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Python

"""
The figure module provides the top-level
:class:`~matplotlib.artist.Artist`, the :class:`Figure`, which
contains all the plot elements. The following classes are defined
:class:`SubplotParams`
control the default spacing of the subplots
:class:`Figure`
Top level container for all plot elements.
"""
import logging
from numbers import Integral
import numpy as np
from matplotlib import rcParams
from matplotlib import backends, docstring, projections
from matplotlib import __version__ as _mpl_version
from matplotlib import get_backend
import matplotlib.artist as martist
from matplotlib.artist import Artist, allow_rasterization
from matplotlib.backend_bases import FigureCanvasBase, NonGuiException
import matplotlib.cbook as cbook
import matplotlib.colorbar as cbar
import matplotlib.image as mimage
from matplotlib.axes import Axes, SubplotBase, subplot_class_factory
from matplotlib.blocking_input import BlockingMouseInput, BlockingKeyMouseInput
from matplotlib.gridspec import GridSpec
import matplotlib.legend as mlegend
from matplotlib.patches import Rectangle
from matplotlib.projections import process_projection_requirements
from matplotlib.text import Text, TextWithDash
from matplotlib.transforms import (Affine2D, Bbox, BboxTransformTo,
TransformedBbox)
import matplotlib._layoutbox as layoutbox
_log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
def _stale_figure_callback(self, val):
if self.figure:
self.figure.stale = val
class _AxesStack(cbook.Stack):
"""
Specialization of the `.Stack` to handle all tracking of
`~matplotlib.axes.Axes` in a `.Figure`.
This stack stores ``key, (ind, axes)`` pairs, where:
* **key** should be a hash of the args and kwargs
used in generating the Axes.
* **ind** is a serial number for tracking the order
in which axes were added.
The AxesStack is a callable, where ``ax_stack()`` returns
the current axes. Alternatively the :meth:`current_key_axes` will
return the current key and associated axes.
"""
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self._ind = 0
def as_list(self):
"""
Return a list of the Axes instances that have been added to the figure.
"""
ia_list = [a for k, a in self._elements]
ia_list.sort()
return [a for i, a in ia_list]
def get(self, key):
"""
Return the Axes instance that was added with *key*.
If it is not present, return *None*.
"""
item = dict(self._elements).get(key)
if item is None:
return None
cbook.warn_deprecated(
"2.1",
message="Adding an axes using the same arguments as a previous "
"axes currently reuses the earlier instance. In a future "
"version, a new instance will always be created and returned. "
"Meanwhile, this warning can be suppressed, and the future "
"behavior ensured, by passing a unique label to each axes "
"instance.")
return item[1]
def _entry_from_axes(self, e):
ind, k = {a: (ind, k) for k, (ind, a) in self._elements}[e]
return (k, (ind, e))
def remove(self, a):
"""Remove the axes from the stack."""
super().remove(self._entry_from_axes(a))
def bubble(self, a):
"""
Move the given axes, which must already exist in the
stack, to the top.
"""
return super().bubble(self._entry_from_axes(a))
def add(self, key, a):
"""
Add Axes *a*, with key *key*, to the stack, and return the stack.
If *key* is unhashable, replace it by a unique, arbitrary object.
If *a* is already on the stack, don't add it again, but
return *None*.
"""
# All the error checking may be unnecessary; but this method
# is called so seldom that the overhead is negligible.
cbook._check_isinstance(Axes, a=a)
try:
hash(key)
except TypeError:
key = object()
a_existing = self.get(key)
if a_existing is not None:
super().remove((key, a_existing))
cbook._warn_external(
"key {!r} already existed; Axes is being replaced".format(key))
# I don't think the above should ever happen.
if a in self:
return None
self._ind += 1
return super().push((key, (self._ind, a)))
def current_key_axes(self):
"""
Return a tuple of ``(key, axes)`` for the active axes.
If no axes exists on the stack, then returns ``(None, None)``.
"""
if not len(self._elements):
return self._default, self._default
else:
key, (index, axes) = self._elements[self._pos]
return key, axes
def __call__(self):
return self.current_key_axes()[1]
def __contains__(self, a):
return a in self.as_list()
@cbook.deprecated("3.2")
class AxesStack(_AxesStack):
pass
class SubplotParams:
"""
A class to hold the parameters for a subplot.
"""
def __init__(self, left=None, bottom=None, right=None, top=None,
wspace=None, hspace=None):
"""
All dimensions are fractions of the figure width or height.
Defaults are given by :rc:`figure.subplot.[name]`.
Parameters
----------
left : float
The left side of the subplots of the figure.
right : float
The right side of the subplots of the figure.
bottom : float
The bottom of the subplots of the figure.
top : float
The top of the subplots of the figure.
wspace : float
The amount of width reserved for space between subplots,
expressed as a fraction of the average axis width.
hspace : float
The amount of height reserved for space between subplots,
expressed as a fraction of the average axis height.
"""
self.validate = True
self.update(left, bottom, right, top, wspace, hspace)
def update(self, left=None, bottom=None, right=None, top=None,
wspace=None, hspace=None):
"""
Update the dimensions of the passed parameters. *None* means unchanged.
"""
thisleft = getattr(self, 'left', None)
thisright = getattr(self, 'right', None)
thistop = getattr(self, 'top', None)
thisbottom = getattr(self, 'bottom', None)
thiswspace = getattr(self, 'wspace', None)
thishspace = getattr(self, 'hspace', None)
self._update_this('left', left)
self._update_this('right', right)
self._update_this('bottom', bottom)
self._update_this('top', top)
self._update_this('wspace', wspace)
self._update_this('hspace', hspace)
def reset():
self.left = thisleft
self.right = thisright
self.top = thistop
self.bottom = thisbottom
self.wspace = thiswspace
self.hspace = thishspace
if self.validate:
if self.left >= self.right:
reset()
raise ValueError('left cannot be >= right')
if self.bottom >= self.top:
reset()
raise ValueError('bottom cannot be >= top')
def _update_this(self, s, val):
if val is None:
val = getattr(self, s, None)
if val is None:
key = 'figure.subplot.' + s
val = rcParams[key]
setattr(self, s, val)
class Figure(Artist):
"""
The top level container for all the plot elements.
The Figure instance supports callbacks through a *callbacks* attribute
which is a `.CallbackRegistry` instance. The events you can connect to
are 'dpi_changed', and the callback will be called with ``func(fig)`` where
fig is the `Figure` instance.
Attributes
----------
patch
The `.Rectangle` instance representing the figure background patch.
suppressComposite
For multiple figure images, the figure will make composite images
depending on the renderer option_image_nocomposite function. If
*suppressComposite* is a boolean, this will override the renderer.
"""
def __str__(self):
return "Figure(%gx%g)" % tuple(self.bbox.size)
def __repr__(self):
return "<{clsname} size {h:g}x{w:g} with {naxes} Axes>".format(
clsname=self.__class__.__name__,
h=self.bbox.size[0], w=self.bbox.size[1],
naxes=len(self.axes),
)
def __init__(self,
figsize=None,
dpi=None,
facecolor=None,
edgecolor=None,
linewidth=0.0,
frameon=None,
subplotpars=None, # default to rc
tight_layout=None, # default to rc figure.autolayout
constrained_layout=None, # default to rc
#figure.constrained_layout.use
):
"""
Parameters
----------
figsize : 2-tuple of floats, default: :rc:`figure.figsize`
Figure dimension ``(width, height)`` in inches.
dpi : float, default: :rc:`figure.dpi`
Dots per inch.
facecolor : default: :rc:`figure.facecolor`
The figure patch facecolor.
edgecolor : default: :rc:`figure.edgecolor`
The figure patch edge color.
linewidth : float
The linewidth of the frame (i.e. the edge linewidth of the figure
patch).
frameon : bool, default: :rc:`figure.frameon`
If ``False``, suppress drawing the figure background patch.
subplotpars : :class:`SubplotParams`
Subplot parameters. If not given, the default subplot
parameters :rc:`figure.subplot.*` are used.
tight_layout : bool or dict, default: :rc:`figure.autolayout`
If ``False`` use *subplotpars*. If ``True`` adjust subplot
parameters using `.tight_layout` with default padding.
When providing a dict containing the keys ``pad``, ``w_pad``,
``h_pad``, and ``rect``, the default `.tight_layout` paddings
will be overridden.
constrained_layout : bool
If ``True`` use constrained layout to adjust positioning of plot
elements. Like ``tight_layout``, but designed to be more
flexible. See
:doc:`/tutorials/intermediate/constrainedlayout_guide`
for examples. (Note: does not work with :meth:`.subplot` or
:meth:`.subplot2grid`.)
Defaults to :rc:`figure.constrained_layout.use`.
