... One day. But I don't want to lose this important historical information - my offspring's height vs time! So I've converted it into a nice graph Using some code #!/usr/bin/env python3 from datetime import datetime from matplotlib import pyplot as plt table = [ (132.4, '10/7/11' ), (134.8, '14/9/11' ), (136.9, '2/3/12' ), (138.4, '7/9/12' ), (141.5, '25/5/13' ), (142.6, '23/6/13' ), (145.8, '15/3/14' ), (148.7, '15/11/14' ), (150.0, '20/1/15' ), (153.1, '8/6/15' ), (157.7, '12/11/15' ), (159.0, '21/12/15' ), (160.1, '7/2/16' ), (164.1, '12/6/16' ), (167.6, '27/12/16' ), (169.9, '4/3/17' ), (171.7, '14/11/17' ), (172.1, '6/6/18' ), (172.9, '24/8/19' ), (173.6, '2/4/20' ), ] def labelToX(label: str): d,m,y = label.sp