0.6 # minor tick width in points
+#ytick.major.pad : 3.5 # distance to major tick label in points
+#ytick.minor.pad : 3.4 # distance to the minor tick label in points
+#ytick.color : k # color of the tick labels
+#ytick.labelsize : medium # fontsize of the tick labels
+#ytick.direction : out # direction: in, out, or inout
+ytick.minor.visible : True # visibility of minor ticks on y-axis
+#xtick.major.left : True # draw y axis left major ticks
+#xtick.major.right : True # draw y axis right major ticks
+#xtick.minor.left : True # draw y axis left minor ticks
+#xtick.minor.right : True # draw y axis right minor ticks
+
+
+### GRIDS
+#grid.color : b0b0b0 # grid color
+grid.linestyle : : # solid
+#grid.linewidth : 0.8 # in points
+#grid.alpha : 1.0 # transparency, between 0.0 and 1.0
+
+### Legend
+#legend.loc : best
+#legend.frameon : True # if True, draw the legend on a background patch
+#legend.framealpha : 0.8 # legend patch transparency
+#legend.facecolor : inherit # inherit from axes.facecolor; or color spec
+#legend.edgecolor : 0.8 # background patch boundary color
+#legend.fancybox : True # if True, use a rounded box for the
+ # legend background, else a rectangle
+#legend.shadow : False # if True, give background a shadow effect
+#legend.numpoints : 1 # the number of marker points in the legend line
+#legend.scatterpoints : 1 # number of scatter points
+#legend.markerscale : 1.0 # the relative size of legend markers vs. original
+#legend.fontsize : medium
+# Dimensions as fraction of fontsize:
+#legend.borderpad : 0.4 # border whitespace
+#legend.labelspacing : 0.5 # the vertical space between the legend entries
+#legend.handlelength : 2.0 # the length of the legend lines
+#legend.handleheight : 0.7 # the height of the legend handle
+#legend.handletextpad : 0.8 # the space between the legend line and legend text
+#legend.borderaxespad : 0.5 # the border between the axes and legend edge
+#legend.columnspacing : 2.0 # column separation
+
+### FIGURE
+# See http://matplotlib.org/api/figure_api.html#matplotlib.figure.Figure
+#figure.titlesize : large # size of the figure title (Figure.suptitle())
+#figure.titleweight : normal # weight of the figure title
+figure.figsize : 8, 6 # figure size in inches
+figure.dpi : 120 # figure dots per inch
+#figure.facecolor : white # figure facecolor; 0.75 is scalar gray
+#figure.edgecolor : white # figure edgecolor
+#figure.autolayout : True # When True, automatically adjust subplot
+ # parameters to make the plot fit the figure
+#figure.max_open_warning : 20 # The maximum number of figures to open through
+ # the pyplot interface before emitting a warning.
+ # If less than one this feature is disabled.
+
+# The figure subplot parameters. All dimensions are a fraction of the
+#figure.subplot.left : 0.125 # the left side of the subplots of the figure
+#figure.subplot.right : 0.9 # the right side of the subplots of the figure
+#figure.subplot.bottom : 0.11 # the bottom of the subplots of the figure
+#figure.subplot.top : 0.88 # the top of the subplots of the figure
+#figure.subplot.wspace : 0.2 # the amount of width reserved for blank space between subplots,
+ # expressed as a fraction of the average axis width
+#figure.subplot.hspace : 0.2 # the amount of height reserved for white space between subplots,
+ # expressed as a fraction of the average axis height
+
+
+### IMAGES
+#image.aspect : equal # equal | auto | a number
+#image.interpolation : nearest # see help(imshow) for options
+#image.cmap : viridis # A colormap name, gray etc...
+#image.lut : 256 # the size of the colormap lookup table
+#image.origin : upper # lower | upper
+#image.resample : True
+#image.composite_image : True # When True, all the images on a set of axes are
+ # combined into a single composite image before
+ # saving a figure as a vector graphics file,
+ # such as a PDF.
+
+### CONTOUR PLOTS
+#contour.negative_linestyle : dashed # dashed | solid
+#contour.corner_mask : True # True | False | legacy
+
+### ERRORBAR PLOTS
+#errorbar.capsize : 0 # length of end cap on error bars in pixels
+
+### HISTOGRAM PLOTS
+#hist.bins : 10 # The default number of histogram bins.
+ # If Numpy 1.11 or later is
+ # installed, may also be `auto`
+
+### SCATTER PLOTS
+#scatter.marker : o # The default marker type for scatter plots.
+
+### Agg rendering
+### Warning: experimental, 2008/10/10
+#agg.path.chunksize : 0 # 0 to disable; values in the range
+ # 10000 to 100000 can improve speed slightly
+ # and prevent an Agg rendering failure
+ # when plotting very large data sets,
+ # especially if they are very gappy.
+ # It may cause minor artifacts, though.
+ # A value of 20000 is probably a good
+ # starting point.
+### SAVING FIGURES
+#path.simplify : True # When True, simplify paths by removing "invisible"
+ # points to reduce file size and increase rendering
+ # speed
+#path.simplify_threshold : 0.1 # The threshold of similarity below which
+ # vertices will be removed in the simplification
+ # process
+#path.snap : True # When True, rectilinear axis-aligned paths will be snapped to
+ # the nearest pixel when certain criteria are met. When False,
+ # paths will never be snapped.
+#path.sketch : None # May be none, or a 3-tuple of the form (scale, length,
+ # randomness).
+ # *scale* is the amplitude of the wiggle
+ # perpendicular to the line (in pixels). *length*
+ # is the length of the wiggle along the line (in
+ # pixels). *randomness* is the factor by which
+ # the length is randomly scaled.