"""
super().__init__()
# remove the non-figure artist _axes property
# as it makes no sense for a figure to be _in_ an axes
# this is used by the property methods in the artist base class
# which are over-ridden in this class
del self._axes
self.callbacks = cbook.CallbackRegistry()
if figsize is None:
figsize = rcParams['figure.figsize']
if dpi is None:
dpi = rcParams['figure.dpi']
if facecolor is None:
facecolor = rcParams['figure.facecolor']
if edgecolor is None:
edgecolor = rcParams['figure.edgecolor']
if frameon is None:
frameon = rcParams['figure.frameon']
if not np.isfinite(figsize).all() or (np.array(figsize) <= 0).any():
raise ValueError('figure size must be positive finite not '
f'{figsize}')
self.bbox_inches = Bbox.from_bounds(0, 0, *figsize)
self.dpi_scale_trans = Affine2D().scale(dpi)
# do not use property as it will trigger
self._dpi = dpi
self.bbox = TransformedBbox(self.bbox_inches, self.dpi_scale_trans)
self.transFigure = BboxTransformTo(self.bbox)
self.patch = Rectangle(
xy=(0, 0), width=1, height=1, visible=frameon,
facecolor=facecolor, edgecolor=edgecolor, linewidth=linewidth,
# Don't let the figure patch influence bbox calculation.
in_layout=False)
self._set_artist_props(self.patch)
self.patch.set_antialiased(False)
FigureCanvasBase(self) # Set self.canvas.
self._suptitle = None
if subplotpars is None:
subplotpars = SubplotParams()
self.subplotpars = subplotpars
# constrained_layout:
self._layoutbox = None
# set in set_constrained_layout_pads()
self.set_constrained_layout(constrained_layout)
self.set_tight_layout(tight_layout)
self._axstack = _AxesStack() # track all figure axes and current axes
self.clf()
self._cachedRenderer = None
# groupers to keep track of x and y labels we want to align.
# see self.align_xlabels and self.align_ylabels and
# axis._get_tick_boxes_siblings
self._align_xlabel_grp = cbook.Grouper()
self._align_ylabel_grp = cbook.Grouper()
# list of child gridspecs for this figure
self._gridspecs = []
# TODO: I'd like to dynamically add the _repr_html_ method
# to the figure in the right context, but then IPython doesn't
# use it, for some reason.
def _repr_html_(self):
# We can't use "isinstance" here, because then we'd end up importing
# webagg unconditionally.
if 'WebAgg' in type(self.canvas).__name__:
from matplotlib.backends import backend_webagg
return backend_webagg.ipython_inline_display(self)
def show(self, warn=True):
"""
If using a GUI backend with pyplot, display the figure window.
If the figure was not created using
:func:`~matplotlib.pyplot.figure`, it will lack a
:class:`~matplotlib.backend_bases.FigureManagerBase`, and
will raise an AttributeError.
.. warning::
This does not manage an GUI event loop. Consequently, the figure
may only be shown briefly or not shown at all if you or your
environment are not managing an event loop.
Proper use cases for `.Figure.show` include running this from a
GUI application or an IPython shell.
If you're running a pure python shell or executing a non-GUI
python script, you should use `matplotlib.pyplot.show` instead,
which takes care of managing the event loop for you.
Parameters
----------
warn : bool
If ``True`` and we are not running headless (i.e. on Linux with an
unset DISPLAY), issue warning when called on a non-GUI backend.
"""
try:
manager = getattr(self.canvas, 'manager')
except AttributeError as err:
raise AttributeError("%s\n"
"Figure.show works only "
"for figures managed by pyplot, normally "
"created by pyplot.figure()." % err)
if manager is not None:
try:
manager.show()
return
except NonGuiException:
pass
if (backends._get_running_interactive_framework() != "headless"
and warn):
cbook._warn_external('Matplotlib is currently using %s, which is '
'a non-GUI backend, so cannot show the '
'figure.' % get_backend())
def _get_axes(self):
return self._axstack.as_list()
axes = property(fget=_get_axes,
doc="List of axes in the Figure. You can access the "
"axes in the Figure through this list. "
"Do not modify the list itself. Instead, use "
"`~Figure.add_axes`, `~.Figure.subplot` or "
"`~.Figure.delaxes` to add or remove an axes.")
def _get_dpi(self):
return self._dpi
def _set_dpi(self, dpi, forward=True):
"""
Parameters
----------
dpi : float
forward : bool
Passed on to `~.Figure.set_size_inches`
"""
self._dpi = dpi
self.dpi_scale_trans.clear().scale(dpi)
w, h = self.get_size_inches()
self.set_size_inches(w, h, forward=forward)
self.callbacks.process('dpi_changed', self)
dpi = property(_get_dpi, _set_dpi, doc="The resolution in dots per inch.")
def get_tight_layout(self):
"""Return whether `.tight_layout` is called when drawing."""
return self._tight
def set_tight_layout(self, tight):
"""
Set whether and how `.tight_layout` is called when drawing.
Parameters
----------
tight : bool or dict with keys "pad", "w_pad", "h_pad", "rect" or None
If a bool, sets whether to call `.tight_layout` upon drawing.
If ``None``, use the ``figure.autolayout`` rcparam instead.
If a dict, pass it as kwargs to `.tight_layout`, overriding the
default paddings.
"""
if tight is None:
tight = rcParams['figure.autolayout']
self._tight = bool(tight)
self._tight_parameters = tight if isinstance(tight, dict) else {}
self.stale = True
def get_constrained_layout(self):
"""
Return a boolean: True means constrained layout is being used.
See :doc:`/tutorials/intermediate/constrainedlayout_guide`.
"""
return self._constrained
def set_constrained_layout(self, constrained):
"""
Set whether ``constrained_layout`` is used upon drawing. If None,
the rcParams['figure.constrained_layout.use'] value will be used.
When providing a dict containing the keys `w_pad`, `h_pad`
the default ``constrained_layout`` paddings will be
overridden. These pads are in inches and default to 3.0/72.0.
``w_pad`` is the width padding and ``h_pad`` is the height padding.
See :doc:`/tutorials/intermediate/constrainedlayout_guide`.
Parameters
----------
constrained : bool or dict or None
"""
self._constrained_layout_pads = dict()
self._constrained_layout_pads['w_pad'] = None
self._constrained_layout_pads['h_pad'] = None
self._constrained_layout_pads['wspace'] = None
self._constrained_layout_pads['hspace'] = None
if constrained is None:
constrained = rcParams['figure.constrained_layout.use']
self._constrained = bool(constrained)
if isinstance(constrained, dict):
self.set_constrained_layout_pads(**constrained)
else:
self.set_constrained_layout_pads()
self.stale = True
def set_constrained_layout_pads(self, **kwargs):
"""
Set padding for ``constrained_layout``. Note the kwargs can be passed
as a dictionary ``fig.set_constrained_layout(**paddict)``.
See :doc:`/tutorials/intermediate/constrainedlayout_guide`.
Parameters
----------
w_pad : scalar
Width padding in inches. This is the pad around axes
and is meant to make sure there is enough room for fonts to
look good. Defaults to 3 pts = 0.04167 inches
h_pad : scalar
Height padding in inches. Defaults to 3 pts.
wspace : scalar
Width padding between subplots, expressed as a fraction of the
subplot width. The total padding ends up being w_pad + wspace.
hspace : scalar
Height padding between subplots, expressed as a fraction of the
subplot width. The total padding ends up being h_pad + hspace.
"""
todo = ['w_pad', 'h_pad', 'wspace', 'hspace']
for td in todo:
if td in kwargs and kwargs[td] is not None:
self._constrained_layout_pads[td] = kwargs[td]
else:
self._constrained_layout_pads[td] = (
rcParams['figure.constrained_layout.' + td])
def get_constrained_layout_pads(self, relative=False):
"""
Get padding for ``constrained_layout``.
Returns a list of `w_pad, h_pad` in inches and
`wspace` and `hspace` as fractions of the subplot.
See :doc:`/tutorials/intermediate/constrainedlayout_guide`.
Parameters
----------
relative : boolean
If `True`, then convert from inches to figure relative.
"""
w_pad = self._constrained_layout_pads['w_pad']
h_pad = self._constrained_layout_pads['h_pad']
wspace = self._constrained_layout_pads['wspace']
hspace = self._constrained_layout_pads['hspace']
if relative and (w_pad is not None or h_pad is not None):
renderer0 = layoutbox.get_renderer(self)
dpi = renderer0.dpi
w_pad = w_pad * dpi / renderer0.width
h_pad = h_pad * dpi / renderer0.height
return w_pad, h_pad, wspace, hspace
def autofmt_xdate(self, bottom=0.2, rotation=30, ha='right', which=None):
"""
Date ticklabels often overlap, so it is useful to rotate them
and right align them. Also, a common use case is a number of
subplots with shared xaxes where the x-axis is date data. The
ticklabels are often long, and it helps to rotate them on the
bottom subplot and turn them off on other subplots, as well as
turn off xlabels.
Parameters
----------
bottom : scalar
The bottom of the subplots for :meth:`subplots_adjust`.
rotation : angle in degrees
The rotation of the xtick labels.
ha : str
The horizontal alignment of the xticklabels.
which : {None, 'major', 'minor', 'both'}
Selects which ticklabels to rotate. Default is None which works
the same as major.
"""
allsubplots = all(hasattr(ax, 'is_last_row') for ax in self.axes)
if len(self.axes) == 1:
for label in self.axes[0].get_xticklabels(which=which):
label.set_ha(ha)
label.set_rotation(rotation)
else:
if allsubplots:
for ax in self.get_axes():
if ax.is_last_row():
for label in ax.get_xticklabels(which=which):
label.set_ha(ha)
label.set_rotation(rotation)
else:
for label in ax.get_xticklabels(which=which):
label.set_visible(False)
ax.set_xlabel('')
if allsubplots:
self.subplots_adjust(bottom=bottom)
self.stale = True
def get_children(self):
"""Get a list of artists contained in the figure."""
return [self.patch,
*self.artists,
*self.axes,
*self.lines,
*self.patches,
*self.texts,
*self.images,
*self.legends]
def contains(self, mouseevent):
"""
Test whether the mouse event occurred on the figure.
Returns
-------
bool, {}
"""
inside, info = self._default_contains(mouseevent, figure=self)
if inside is not None:
return inside, info
inside = self.bbox.contains(mouseevent.x, mouseevent.y)
return inside, {}
def get_window_extent(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Return the figure bounding box in display space. Arguments are ignored.
"""
return self.bbox
def suptitle(self, t, **kwargs):
"""
Add a centered title to the figure.
Parameters
----------
t : str
The title text.
x : float, default 0.5
The x location of the text in figure coordinates.
y : float, default 0.98
The y location of the text in figure coordinates.
horizontalalignment, ha : {'center', 'left', right'}, default: 'center'
The horizontal alignment of the text relative to (*x*, *y*).
verticalalignment, va : {'top', 'center', 'bottom', 'baseline'}, \
default: 'top'
The vertical alignment of the text relative to (*x*, *y*).
fontsize, size : default: :rc:`figure.titlesize`
The font size of the text. See `.Text.set_size` for possible
values.
fontweight, weight : default: :rc:`figure.titleweight`
The font weight of the text. See `.Text.set_weight` for possible
values.
