0.85 breaks rcParams[tick.minor.pad]

matplotlib 0.85 broke rcParams[tick.minor.pad].

    > rcParams[xtick.minor.pad] works.

    > Could not find a reference to this in the changelog so I
    > posted it here in case anybody else had the same prob;em.

Sorry -- this was in API_CHANGES but it should have also been put in
the CHANGELOG. To just make clear, the tick.* properties in rc have
now been replaced by xtick.* and ytick.*. If you don't update your
rc file, you'll get lots of warnings when you start matplotlib.

This problem was compounded by the fact that I never got time to
officially write up the 0.85 release notes and actually announce the
release. Maybe by the time I release 0.86 <wink>

Included below is the updated rc file for 0.85

### MATPLOTLIBRC FORMAT

# This is a sample matplotlib configuration file. It should be placed
# in HOME/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc (unix/linux like systems) and
# C:\Documents and Settings\yourname\.matplotlib (win32 systems)

···

#
# By default, the installer will overwrite the existing file in the
# install path, so if you want to preserve your's, please move it to
# your HOME dir and set the environment variable if necessary.
#
# 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 (no '#' symbol)
# - a scalar grayscale intensity such as 0.75
# - a legal html color name, eg red, blue, darkslategray

#### CONFIGURATION BEGINS HERE
# the default backend; one of GTK GTKAgg GTKCairo FltkAgg QtAgg TkAgg
# Agg Cairo GD GDK Paint PS SVG Template
backend : GTKAgg
numerix : Numeric # Numeric or numarray
interactive : False # see http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/interactive.html
toolbar : toolbar2 # None | classic | toolbar2
timezone : UTC # a pytz timezone string, eg 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.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.lines.html for more
# information on line properties.
lines.linewidth : 1.0 # line width in points
lines.linestyle : - # solid line
lines.color : blue
lines.marker : None # the default marker
lines.markerfacecolor : blue
lines.markeredgecolor : black
lines.markeredgewidth : 0.5 # 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 antialised (no jaggies)

### PATCHES
# Patches are graphical objects that fill 2D space, like polygons or
# circles. See
# http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.patches.html for more
# information on patch properties
patch.linewidth : 1.0 # edge width in points
patch.facecolor : blue
patch.edgecolor : black
patch.antialiased : True # render patches in antialised (no jaggies)

### FONT
#
# font properties used by text.Text. See
# http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.font_manager.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.
#
# 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 has 11 values: xx-small, x-small, small,
# medium, large, x-large, xx-large, larger, smaller, length (such as
# 12pt), and percentage. larger and smaller are relative values.
# percentage is not yet implemented.
#
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
font.size : medium
font.serif : New Century Schoolbook, Century Schoolbook L, Utopia, ITC Bookman, Bookman, Bitstream Vera Serif, Nimbus Roman No9 L, Times New Roman, Times, Palatino, Charter, serif
font.sans-serif : Lucida Grande, Verdana, Geneva, Lucida, Bitstream Vera Sans, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif
font.cursive : Apple Chancery, Textile, Zapf Chancery, Sand, cursive
font.fantasy : Comic Sans MS, Chicago, Charcoal, Impact, Western, fantasy
font.monospace : Andale Mono, Bitstream Vera Sans Mono, Nimbus Mono L, Courier New, Courier, Fixed, Terminal, monospace
font.latex.package : type1cm # This must be an available LaTeX font
#package, like 'times' or 'pslatex' ; only applies if text.usetex is set

### TEXT
# text properties used by text.Text. See
# http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.text.html for more
# information on text properties
text.color : black
text.usetex : False # use tex/latex for all text handling. See http://matplotlib.sf.net/matplotlib.texmanager.html
text.tex.engine : latex # tex is faster, but latex is required to use special font packages

### AXES
# default face and edge color, default tick sizes,
# default fontsizes for ticklabels, and so on. See
# http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.axes.html#Axes
axes.hold : True # whether to clear the axes by default on
axes.facecolor : white # axes background color
axes.edgecolor : black # axes edge color
axes.linewidth : 1.0 # edge linewidth
axes.grid : False # display grid or not
axes.titlesize : 14 # fontsize of the axes title
axes.labelsize : 12 # fontsize of the x any y labels
axes.labelcolor : black

polaraxes.grid : True # display grid on polar axes

### TICKS
# see http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.axis.html#Ticks
xtick.major.size : 4 # major tick size in points
xtick.minor.size : 2 # minor tick size in points
xtick.major.pad : 4 # distance to major tick label in points
xtick.minor.pad : 4 # distance to the minor tick label in points
xtick.color : k # color of the tick labels
xtick.labelsize : 12 # fontsize of the tick labels
xtick.direction : in # direction: in or out

ytick.major.size : 4 # major tick size in points
ytick.minor.size : 2 # minor tick size in points
ytick.major.pad : 4 # distance to major tick label in points
ytick.minor.pad : 4 # distance to the minor tick label in points
ytick.color : k # color of the tick labels
ytick.labelsize : 12 # fontsize of the tick labels
ytick.direction : in # direction: in or out

### GRIDS
grid.color : black # grid color
grid.linestyle : : # dotted
grid.linewidth : 0.5 # in points

### FIGURE
# See http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/matplotlib.figure.html#Figure
figure.figsize : 8, 6 # figure size in inches
figure.dpi : 80 # figure dots per inch
figure.facecolor : 0.75 # figure facecolor; 0.75 is scalar gray
figure.edgecolor : white # figure edgecolor

# The figure subplot parameters. All dimensions are fraction of the
# figure width or height
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 : 0.1 # the bottom of the subplots of the figure
figure.subplot.top : 0.9 # the top of the subplots of the figure
figure.subplot.wspace : 0.2 # the amount of width reserved for blank space between subplots
figure.subplot.hspace : 0.2 # the amount of height reserved for white space between subplots

### IMAGES
image.aspect : free # free | preserve
image.interpolation : bilinear # see help(imshow) for options
image.cmap : jet # gray | jet
image.lut : 256 # the size of the colormap lookup table
image.origin : upper # lower | upper

### SAVING FIGURES
# the default savefig params can be different for the GUI backends.
# Eg, you may want a higher resolution, or to make the figure
# background white
savefig.dpi : 100 # figure dots per inch
savefig.facecolor : white # figure facecolor when saving
savefig.edgecolor : white # figure edgecolor when saving

# tk backend params
tk.window_focus : False # Maintain shell focus for TkAgg
tk.pythoninspect : False # tk sets PYTHONINSEPCT

# ps backend params
ps.papersize : letter # executive, letter, legal, ledger, A0-A10, B0-B6, C0-C6
ps.useafm : False # use of afm fonts -- breaks mathtext but results in small files
ps.usedistiller : False # Experimental: use ghostscript to distill ps output - may yield smaller files
ps.distiller.res : 6000 # dpi

# Set the verbose flags. This controls how much information
# matplotlib gives you at runtime and where it goes. Ther verbosity
# levels are: silent, helpful, debug, debug-annoying. Any level is
# inclusive of all the levels below it. If you 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, eg --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