@ForrestTheWoods@ianhi7919@matplotlib You can try playing with the dpi= option to scatter_density if you want to make the pixels of the density map larger, which might visually be similar to making the points larger.
@mileslucas_ Some dependencies of astropy are optional - to install astropy with all its dependencies, do:
pip install astropy[all]
If you still run into any issues after this, please let us know at https://t.co/qS65uv1nQI - thanks!
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I almost feel like some people have misunderstood something I wrote on Twitter and/or are distorting what I am saying when quoting me. But that shouldn't be possible, right?!? π±π€£
@hannorein Yes my complaints about Apple was perhaps tangential to the point of the thread, and unfortunately seems to have started some Mac vs Linux vs Windows flame wars in the comments π
@hannorein I'm not against change - my main goal here was to push back against people who will update immediately after major releases like this and who will then be unhappy/unproductive when things don't work. I'm just suggesting waiting for issues to be ironed out.
And yes I know that upgrading to the new Apple hardware is far more risky - in fact it is almost guaranteed to not work smoothly unless all you do is browse the internet and check emails!
Epilogue: yes, I know that upgrading to Big Sur might work just fine for some, but I also know that it has broken things for others. The key message here is that by upgrading *this early* you are taking unnecessary risks (and this is true of every major OS X version)
@te_pickering I don't debate that there's a huge difference - my point is more that the Big Sur changes are significant *enough* to break people's workflows (especially since the average researcher isn't using Python 3.9)
@te_pickering So while I wouldn't have made a big deal out of your average MacOS X 10.x upgrade, Big Sur from what I can see has had by far the most disruption to the Python ecosystem which is yet to be resolved.
@te_pickering These issues are going to require a new patch release of Python 3.8.x and 3.9.x and won't even be fixed in older Pythons. It's not clear how soon those patch releases will happen.