Returns
-------
text
The `.Text` instance of the title.
Other Parameters
----------------
fontproperties : None or dict, optional
A dict of font properties. If *fontproperties* is given the
default values for font size and weight are taken from the
`FontProperties` defaults. :rc:`figure.titlesize` and
:rc:`figure.titleweight` are ignored in this case.
**kwargs
Additional kwargs are :class:`matplotlib.text.Text` properties.
Examples
--------
>>> fig.suptitle('This is the figure title', fontsize=12)
"""
manual_position = ('x' in kwargs or 'y' in kwargs)
x = kwargs.pop('x', 0.5)
y = kwargs.pop('y', 0.98)
if 'horizontalalignment' not in kwargs and 'ha' not in kwargs:
kwargs['horizontalalignment'] = 'center'
if 'verticalalignment' not in kwargs and 'va' not in kwargs:
kwargs['verticalalignment'] = 'top'
if 'fontproperties' not in kwargs:
if 'fontsize' not in kwargs and 'size' not in kwargs:
kwargs['size'] = rcParams['figure.titlesize']
if 'fontweight' not in kwargs and 'weight' not in kwargs:
kwargs['weight'] = rcParams['figure.titleweight']
sup = self.text(x, y, t, **kwargs)
if self._suptitle is not None:
self._suptitle.set_text(t)
self._suptitle.set_position((x, y))
self._suptitle.update_from(sup)
sup.remove()
else:
self._suptitle = sup
self._suptitle._layoutbox = None
if self._layoutbox is not None and not manual_position:
w_pad, h_pad, wspace, hspace = \
self.get_constrained_layout_pads(relative=True)
figlb = self._layoutbox
self._suptitle._layoutbox = layoutbox.LayoutBox(
parent=figlb, artist=self._suptitle,
name=figlb.name+'.suptitle')
# stack the suptitle on top of all the children.
# Some day this should be on top of all the children in the
# gridspec only.
for child in figlb.children:
if child is not self._suptitle._layoutbox:
layoutbox.vstack([self._suptitle._layoutbox,
child],
padding=h_pad*2., strength='required')
self.stale = True
return self._suptitle
def set_canvas(self, canvas):
"""
Set the canvas that contains the figure
Parameters
----------
canvas : FigureCanvas
"""
self.canvas = canvas
def figimage(self, X, xo=0, yo=0, alpha=None, norm=None, cmap=None,
vmin=None, vmax=None, origin=None, resize=False, **kwargs):
"""
Add a non-resampled image to the figure.
The image is attached to the lower or upper left corner depending on
*origin*.
Parameters
----------
X
The image data. This is an array of one of the following shapes:
- MxN: luminance (grayscale) values
- MxNx3: RGB values
- MxNx4: RGBA values
xo, yo : int
The *x*/*y* image offset in pixels.
alpha : None or float
The alpha blending value.
norm : :class:`matplotlib.colors.Normalize`
A :class:`.Normalize` instance to map the luminance to the
interval [0, 1].
cmap : str or :class:`matplotlib.colors.Colormap`
The colormap to use. Default: :rc:`image.cmap`.
vmin, vmax : scalar
If *norm* is not given, these values set the data limits for the
colormap.
origin : {'upper', 'lower'}
Indicates where the [0, 0] index of the array is in the upper left
or lower left corner of the axes. Defaults to :rc:`image.origin`.
resize : bool
If *True*, resize the figure to match the given image size.
Returns
-------
:class:`matplotlib.image.FigureImage`
Other Parameters
----------------
**kwargs
Additional kwargs are `.Artist` kwargs passed on to `.FigureImage`.
Notes
-----
figimage complements the axes image
(:meth:`~matplotlib.axes.Axes.imshow`) which will be resampled
to fit the current axes. If you want a resampled image to
fill the entire figure, you can define an
:class:`~matplotlib.axes.Axes` with extent [0, 0, 1, 1].
Examples::
f = plt.figure()
nx = int(f.get_figwidth() * f.dpi)
ny = int(f.get_figheight() * f.dpi)
data = np.random.random((ny, nx))
f.figimage(data)
plt.show()
"""
if resize:
dpi = self.get_dpi()
figsize = [x / dpi for x in (X.shape[1], X.shape[0])]
self.set_size_inches(figsize, forward=True)
im = mimage.FigureImage(self, cmap, norm, xo, yo, origin, **kwargs)
im.stale_callback = _stale_figure_callback
im.set_array(X)
im.set_alpha(alpha)
if norm is None:
im.set_clim(vmin, vmax)
self.images.append(im)
im._remove_method = self.images.remove
self.stale = True
return im
def set_size_inches(self, w, h=None, forward=True):
"""
Set the figure size in inches.
Call signatures::
fig.set_size_inches(w, h) # OR
fig.set_size_inches((w, h))
Parameters
----------
w : (float, float) or float
Width and height in inches (if height not specified as a separate
argument) or width.
h : float
Height in inches.
forward : bool, default: True
If ``True``, the canvas size is automatically updated, e.g.,
you can resize the figure window from the shell.
See Also
--------
matplotlib.Figure.get_size_inches
"""
if h is None: # Got called with a single pair as argument.
w, h = w
size = np.array([w, h])
if not np.isfinite(size).all() or (size <= 0).any():
raise ValueError(f'figure size must be positive finite not {size}')
self.bbox_inches.p1 = size
if forward:
canvas = getattr(self, 'canvas')
if canvas is not None:
dpi_ratio = getattr(canvas, '_dpi_ratio', 1)
manager = getattr(canvas, 'manager', None)
if manager is not None:
manager.resize(*(size * self.dpi / dpi_ratio).astype(int))
self.stale = True
def get_size_inches(self):
"""
Returns the current size of the figure in inches.
Returns
-------
size : ndarray
The size (width, height) of the figure in inches.
See Also
--------
matplotlib.Figure.set_size_inches
"""
return np.array(self.bbox_inches.p1)
def get_edgecolor(self):
"""Get the edge color of the Figure rectangle."""
return self.patch.get_edgecolor()
def get_facecolor(self):
"""Get the face color of the Figure rectangle."""
return self.patch.get_facecolor()
def get_figwidth(self):
"""Return the figure width as a float."""
return self.bbox_inches.width
def get_figheight(self):
"""Return the figure height as a float."""
return self.bbox_inches.height
def get_dpi(self):
"""Return the resolution in dots per inch as a float."""
return self.dpi
def get_frameon(self):
"""
Return the figure's background patch visibility, i.e.
whether the figure background will be drawn. Equivalent to
``Figure.patch.get_visible()``.
"""
return self.patch.get_visible()
def set_edgecolor(self, color):
"""
Set the edge color of the Figure rectangle.
Parameters
----------
color : color
"""
self.patch.set_edgecolor(color)
def set_facecolor(self, color):
"""
Set the face color of the Figure rectangle.
Parameters
----------
color : color
"""
self.patch.set_facecolor(color)
def set_dpi(self, val):
"""
Set the resolution of the figure in dots-per-inch.
Parameters
----------
val : float
"""
self.dpi = val
self.stale = True
def set_figwidth(self, val, forward=True):
"""
Set the width of the figure in inches.
Parameters
----------
val : float
forward : bool
"""
self.set_size_inches(val, self.get_figheight(), forward=forward)
def set_figheight(self, val, forward=True):
"""
Set the height of the figure in inches.
Parameters
----------
val : float
forward : bool
"""
self.set_size_inches(self.get_figwidth(), val, forward=forward)
def set_frameon(self, b):
"""
Set the figure's background patch visibility, i.e.
whether the figure background will be drawn. Equivalent to
``Figure.patch.set_visible()``.
Parameters
----------
b : bool
"""
self.patch.set_visible(b)
self.stale = True
frameon = property(get_frameon, set_frameon)
def delaxes(self, ax):
"""
Remove the `~matplotlib.axes.Axes` *ax* from the figure and update the
current axes.
"""
self._axstack.remove(ax)
for func in self._axobservers:
func(self)
self.stale = True
def add_artist(self, artist, clip=False):
"""
Add any :class:`~matplotlib.artist.Artist` to the figure.
Usually artists are added to axes objects using
:meth:`matplotlib.axes.Axes.add_artist`, but use this method in the
rare cases that adding directly to the figure is necessary.
Parameters
----------
artist : `~matplotlib.artist.Artist`
The artist to add to the figure. If the added artist has no
transform previously set, its transform will be set to
``figure.transFigure``.
clip : bool, optional, default ``False``
An optional parameter ``clip`` determines whether the added artist
should be clipped by the figure patch. Default is *False*,
i.e. no clipping.
Returns
-------
artist : The added `~matplotlib.artist.Artist`
"""
artist.set_figure(self)
self.artists.append(artist)
artist._remove_method = self.artists.remove
if not artist.is_transform_set():
artist.set_transform(self.transFigure)
if clip:
artist.set_clip_path(self.patch)
self.stale = True
return artist
def _make_key(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""Make a hashable key out of args and kwargs."""
def fixitems(items):
# items may have arrays and lists in them, so convert them
# to tuples for the key
ret = []
for k, v in items:
# some objects can define __getitem__ without being
# iterable and in those cases the conversion to tuples
# will fail. So instead of using the np.iterable(v) function
# we simply try and convert to a tuple, and proceed if not.
try:
v = tuple(v)
except Exception:
pass
ret.append((k, v))
return tuple(ret)
def fixlist(args):
ret = []
for a in args:
if np.iterable(a):
a = tuple(a)
ret.append(a)
return tuple(ret)
key = fixlist(args), fixitems(kwargs.items())
return key
def _process_projection_requirements(
self, *args, polar=False, projection=None, **kwargs):
"""
Handle the args/kwargs to add_axes/add_subplot/gca, returning::
(axes_proj_class, proj_class_kwargs, proj_stack_key)
which can be used for new axes initialization/identification.