+
+# the default savefig params can be different from the display params
+# e.g., you may want a higher resolution, or to make the figure
+# background white
+#savefig.dpi : figure # figure dots per inch or 'figure'
+#savefig.facecolor : white # figure facecolor when saving
+#savefig.edgecolor : white # figure edgecolor when saving
+#savefig.format : png # png, ps, pdf, svg
+savefig.bbox : tight # 'tight' or 'standard'.
+ # 'tight' is incompatible with pipe-based animation
+ # backends but will workd with temporary file based ones:
+ # e.g. setting animation.writer to ffmpeg will not work,
+ # use ffmpeg_file instead
+savefig.pad_inches : 0.05 # Padding to be used when bbox is set to 'tight'
+#savefig.jpeg_quality: 95 # when a jpeg is saved, the default quality parameter.
+#savefig.directory : ~ # default directory in savefig dialog box,
+ # leave empty to always use current working directory
+#savefig.transparent : False # setting that controls whether figures are saved with a
+ # transparent background by default
+
+# tk backend params
+#tk.window_focus : False # Maintain shell focus for TkAgg
+
+# ps backend params
+#ps.papersize : letter # auto, letter, legal, ledger, A0-A10, B0-B10
+#ps.useafm : False # use of afm fonts, results in small files
+#ps.usedistiller : False # can be: None, ghostscript or xpdf
+ # Experimental: may produce smaller files.
+ # xpdf intended for production of publication quality files,
+ # but requires ghostscript, xpdf and ps2eps
+#ps.distiller.res : 6000 # dpi
+#ps.fonttype : 3 # Output Type 3 (Type3) or Type 42 (TrueType)
+
+# pdf backend params
+#pdf.compression : 6 # integer from 0 to 9
+ # 0 disables compression (good for debugging)
+#pdf.fonttype : 3 # Output Type 3 (Type3) or Type 42 (TrueType)
+
+# svg backend params
+#svg.image_inline : True # write raster image data directly into the svg file
+#svg.fonttype : 'path' # How to handle SVG fonts:
+# 'none': Assume fonts are installed on the machine where the SVG will be viewed.
+# 'path': Embed characters as paths -- supported by most SVG renderers
+# 'svgfont': Embed characters as SVG fonts -- supported only by Chrome,
+# Opera and Safari
+#svg.hashsalt : None # if not None, use this string as hash salt
+ # instead of uuid4
+
+# docstring params
+#docstring.hardcopy = False # set this when you want to generate hardcopy docstring
+
+# Set the verbose flags. This controls how much information
+# matplotlib gives you at runtime and where it goes. The verbosity
+# levels are: silent, helpful, debug, debug-annoying. Any level is
+# inclusive of all the levels below it. If your setting is "debug",
+# you'll get all the debug and helpful messages. When submitting
+# problems to the mailing-list, please set verbose to "helpful" or "debug"
+# and paste the output into your report.
+#
+# The "fileo" gives the destination for any calls to verbose.report.
+# These objects can a filename, or a filehandle like sys.stdout.
+#
+# You can override the rc default verbosity from the command line by
+# giving the flags --verbose-LEVEL where LEVEL is one of the legal
+# levels, e.g., --verbose-helpful.
+#
+# You can access the verbose instance in your code
+# from matplotlib import verbose.
+#verbose.level : silent # one of silent, helpful, debug, debug-annoying
+#verbose.fileo : sys.stdout # a log filename, sys.stdout or sys.stderr
+
+# Event keys to interact with figures/plots via keyboard.
+# Customize these settings according to your needs.
+# Leave the field(s) empty if you don't need a key-map. (i.e., fullscreen : '')
+
+#keymap.fullscreen : f, ctrl+f # toggling
+#keymap.home : h, r, home # home or reset mnemonic
+#keymap.back : left, c, backspace # forward / backward keys to enable
+#keymap.forward : right, v # left handed quick navigation
+#keymap.pan : p # pan mnemonic
+#keymap.zoom : o # zoom mnemonic
+#keymap.save : s # saving current figure
+#keymap.quit : ctrl+w, cmd+w # close the current figure
+#keymap.grid : g # switching on/off a grid in current axes
+#keymap.yscale : l # toggle scaling of y-axes ('log'/'linear')
+#keymap.xscale : L, k # toggle scaling of x-axes ('log'/'linear')
+#keymap.all_axes : a # enable all axes
+
+# Control location of examples data files
+#examples.directory : '' # directory to look in for custom installation
+
+###ANIMATION settings
+#animation.html : 'none' # How to display the animation as HTML in
+ # the IPython notebook. 'html5' uses
+ # HTML5 video tag.
+#animation.writer : ffmpeg # MovieWriter 'backend' to use
+#animation.codec : h264 # Codec to use for writing movie
+#animation.bitrate: -1 # Controls size/quality tradeoff for movie.
+ # -1 implies let utility auto-determine
+#animation.frame_format: 'png' # Controls frame format used by temp files
+#animation.ffmpeg_path: 'ffmpeg' # Path to ffmpeg binary. Without full path
+ # $PATH is searched
+#animation.ffmpeg_args: '' # Additional arguments to pass to ffmpeg
+#animation.avconv_path: 'avconv' # Path to avconv binary. Without full path
+ # $PATH is searched
+#animation.avconv_args: '' # Additional arguments to pass to avconv
+#animation.mencoder_path: 'mencoder'
+ # Path to mencoder binary. Without full path
+ # $PATH is searched
+#animation.mencoder_args: '' # Additional arguments to pass to mencoder
+#animation.convert_path: 'convert' # Path to ImageMagick's convert binary.
+ # On Windows use the full path since convert
+ # is also the name of a system tool.