"""
if polar:
if projection is not None and projection != 'polar':
raise ValueError(
"polar=True, yet projection=%r. "
"Only one of these arguments should be supplied." %
projection)
projection = 'polar'
if isinstance(projection, str) or projection is None:
projection_class = projections.get_projection_class(projection)
elif hasattr(projection, '_as_mpl_axes'):
projection_class, extra_kwargs = projection._as_mpl_axes()
kwargs.update(**extra_kwargs)
else:
raise TypeError('projection must be a string, None or implement a '
'_as_mpl_axes method. Got %r' % projection)
# Make the key without projection kwargs, this is used as a unique
# lookup for axes instances
key = self._make_key(*args, **kwargs)
return projection_class, kwargs, key
@docstring.dedent_interpd
def add_axes(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Add an axes to the figure.
Call signatures::
add_axes(rect, projection=None, polar=False, **kwargs)
add_axes(ax)
Parameters
----------
rect : sequence of float
The dimensions [left, bottom, width, height] of the new axes. All
quantities are in fractions of figure width and height.
projection : {None, 'aitoff', 'hammer', 'lambert', 'mollweide', \
'polar', 'rectilinear', str}, optional
The projection type of the `~.axes.Axes`. *str* is the name of
a custom projection, see `~matplotlib.projections`. The default
None results in a 'rectilinear' projection.
polar : boolean, optional
If True, equivalent to projection='polar'.
sharex, sharey : `~.axes.Axes`, optional
Share the x or y `~matplotlib.axis` with sharex and/or sharey.
The axis will have the same limits, ticks, and scale as the axis
of the shared axes.
label : str
A label for the returned axes.
Other Parameters
----------------
**kwargs
This method also takes the keyword arguments for
the returned axes class. The keyword arguments for the
rectilinear axes class `~.axes.Axes` can be found in
the following table but there might also be other keyword
arguments if another projection is used, see the actual axes
class.
%(Axes)s
Returns
-------
axes : `~.axes.Axes` (or a subclass of `~.axes.Axes`)
The returned axes class depends on the projection used. It is
`~.axes.Axes` if rectilinear projection are used and
`.projections.polar.PolarAxes` if polar projection
are used.
Notes
-----
If the figure already has an axes with key (*args*,
*kwargs*) then it will simply make that axes current and
return it. This behavior is deprecated. Meanwhile, if you do
not want this behavior (i.e., you want to force the creation of a
new axes), you must use a unique set of args and kwargs. The axes
*label* attribute has been exposed for this purpose: if you want
two axes that are otherwise identical to be added to the figure,
make sure you give them unique labels.
In rare circumstances, `.add_axes` may be called with a single
argument, a axes instance already created in the present figure but
not in the figure's list of axes.
See Also
--------
.Figure.add_subplot
.pyplot.subplot
.pyplot.axes
.Figure.subplots
.pyplot.subplots
Examples
--------
Some simple examples::
rect = l, b, w, h
fig = plt.figure()
fig.add_axes(rect, label=label1)
fig.add_axes(rect, label=label2)
fig.add_axes(rect, frameon=False, facecolor='g')
fig.add_axes(rect, polar=True)
ax = fig.add_axes(rect, projection='polar')
fig.delaxes(ax)
fig.add_axes(ax)
"""
if not len(args):
return
# shortcut the projection "key" modifications later on, if an axes
# with the exact args/kwargs exists, return it immediately.
key = self._make_key(*args, **kwargs)
ax = self._axstack.get(key)
if ax is not None:
self.sca(ax)
return ax
if isinstance(args[0], Axes):
a = args[0]
if a.get_figure() is not self:
raise ValueError(
"The Axes must have been created in the present figure")
else:
rect = args[0]
if not np.isfinite(rect).all():
raise ValueError('all entries in rect must be finite '
'not {}'.format(rect))
projection_class, kwargs, key = \
self._process_projection_requirements(*args, **kwargs)
# check that an axes of this type doesn't already exist, if it
# does, set it as active and return it
ax = self._axstack.get(key)
if isinstance(ax, projection_class):
self.sca(ax)
return ax
# create the new axes using the axes class given
a = projection_class(self, rect, **kwargs)
return self._add_axes_internal(key, a)
@docstring.dedent_interpd
def add_subplot(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Add an `~.axes.Axes` to the figure as part of a subplot arrangement.
Call signatures::
add_subplot(nrows, ncols, index, **kwargs)
add_subplot(pos, **kwargs)
add_subplot(ax)
add_subplot()
Parameters
----------
*args
Either a 3-digit integer or three separate integers
describing the position of the subplot. If the three
integers are *nrows*, *ncols*, and *index* in order, the
subplot will take the *index* position on a grid with *nrows*
rows and *ncols* columns. *index* starts at 1 in the upper left
corner and increases to the right.
*pos* is a three digit integer, where the first digit is the
number of rows, the second the number of columns, and the third
the index of the subplot. i.e. fig.add_subplot(235) is the same as
fig.add_subplot(2, 3, 5). Note that all integers must be less than
10 for this form to work.
If no positional arguments are passed, defaults to (1, 1, 1).
In rare circumstances, `.add_subplot` may be called with a single
argument, a subplot axes instance already created in the
present figure but not in the figure's list of axes.
projection : {None, 'aitoff', 'hammer', 'lambert', 'mollweide', \
'polar', 'rectilinear', str}, optional
The projection type of the subplot (`~.axes.Axes`). *str* is the
name of a custom projection, see `~matplotlib.projections`. The
default None results in a 'rectilinear' projection.
polar : boolean, optional
If True, equivalent to projection='polar'.
sharex, sharey : `~.axes.Axes`, optional
Share the x or y `~matplotlib.axis` with sharex and/or sharey.
The axis will have the same limits, ticks, and scale as the axis
of the shared axes.
label : str
A label for the returned axes.
Other Parameters
----------------
**kwargs
This method also takes the keyword arguments for the returned axes
base class; except for the *figure* argument. The keyword arguments
for the rectilinear base class `~.axes.Axes` can be found in
the following table but there might also be other keyword
arguments if another projection is used.
%(Axes)s
Returns
-------
axes : `.axes.SubplotBase`, or another subclass of `~.axes.Axes`
The axes of the subplot. The returned axes base class depends on
the projection used. It is `~.axes.Axes` if rectilinear projection
are used and `.projections.polar.PolarAxes` if polar projection
are used. The returned axes is then a subplot subclass of the
base class.
Notes
-----
If the figure already has a subplot with key (*args*,
*kwargs*) then it will simply make that subplot current and
return it. This behavior is deprecated. Meanwhile, if you do
not want this behavior (i.e., you want to force the creation of a
new subplot), you must use a unique set of args and kwargs. The axes
*label* attribute has been exposed for this purpose: if you want
two subplots that are otherwise identical to be added to the figure,
make sure you give them unique labels.
See Also
--------
.Figure.add_axes
.pyplot.subplot
.pyplot.axes
.Figure.subplots
.pyplot.subplots
Examples
--------
::
fig = plt.figure()
fig.add_subplot(221)
# equivalent but more general
ax1 = fig.add_subplot(2, 2, 1)
# add a subplot with no frame
ax2 = fig.add_subplot(222, frameon=False)
# add a polar subplot
fig.add_subplot(223, projection='polar')
# add a red subplot that share the x-axis with ax1
fig.add_subplot(224, sharex=ax1, facecolor='red')
#delete x2 from the figure
fig.delaxes(ax2)
#add x2 to the figure again
fig.add_subplot(ax2)
"""
if not len(args):
args = (1, 1, 1)
if len(args) == 1 and isinstance(args[0], Integral):
if not 100 <= args[0] <= 999:
raise ValueError("Integer subplot specification must be a "
"three-digit number, not {}".format(args[0]))
args = tuple(map(int, str(args[0])))
if 'figure' in kwargs:
# Axes itself allows for a 'figure' kwarg, but since we want to
# bind the created Axes to self, it is not allowed here.
raise TypeError(
"add_subplot() got an unexpected keyword argument 'figure'")
if isinstance(args[0], SubplotBase):
a = args[0]
if a.get_figure() is not self:
raise ValueError(
"The Subplot must have been created in the present figure")
# make a key for the subplot (which includes the axes object id
# in the hash)
key = self._make_key(*args, **kwargs)
else:
projection_class, kwargs, key = \
self._process_projection_requirements(*args, **kwargs)
# try to find the axes with this key in the stack
ax = self._axstack.get(key)
if ax is not None:
if isinstance(ax, projection_class):
# the axes already existed, so set it as active & return
self.sca(ax)
return ax
else:
# Undocumented convenience behavior:
# subplot(111); subplot(111, projection='polar')
# will replace the first with the second.
# Without this, add_subplot would be simpler and
# more similar to add_axes.
self._axstack.remove(ax)
a = subplot_class_factory(projection_class)(self, *args, **kwargs)
return self._add_axes_internal(key, a)
def _add_axes_internal(self, key, ax):
"""Private helper for `add_axes` and `add_subplot`."""
self._axstack.add(key, ax)
self.sca(ax)
ax._remove_method = self._remove_ax
self.stale = True
ax.stale_callback = _stale_figure_callback
return ax
def subplots(self, nrows=1, ncols=1, sharex=False, sharey=False,
squeeze=True, subplot_kw=None, gridspec_kw=None):
"""
Add a set of subplots to this figure.
This utility wrapper makes it convenient to create common layouts of
subplots in a single call.
Parameters
----------
nrows, ncols : int, optional, default: 1
Number of rows/columns of the subplot grid.
sharex, sharey : bool or {'none', 'all', 'row', 'col'}, default: False
Controls sharing of properties among x (`sharex`) or y (`sharey`)
axes:
- True or 'all': x- or y-axis will be shared among all subplots.
- False or 'none': each subplot x- or y-axis will be independent.
- 'row': each subplot row will share an x- or y-axis.
- 'col': each subplot column will share an x- or y-axis.
When subplots have a shared x-axis along a column, only the x tick
labels of the bottom subplot are created. Similarly, when subplots
have a shared y-axis along a row, only the y tick labels of the
first column subplot are created. To later turn other subplots'
ticklabels on, use `~matplotlib.axes.Axes.tick_params`.
squeeze : bool, optional, default: True
- If True, extra dimensions are squeezed out from the returned
array of Axes:
- if only one subplot is constructed (nrows=ncols=1), the
resulting single Axes object is returned as a scalar.
- for Nx1 or 1xM subplots, the returned object is a 1D numpy
object array of Axes objects.
- for NxM, subplots with N>1 and M>1 are returned as a 2D array.
- If False, no squeezing at all is done: the returned Axes object
is always a 2D array containing Axes instances, even if it ends
up being 1x1.
subplot_kw : dict, optional
Dict with keywords passed to the
:meth:`~matplotlib.figure.Figure.add_subplot` call used to create
each subplot.
gridspec_kw : dict, optional
Dict with keywords passed to the
`~matplotlib.gridspec.GridSpec` constructor used to create
the grid the subplots are placed on.
Returns
-------
ax : `~.axes.Axes` object or array of Axes objects.
*ax* can be either a single `~matplotlib.axes.Axes` object or
an array of Axes objects if more than one subplot was created. The
dimensions of the resulting array can be controlled with the
squeeze keyword, see above.
Examples
--------
::
# First create some toy data:
x = np.linspace(0, 2*np.pi, 400)
y = np.sin(x**2)
# Create a figure
plt.figure()
# Create a subplot
ax = fig.subplots()
ax.plot(x, y)
ax.set_title('Simple plot')
# Create two subplots and unpack the output array immediately
ax1, ax2 = fig.subplots(1, 2, sharey=True)
ax1.plot(x, y)
ax1.set_title('Sharing Y axis')
ax2.scatter(x, y)
# Create four polar axes and access them through the returned array
axes = fig.subplots(2, 2, subplot_kw=dict(polar=True))
axes[0, 0].plot(x, y)
axes[1, 1].scatter(x, y)
# Share a X axis with each column of subplots
fig.subplots(2, 2, sharex='col')
# Share a Y axis with each row of subplots
fig.subplots(2, 2, sharey='row')
# Share both X and Y axes with all subplots
fig.subplots(2, 2, sharex='all', sharey='all')
# Note that this is the same as
fig.subplots(2, 2, sharex=True, sharey=True)
See Also
--------
.pyplot.subplots
.Figure.add_subplot
.pyplot.subplot
"""
if isinstance(sharex, bool):
sharex = "all" if sharex else "none"
if isinstance(sharey, bool):
sharey = "all" if sharey else "none"
# This check was added because it is very easy to type
# `subplots(1, 2, 1)` when `subplot(1, 2, 1)` was intended.
# In most cases, no error will ever occur, but mysterious behavior
# will result because what was intended to be the subplot index is
# instead treated as a bool for sharex.
if isinstance(sharex, Integral):
cbook._warn_external(
"sharex argument to subplots() was an integer. Did you "
"intend to use subplot() (without 's')?")
cbook._check_in_list(["all", "row", "col", "none"],
sharex=sharex, sharey=sharey)
if subplot_kw is None:
subplot_kw = {}
if gridspec_kw is None:
gridspec_kw = {}
# don't mutate kwargs passed by user...
subplot_kw = subplot_kw.copy()
gridspec_kw = gridspec_kw.copy()
if self.get_constrained_layout():
gs = GridSpec(nrows, ncols, figure=self, **gridspec_kw)
else:
# this should turn constrained_layout off if we don't want it
gs = GridSpec(nrows, ncols, figure=None, **gridspec_kw)
self._gridspecs.append(gs)
# Create array to hold all axes.
axarr = np.empty((nrows, ncols), dtype=object)
for row in range(nrows):
for col in range(ncols):
shared_with = {"none": None, "all": axarr[0, 0],
"row": axarr[row, 0], "col": axarr[0, col]}
subplot_kw["sharex"] = shared_with[sharex]
subplot_kw["sharey"] = shared_with[sharey]
axarr[row, col] = self.add_subplot(gs[row, col], **subplot_kw)
# turn off redundant tick labeling
if sharex in ["col", "all"]:
# turn off all but the bottom row
for ax in axarr[:-1, :].flat:
ax.xaxis.set_tick_params(which='both',
labelbottom=False, labeltop=False)
ax.xaxis.offsetText.set_visible(False)
if sharey in ["row", "all"]:
# turn off all but the first column
for ax in axarr[:, 1:].flat:
ax.yaxis.set_tick_params(which='both',
labelleft=False, labelright=False)
ax.yaxis.offsetText.set_visible(False)
if squeeze:
# Discarding unneeded dimensions that equal 1. If we only have one
# subplot, just return it instead of a 1-element array.
return axarr.item() if axarr.size == 1 else axarr.squeeze()
else:
# Returned axis array will be always 2-d, even if nrows=ncols=1.
return axarr
def _remove_ax(self, ax):
def _reset_locators_and_formatters(axis):
# Set the formatters and locators to be associated with axis
# (where previously they may have been associated with another
# Axis isntance)
#
# Because set_major_formatter() etc. force isDefault_* to be False,
# we have to manually check if the original formatter was a
# default and manually set isDefault_* if that was the case.
majfmt = axis.get_major_formatter()
isDefault = majfmt.axis.isDefault_majfmt
axis.set_major_formatter(majfmt)
if isDefault:
majfmt.axis.isDefault_majfmt = True
majloc = axis.get_major_locator()
isDefault = majloc.axis.isDefault_majloc
axis.set_major_locator(majloc)
if isDefault:
majloc.axis.isDefault_majloc = True
minfmt = axis.get_minor_formatter()
isDefault = majloc.axis.isDefault_minfmt
axis.set_minor_formatter(minfmt)
if isDefault:
minfmt.axis.isDefault_minfmt = True
minloc = axis.get_minor_locator()
isDefault = majloc.axis.isDefault_minloc
axis.set_minor_locator(minloc)
if isDefault:
minloc.axis.isDefault_minloc = True
def _break_share_link(ax, grouper):
siblings = grouper.get_siblings(ax)
if len(siblings) > 1:
grouper.remove(ax)
for last_ax in siblings:
if ax is not last_ax:
return last_ax
return None
self.delaxes(ax)
last_ax = _break_share_link(ax, ax._shared_y_axes)
if last_ax is not None:
_reset_locators_and_formatters(last_ax.yaxis)
last_ax = _break_share_link(ax, ax._shared_x_axes)
if last_ax is not None:
_reset_locators_and_formatters(last_ax.xaxis)
def clf(self, keep_observers=False):
"""
Clear the figure.
Set *keep_observers* to True if, for example,
a gui widget is tracking the axes in the figure.
"""
self.suppressComposite = None
self.callbacks = cbook.CallbackRegistry()
for ax in tuple(self.axes): # Iterate over the copy.
ax.cla()
self.delaxes(ax) # removes ax from self._axstack
toolbar = getattr(self.canvas, 'toolbar', None)
if toolbar is not None:
toolbar.update()
self._axstack.clear()
self.artists = []
self.lines = []
self.patches = []
self.texts = []
self.images = []
self.legends = []
if not keep_observers:
self._axobservers = []
self._suptitle = None
if self.get_constrained_layout():
layoutbox.nonetree(self._layoutbox)
self.stale = True
def clear(self, keep_observers=False):
"""
Clear the figure -- synonym for :meth:`clf`.
"""
self.clf(keep_observers=keep_observers)
@allow_rasterization
def draw(self, renderer):
"""
Render the figure using :class:`matplotlib.backend_bases.RendererBase`
instance *renderer*.
"""
self._cachedRenderer = renderer
# draw the figure bounding box, perhaps none for white figure
if not self.get_visible():
return
artists = self.get_children()
artists.remove(self.patch)
artists = sorted(
(artist for artist in artists if not artist.get_animated()),
key=lambda artist: artist.get_zorder())
for ax in self.axes:
locator = ax.get_axes_locator()
if locator:
pos = locator(ax, renderer)
ax.apply_aspect(pos)
else:
ax.apply_aspect()
for child in ax.get_children():
if hasattr(child, 'apply_aspect'):
locator = child.get_axes_locator()
if locator:
pos = locator(child, renderer)
child.apply_aspect(pos)
else:
child.apply_aspect()
try:
renderer.open_group('figure', gid=self.get_gid())
if self.get_constrained_layout() and self.axes:
self.execute_constrained_layout(renderer)
if self.get_tight_layout() and self.axes:
try:
self.tight_layout(**self._tight_parameters)
except ValueError:
pass
# ValueError can occur when resizing a window.
self.patch.draw(renderer)
mimage._draw_list_compositing_images(
renderer, self, artists, self.suppressComposite)
renderer.close_group('figure')
finally:
self.stale = False
self.canvas.draw_event(renderer)
def draw_artist(self, a):
"""
Draw :class:`matplotlib.artist.Artist` instance *a* only.
This is available only after the figure is drawn.
"""
if self._cachedRenderer is None:
raise AttributeError("draw_artist can only be used after an "
"initial draw which caches the renderer")
a.draw(self._cachedRenderer)
def get_axes(self):
"""
Return a list of axes in the Figure. You can access and modify the
axes in the Figure through this list.
Do not modify the list itself. Instead, use `~Figure.add_axes`,
`~.Figure.subplot` or `~.Figure.delaxes` to add or remove an axes.
Note: This is equivalent to the property `~.Figure.axes`.
"""
return self.axes
# Note: in the docstring below, the newlines in the examples after the
# calls to legend() allow replacing it with figlegend() to generate the
# docstring of pyplot.figlegend.
@docstring.dedent_interpd
def legend(self, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Place a legend on the figure.
To make a legend from existing artists on every axes::
legend()
To make a legend for a list of lines and labels::
legend(
(line1, line2, line3),
('label1', 'label2', 'label3'),
loc='upper right')
These can also be specified by keyword::
legend(
handles=(line1, line2, line3),
labels=('label1', 'label2', 'label3'),
loc='upper right')
Parameters
----------
handles : list of `.Artist`, optional
A list of Artists (lines, patches) to be added to the legend.
Use this together with *labels*, if you need full control on what
is shown in the legend and the automatic mechanism described above
is not sufficient.
The length of handles and labels should be the same in this
case. If they are not, they are truncated to the smaller length.
labels : list of str, optional
A list of labels to show next to the artists.
Use this together with *handles*, if you need full control on what
is shown in the legend and the automatic mechanism described above
is not sufficient.
Other Parameters
----------------
%(_legend_kw_doc)s
Returns
-------
:class:`matplotlib.legend.Legend` instance
Notes
-----
Not all kinds of artist are supported by the legend command. See
:doc:`/tutorials/intermediate/legend_guide` for details.
"""
handles, labels, extra_args, kwargs = mlegend._parse_legend_args(
self.axes,
*args,
**kwargs)
# check for third arg
if len(extra_args):
# cbook.warn_deprecated(
# "2.1",
# message="Figure.legend will accept no more than two "
# "positional arguments in the future. Use "
# "'fig.legend(handles, labels, loc=location)' "
# "instead.")
# kwargs['loc'] = extra_args[0]
# extra_args = extra_args[1:]
pass
l = mlegend.Legend(self, handles, labels, *extra_args, **kwargs)
self.legends.append(l)
l._remove_method = self.legends.remove
self.stale = True
return l
@cbook._delete_parameter("3.1", "withdash")
@docstring.dedent_interpd
def text(self, x, y, s, fontdict=None, withdash=False, **kwargs):
"""
Add text to figure.
Parameters
----------
x, y : float
The position to place the text. By default, this is in figure
coordinates, floats in [0, 1]. The coordinate system can be changed
using the *transform* keyword.
s : str
The text string.
fontdict : dictionary, optional, default: None
A dictionary to override the default text properties. If fontdict
is None, the defaults are determined by your rc parameters. A
property in *kwargs* override the same property in fontdict.
withdash : boolean, optional, default: False
Creates a `~matplotlib.text.TextWithDash` instance instead of a
`~matplotlib.text.Text` instance.
Other Parameters
----------------
**kwargs : `~matplotlib.text.Text` properties
Other miscellaneous text parameters.
%(Text)s
Returns
-------
text : `~.text.Text`
See Also
--------
.Axes.text
.pyplot.text
"""
default = dict(transform=self.transFigure)
if (withdash
and withdash is not cbook.deprecation._deprecated_parameter):
text = TextWithDash(x=x, y=y, text=s)
else:
text = Text(x=x, y=y, text=s)
text.update(default)
if fontdict is not None:
text.update(fontdict)
text.update(kwargs)
text.set_figure(self)
text.stale_callback = _stale_figure_callback
self.texts.append(text)
text._remove_method = self.texts.remove
self.stale = True
return text
def _set_artist_props(self, a):
if a != self:
a.set_figure(self)
a.stale_callback = _stale_figure_callback
a.set_transform(self.transFigure)
@docstring.dedent_interpd
def gca(self, **kwargs):
"""
Get the current axes, creating one if necessary.
The following kwargs are supported for ensuring the returned axes
adheres to the given projection etc., and for axes creation if
the active axes does not exist:
%(Axes)s
"""
ckey, cax = self._axstack.current_key_axes()
# if there exists an axes on the stack see if it matches
# the desired axes configuration
if cax is not None:
# if no kwargs are given just return the current axes
# this is a convenience for gca() on axes such as polar etc.
if not kwargs:
return cax
# if the user has specified particular projection detail
# then build up a key which can represent this
else:
projection_class, _, key = \
self._process_projection_requirements(**kwargs)
# let the returned axes have any gridspec by removing it from
# the key
ckey = ckey[1:]
key = key[1:]
# if the cax matches this key then return the axes, otherwise
# continue and a new axes will be created
if key == ckey and isinstance(cax, projection_class):
return cax
else:
cbook._warn_external('Requested projection is different '
'from current axis projection, '
'creating new axis with requested '
'projection.')
# no axes found, so create one which spans the figure
return self.add_subplot(1, 1, 1, **kwargs)
def sca(self, a):
"""Set the current axes to be a and return a."""
self._axstack.bubble(a)
for func in self._axobservers:
func(self)
return a
def _gci(self):
"""
Helper for :func:`~matplotlib.pyplot.gci`. Do not use elsewhere.
"""
# Look first for an image in the current Axes:
cax = self._axstack.current_key_axes()[1]
if cax is None:
return None
im = cax._gci()
if im is not None:
return im
# If there is no image in the current Axes, search for
# one in a previously created Axes. Whether this makes
# sense is debatable, but it is the documented behavior.
for ax in reversed(self.axes):
im = ax._gci()
if im is not None:
return im
return None
def __getstate__(self):
state = super().__getstate__()
# the axobservers cannot currently be pickled.
# Additionally, the canvas cannot currently be pickled, but this has
# the benefit of meaning that a figure can be detached from one canvas,
# and re-attached to another.
for attr_to_pop in ('_axobservers', 'show',
'canvas', '_cachedRenderer'):
state.pop(attr_to_pop, None)
# add version information to the state
state['__mpl_version__'] = _mpl_version
# check whether the figure manager (if any) is registered with pyplot
from matplotlib import _pylab_helpers
if getattr(self.canvas, 'manager', None) \
in _pylab_helpers.Gcf.figs.values():
state['_restore_to_pylab'] = True
# set all the layoutbox information to None. kiwisolver objects can't
# be pickled, so we lose the layout options at this point.
state.pop('_layoutbox', None)
# suptitle:
if self._suptitle is not None:
self._suptitle._layoutbox = None
return state
def __setstate__(self, state):
version = state.pop('__mpl_version__')
restore_to_pylab = state.pop('_restore_to_pylab', False)
if version != _mpl_version:
cbook._warn_external(
f"This figure was saved with matplotlib version {version} and "
f"is unlikely to function correctly.")
self.__dict__ = state
# re-initialise some of the unstored state information
self._axobservers = []
FigureCanvasBase(self) # Set self.canvas.
self._layoutbox = None
if restore_to_pylab:
# lazy import to avoid circularity
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import matplotlib._pylab_helpers as pylab_helpers
allnums = plt.get_fignums()
num = max(allnums) + 1 if allnums else 1
mgr = plt._backend_mod.new_figure_manager_given_figure(num, self)
# XXX The following is a copy and paste from pyplot. Consider
# factoring to pylab_helpers
if self.get_label():
mgr.set_window_title(self.get_label())
# make this figure current on button press event
def make_active(event):
pylab_helpers.Gcf.set_active(mgr)
mgr._cidgcf = mgr.canvas.mpl_connect('button_press_event',
make_active)
pylab_helpers.Gcf.set_active(mgr)
self.number = num
plt.draw_if_interactive()
self.stale = True
def add_axobserver(self, func):
"""Whenever the axes state change, ``func(self)`` will be called."""
self._axobservers.append(func)
def savefig(self, fname, *, transparent=None, **kwargs):
"""
Save the current figure.
Call signature::
savefig(fname, dpi=None, facecolor='w', edgecolor='w',
orientation='portrait', papertype=None, format=None,
transparent=False, bbox_inches=None, pad_inches=0.1,
frameon=None, metadata=None)
The output formats available depend on the backend being used.
Parameters
----------
fname : str or PathLike or file-like object
A path, or a Python file-like object, or
possibly some backend-dependent object such as
`matplotlib.backends.backend_pdf.PdfPages`.
If *format* is not set, then the output format is inferred from
the extension of *fname*, if any, and from :rc:`savefig.format`
otherwise. If *format* is set, it determines the output format.
Hence, if *fname* is not a path or has no extension, remember to
specify *format* to ensure that the correct backend is used.
Other Parameters
----------------
dpi : [ *None* | scalar > 0 | 'figure' ]
The resolution in dots per inch. If *None*, defaults to
:rc:`savefig.dpi`. If 'figure', uses the figure's dpi value.
quality : [ *None* | 1 <= scalar <= 100 ]
The image quality, on a scale from 1 (worst) to 95 (best).
Applicable only if *format* is jpg or jpeg, ignored otherwise.
If *None*, defaults to :rc:`savefig.jpeg_quality`.
Values above 95 should be avoided; 100 completely disables the
JPEG quantization stage.
optimize : bool
If *True*, indicates that the JPEG encoder should make an extra
pass over the image in order to select optimal encoder settings.
Applicable only if *format* is jpg or jpeg, ignored otherwise.
Is *False* by default.
progressive : bool
If *True*, indicates that this image should be stored as a
progressive JPEG file. Applicable only if *format* is jpg or
jpeg, ignored otherwise. Is *False* by default.
facecolor : color or None, optional
The facecolor of the figure; if *None*, defaults to
:rc:`savefig.facecolor`.
edgecolor : color or None, optional
The edgecolor of the figure; if *None*, defaults to
:rc:`savefig.edgecolor`
orientation : {'landscape', 'portrait'}
Currently only supported by the postscript backend.
papertype : str
One of 'letter', 'legal', 'executive', 'ledger', 'a0' through
'a10', 'b0' through 'b10'. Only supported for postscript
output.
format : str
The file format, e.g. 'png', 'pdf', 'svg', ... The behavior when
this is unset is documented under *fname*.
transparent : bool
If *True*, the axes patches will all be transparent; the
figure patch will also be transparent unless facecolor
and/or edgecolor are specified via kwargs.
This is useful, for example, for displaying
a plot on top of a colored background on a web page. The
transparency of these patches will be restored to their
original values upon exit of this function.
bbox_inches : str or `~matplotlib.transforms.Bbox`, optional
Bbox in inches. Only the given portion of the figure is
saved. If 'tight', try to figure out the tight bbox of
the figure. If None, use savefig.bbox
pad_inches : scalar, optional
Amount of padding around the figure when bbox_inches is
'tight'. If None, use savefig.pad_inches
bbox_extra_artists : list of `~matplotlib.artist.Artist`, optional
A list of extra artists that will be considered when the
tight bbox is calculated.
metadata : dict, optional
Key/value pairs to store in the image metadata. The supported keys
and defaults depend on the image format and backend:
- 'png' with Agg backend: See the parameter ``metadata`` of
`~.FigureCanvasAgg.print_png`.
- 'pdf' with pdf backend: See the parameter ``metadata`` of
`~.backend_pdf.PdfPages`.
- 'eps' and 'ps' with PS backend: Only 'Creator' is supported.
pil_kwargs : dict, optional
Additional keyword arguments that are passed to `PIL.Image.save`
when saving the figure. Only applicable for formats that are saved
using Pillow, i.e. JPEG, TIFF, and (if the keyword is set to a
non-None value) PNG.
"""
kwargs.setdefault('dpi', rcParams['savefig.dpi'])
if "frameon" in kwargs:
cbook.warn_deprecated("3.1", name="frameon", obj_type="kwarg",
alternative="facecolor")
frameon = kwargs.pop("frameon")
if frameon is None:
frameon = dict.__getitem__(rcParams, 'savefig.frameon')
else:
frameon = False # Won't pass "if frameon:" below.
if transparent is None:
transparent = rcParams['savefig.transparent']
if transparent:
kwargs.setdefault('facecolor', 'none')
kwargs.setdefault('edgecolor', 'none')
original_axes_colors = []
for ax in self.axes:
patch = ax.patch
original_axes_colors.append((patch.get_facecolor(),
patch.get_edgecolor()))
patch.set_facecolor('none')
patch.set_edgecolor('none')
else:
kwargs.setdefault('facecolor', rcParams['savefig.facecolor'])
kwargs.setdefault('edgecolor', rcParams['savefig.edgecolor'])
if frameon:
original_frameon = self.patch.get_visible()
self.patch.set_visible(frameon)
self.canvas.print_figure(fname, **kwargs)
if frameon:
self.patch.set_visible(original_frameon)
if transparent:
for ax, cc in zip(self.axes, original_axes_colors):
ax.patch.set_facecolor(cc[0])
ax.patch.set_edgecolor(cc[1])
@docstring.dedent_interpd
def colorbar(self, mappable, cax=None, ax=None, use_gridspec=True, **kw):
"""
Create a colorbar for a ScalarMappable instance, *mappable*.
Documentation for the pyplot thin wrapper:
%(colorbar_doc)s
"""
if ax is None:
ax = self.gca()
# Store the value of gca so that we can set it back later on.
current_ax = self.gca()
if cax is None:
if use_gridspec and isinstance(ax, SubplotBase) \
and (not self.get_constrained_layout()):
cax, kw = cbar.make_axes_gridspec(ax, **kw)
else:
cax, kw = cbar.make_axes(ax, **kw)
# need to remove kws that cannot be passed to Colorbar
NON_COLORBAR_KEYS = ['fraction', 'pad', 'shrink', 'aspect', 'anchor',
'panchor']
cb_kw = {k: v for k, v in kw.items() if k not in NON_COLORBAR_KEYS}
cb = cbar.colorbar_factory(cax, mappable, **cb_kw)
self.sca(current_ax)
self.stale = True
return cb
def subplots_adjust(self, left=None, bottom=None, right=None, top=None,
wspace=None, hspace=None):
"""
Update the :class:`SubplotParams` with *kwargs* (defaulting to rc when
*None*) and update the subplot locations.
"""
if self.get_constrained_layout():
self.set_constrained_layout(False)
cbook._warn_external("This figure was using "
"constrained_layout==True, but that is "
"incompatible with subplots_adjust and or "
"tight_layout: setting "
"constrained_layout==False. ")
self.subplotpars.update(left, bottom, right, top, wspace, hspace)
for ax in self.axes:
if not isinstance(ax, SubplotBase):
# Check if sharing a subplots axis
if isinstance(ax._sharex, SubplotBase):
ax._sharex.update_params()
ax.set_position(ax._sharex.figbox)
elif isinstance(ax._sharey, SubplotBase):
ax._sharey.update_params()
ax.set_position(ax._sharey.figbox)
else:
ax.update_params()
ax.set_position(ax.figbox)
self.stale = True
def ginput(self, n=1, timeout=30, show_clicks=True, mouse_add=1,
mouse_pop=3, mouse_stop=2):
"""
Blocking call to interact with a figure.
Wait until the user clicks *n* times on the figure, and return the
coordinates of each click in a list.
There are three possible interactions:
- Add a point.
- Remove the most recently added point.
- Stop the interaction and return the points added so far.
The actions are assigned to mouse buttons via the arguments
*mouse_add*, *mouse_pop* and *mouse_stop*. Mouse buttons are defined
by the numbers:
- 1: left mouse button
- 2: middle mouse button
- 3: right mouse button
- None: no mouse button
Parameters
----------
n : int, optional, default: 1
Number of mouse clicks to accumulate. If negative, accumulate
clicks until the input is terminated manually.
timeout : scalar, optional, default: 30
Number of seconds to wait before timing out. If zero or negative
will never timeout.
show_clicks : bool, optional, default: True
If True, show a red cross at the location of each click.
mouse_add : {1, 2, 3, None}, optional, default: 1 (left click)
Mouse button used to add points.
mouse_pop : {1, 2, 3, None}, optional, default: 3 (right click)
Mouse button used to remove the most recently added point.
mouse_stop : {1, 2, 3, None}, optional, default: 2 (middle click)
Mouse button used to stop input.
Returns
-------
points : list of tuples
A list of the clicked (x, y) coordinates.
Notes
-----
The keyboard can also be used to select points in case your mouse
does not have one or more of the buttons. The delete and backspace
keys act like right clicking (i.e., remove last point), the enter key
terminates input and any other key (not already used by the window
manager) selects a point.
"""
blocking_mouse_input = BlockingMouseInput(self,
mouse_add=mouse_add,
mouse_pop=mouse_pop,
mouse_stop=mouse_stop)
return blocking_mouse_input(n=n, timeout=timeout,
show_clicks=show_clicks)
def waitforbuttonpress(self, timeout=-1):
"""
Blocking call to interact with the figure.
This will return True is a key was pressed, False if a mouse
button was pressed and None if *timeout* was reached without
either being pressed.
If *timeout* is negative, does not timeout.
"""
blocking_input = BlockingKeyMouseInput(self)
return blocking_input(timeout=timeout)
def get_default_bbox_extra_artists(self):
bbox_artists = [artist for artist in self.get_children()
if (artist.get_visible() and artist.get_in_layout())]
for ax in self.axes:
if ax.get_visible():
bbox_artists.extend(ax.get_default_bbox_extra_artists())
return bbox_artists
def get_tightbbox(self, renderer, bbox_extra_artists=None):
"""
Return a (tight) bounding box of the figure in inches.
Artists that have ``artist.set_in_layout(False)`` are not included
in the bbox.
Parameters
----------
renderer : `.RendererBase` instance
renderer that will be used to draw the figures (i.e.
``fig.canvas.get_renderer()``)
bbox_extra_artists : list of `.Artist` or ``None``
List of artists to include in the tight bounding box. If
``None`` (default), then all artist children of each axes are
included in the tight bounding box.
Returns
-------
bbox : `.BboxBase`
containing the bounding box (in figure inches).
"""
bb = []
if bbox_extra_artists is None:
artists = self.get_default_bbox_extra_artists()
else:
artists = bbox_extra_artists
for a in artists:
bbox = a.get_tightbbox(renderer)
if bbox is not None and (bbox.width != 0 or bbox.height != 0):
bb.append(bbox)
for ax in self.axes:
if ax.get_visible():
# some axes don't take the bbox_extra_artists kwarg so we
# need this conditional....
try:
bbox = ax.get_tightbbox(renderer,
bbox_extra_artists=bbox_extra_artists)
except TypeError:
bbox = ax.get_tightbbox(renderer)
bb.append(bbox)
bb = [b for b in bb
if (np.isfinite(b.width) and np.isfinite(b.height)
and (b.width != 0 or b.height != 0))]
if len(bb) == 0:
return self.bbox_inches
_bbox = Bbox.union(bb)
bbox_inches = TransformedBbox(_bbox, Affine2D().scale(1 / self.dpi))
return bbox_inches
def init_layoutbox(self):
"""Initialize the layoutbox for use in constrained_layout."""
if self._layoutbox is None:
self._layoutbox = layoutbox.LayoutBox(parent=None,
name='figlb',
artist=self)
self._layoutbox.constrain_geometry(0., 0., 1., 1.)
def execute_constrained_layout(self, renderer=None):
"""
Use ``layoutbox`` to determine pos positions within axes.
See also `.set_constrained_layout_pads`.
"""
from matplotlib._constrained_layout import do_constrained_layout
_log.debug('Executing constrainedlayout')
if self._layoutbox is None:
cbook._warn_external("Calling figure.constrained_layout, but "
"figure not setup to do constrained layout. "
" You either called GridSpec without the "
"fig keyword, you are using plt.subplot, "
"or you need to call figure or subplots "
"with the constrained_layout=True kwarg.")
return
w_pad, h_pad, wspace, hspace = self.get_constrained_layout_pads()
# convert to unit-relative lengths
fig = self
width, height = fig.get_size_inches()
w_pad = w_pad / width
h_pad = h_pad / height
if renderer is None:
renderer = layoutbox.get_renderer(fig)
do_constrained_layout(fig, renderer, h_pad, w_pad, hspace, wspace)
@cbook._delete_parameter("3.2", "renderer")
def tight_layout(self, renderer=None, pad=1.08, h_pad=None, w_pad=None,
rect=None):
"""
Automatically adjust subplot parameters to give specified padding.
To exclude an artist on the axes from the bounding box calculation
that determines the subplot parameters (i.e. legend, or annotation),
then set `a.set_in_layout(False)` for that artist.
Parameters
----------
renderer : subclass of `~.backend_bases.RendererBase`, optional
Defaults to the renderer for the figure. Deprecated.
pad : float, optional
Padding between the figure edge and the edges of subplots,
as a fraction of the font size.
h_pad, w_pad : float, optional
Padding (height/width) between edges of adjacent subplots,
as a fraction of the font size. Defaults to *pad*.
rect : tuple (left, bottom, right, top), optional
A rectangle (left, bottom, right, top) in the normalized
figure coordinate that the whole subplots area (including
labels) will fit into. Default is (0, 0, 1, 1).
See Also
--------
.Figure.set_tight_layout
.pyplot.tight_layout
"""
from .tight_layout import (
get_renderer, get_subplotspec_list, get_tight_layout_figure)
subplotspec_list = get_subplotspec_list(self.axes)
if None in subplotspec_list:
cbook._warn_external("This figure includes Axes that are not "
"compatible with tight_layout, so results "
"might be incorrect.")
if renderer is None:
renderer = get_renderer(self)
kwargs = get_tight_layout_figure(
self, self.axes, subplotspec_list, renderer,
pad=pad, h_pad=h_pad, w_pad=w_pad, rect=rect)
if kwargs:
self.subplots_adjust(**kwargs)
def align_xlabels(self, axs=None):
"""
Align the ylabels of subplots in the same subplot column if label
alignment is being done automatically (i.e. the label position is
not manually set).
Alignment persists for draw events after this is called.
If a label is on the bottom, it is aligned with labels on axes that
also have their label on the bottom and that have the same
bottom-most subplot row. If the label is on the top,
it is aligned with labels on axes with the same top-most row.
Parameters
----------
axs : list of `~matplotlib.axes.Axes`
Optional list of (or ndarray) `~matplotlib.axes.Axes`
to align the xlabels.
Default is to align all axes on the figure.
See Also
--------
matplotlib.figure.Figure.align_ylabels
matplotlib.figure.Figure.align_labels
Notes
-----
This assumes that ``axs`` are from the same `.GridSpec`, so that
their `.SubplotSpec` positions correspond to figure positions.
Examples
--------
Example with rotated xtick labels::
fig, axs = plt.subplots(1, 2)
for tick in axs[0].get_xticklabels():
tick.set_rotation(55)
axs[0].set_xlabel('XLabel 0')
axs[1].set_xlabel('XLabel 1')
fig.align_xlabels()
"""
if axs is None:
axs = self.axes
axs = np.asarray(axs).ravel()
for ax in axs:
_log.debug(' Working on: %s', ax.get_xlabel())
ss = ax.get_subplotspec()
nrows, ncols, row0, row1, col0, col1 = ss.get_rows_columns()
labpo = ax.xaxis.get_label_position() # top or bottom
# loop through other axes, and search for label positions
# that are same as this one, and that share the appropriate
# row number.
# Add to a grouper associated with each axes of sibblings.
# This list is inspected in `axis.draw` by
# `axis._update_label_position`.
for axc in axs:
if axc.xaxis.get_label_position() == labpo:
ss = axc.get_subplotspec()
nrows, ncols, rowc0, rowc1, colc, col1 = \
ss.get_rows_columns()
if (labpo == 'bottom' and rowc1 == row1 or
labpo == 'top' and rowc0 == row0):
# grouper for groups of xlabels to align
self._align_xlabel_grp.join(ax, axc)
def align_ylabels(self, axs=None):
"""
Align the ylabels of subplots in the same subplot column if label
alignment is being done automatically (i.e. the label position is
not manually set).
Alignment persists for draw events after this is called.
If a label is on the left, it is aligned with labels on axes that
also have their label on the left and that have the same
left-most subplot column. If the label is on the right,
it is aligned with labels on axes with the same right-most column.
Parameters
----------
axs : list of `~matplotlib.axes.Axes`
Optional list (or ndarray) of `~matplotlib.axes.Axes`
to align the ylabels.
Default is to align all axes on the figure.
See Also
--------
matplotlib.figure.Figure.align_xlabels
matplotlib.figure.Figure.align_labels
Notes
-----
This assumes that ``axs`` are from the same `.GridSpec`, so that
their `.SubplotSpec` positions correspond to figure positions.
Examples
--------
Example with large yticks labels::
fig, axs = plt.subplots(2, 1)
axs[0].plot(np.arange(0, 1000, 50))
axs[0].set_ylabel('YLabel 0')
axs[1].set_ylabel('YLabel 1')
fig.align_ylabels()
"""
if axs is None:
axs = self.axes
axs = np.asarray(axs).ravel()
for ax in axs:
_log.debug(' Working on: %s', ax.get_ylabel())
ss = ax.get_subplotspec()
nrows, ncols, row0, row1, col0, col1 = ss.get_rows_columns()
labpo = ax.yaxis.get_label_position() # left or right
# loop through other axes, and search for label positions
# that are same as this one, and that share the appropriate
# column number.
# Add to a list associated with each axes of sibblings.
# This list is inspected in `axis.draw` by
# `axis._update_label_position`.
for axc in axs:
if axc != ax:
if axc.yaxis.get_label_position() == labpo:
ss = axc.get_subplotspec()
nrows, ncols, row0, row1, colc0, colc1 = \
ss.get_rows_columns()
if (labpo == 'left' and colc0 == col0 or
labpo == 'right' and colc1 == col1):
# grouper for groups of ylabels to align
self._align_ylabel_grp.join(ax, axc)
def align_labels(self, axs=None):
"""
Align the xlabels and ylabels of subplots with the same subplots
row or column (respectively) if label alignment is being
done automatically (i.e. the label position is not manually set).
Alignment persists for draw events after this is called.
Parameters
----------
axs : list of `~matplotlib.axes.Axes`
Optional list (or ndarray) of `~matplotlib.axes.Axes`
to align the labels.
Default is to align all axes on the figure.
See Also
--------
matplotlib.figure.Figure.align_xlabels
matplotlib.figure.Figure.align_ylabels
"""
self.align_xlabels(axs=axs)
self.align_ylabels(axs=axs)
def add_gridspec(self, nrows, ncols, **kwargs):
"""
Return a `.GridSpec` that has this figure as a parent. This allows
complex layout of axes in the figure.
Parameters
----------
nrows : int
Number of rows in grid.
ncols : int
Number or columns in grid.
Returns
-------
gridspec : `.GridSpec`
Other Parameters
----------------
**kwargs
Keyword arguments are passed to `.GridSpec`.
See Also
--------
matplotlib.pyplot.subplots
Examples
--------
Adding a subplot that spans two rows::
fig = plt.figure()
gs = fig.add_gridspec(2, 2)
ax1 = fig.add_subplot(gs[0, 0])
ax2 = fig.add_subplot(gs[1, 0])
# spans two rows:
ax3 = fig.add_subplot(gs[:, 1])
"""
_ = kwargs.pop('figure', None) # pop in case user has added this...
gs = GridSpec(nrows=nrows, ncols=ncols, figure=self, **kwargs)
self._gridspecs.append(gs)
return gs
def figaspect(arg):
"""
Calculate the width and height for a figure with a specified aspect ratio.
While the height is taken from :rc:`figure.figsize`, the width is
adjusted to match the desired aspect ratio. Additionally, it is ensured
that the width is in the range [4., 16.] and the height is in the range
[2., 16.]. If necessary, the default height is adjusted to ensure this.
Parameters
----------
arg : scalar or 2d array
If a scalar, this defines the aspect ratio (i.e. the ratio height /
width).
In case of an array the aspect ratio is number of rows / number of
columns, so that the array could be fitted in the figure undistorted.
Returns
-------
width, height
The figure size in inches.
Notes
-----
If you want to create an axes within the figure, that still preserves the
aspect ratio, be sure to create it with equal width and height. See
examples below.
Thanks to Fernando Perez for this function.
Examples
--------
Make a figure twice as tall as it is wide::
w, h = figaspect(2.)
fig = Figure(figsize=(w, h))
ax = fig.add_axes([0.1, 0.1, 0.8, 0.8])
ax.imshow(A, **kwargs)
Make a figure with the proper aspect for an array::
A = rand(5, 3)
w, h = figaspect(A)
fig = Figure(figsize=(w, h))
ax = fig.add_axes([0.1, 0.1, 0.8, 0.8])
ax.imshow(A, **kwargs)
"""
isarray = hasattr(arg, 'shape') and not np.isscalar(arg)
# min/max sizes to respect when autoscaling. If John likes the idea, they
# could become rc parameters, for now they're hardwired.
figsize_min = np.array((4.0, 2.0)) # min length for width/height
figsize_max = np.array((16.0, 16.0)) # max length for width/height
# Extract the aspect ratio of the array
if isarray:
nr, nc = arg.shape[:2]
arr_ratio = nr / nc
else:
arr_ratio = arg
# Height of user figure defaults
fig_height = rcParams['figure.figsize'][1]
# New size for the figure, keeping the aspect ratio of the caller
newsize = np.array((fig_height / arr_ratio, fig_height))
# Sanity checks, don't drop either dimension below figsize_min
newsize /= min(1.0, *(newsize / figsize_min))
# Avoid humongous windows as well
newsize /= max(1.0, *(newsize / figsize_max))
# Finally, if we have a really funky aspect ratio, break it but respect
# the min/max dimensions (we don't want figures 10 feet tall!)
newsize = np.clip(newsize, figsize_min, figsize_max)
return newsize
docstring.interpd.update(Figure=martist.kwdoc(Figure))