Matplotlib has extensive text support, including support for mathematical expressions, truetype support for raster and vector outputs, newline separated text with arbitrary rotations, and Unicode support.
Because it embeds fonts directly in output documents, e.g., for postscript or PDF, what you see on the screen is what you get in the hardcopy. FreeType support produces very nice, antialiased fonts, that look good even at small raster sizes. Matplotlib includes its own matplotlib.font_manager
(thanks to Paul Barrett), which implements a cross platform, W3C compliant font finding algorithm.
The user has a great deal of control over text properties (font size, font weight, text location and color, etc.) with sensible defaults set in the rc file. And significantly, for those interested in mathematical or scientific figures, Matplotlib implements a large number of TeX math symbols and commands, supporting mathematical expressions anywhere in your figure.
Basic text commands#The following commands are used to create text in the implicit and explicit interfaces (see Matplotlib Application Interfaces (APIs) for an explanation of the tradeoffs):
All of these functions create and return a Text
instance, which can be configured with a variety of font and other properties. The example below shows all of these commands in action, and more detail is provided in the sections that follow.
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt import matplotlib fig = plt.figure() ax = fig.add_subplot() fig.subplots_adjust(top=0.85) # Set titles for the figure and the subplot respectively fig.suptitle('bold figure suptitle', fontsize=14, fontweight='bold') ax.set_title('axes title') ax.set_xlabel('xlabel') ax.set_ylabel('ylabel') # Set both x- and y-axis limits to [0, 10] instead of default [0, 1] ax.axis([0, 10, 0, 10]) ax.text(3, 8, 'boxed italics text in data coords', style='italic', bbox={'facecolor': 'red', 'alpha': 0.5, 'pad': 10}) ax.text(2, 6, r'an equation: $E=mc^2$', fontsize=15) ax.text(3, 2, 'Unicode: Institut für Festkörperphysik') ax.text(0.95, 0.01, 'colored text in axes coords', verticalalignment='bottom', horizontalalignment='right', transform=ax.transAxes, color='green', fontsize=15) ax.plot([2], [1], 'o') ax.annotate('annotate', xy=(2, 1), xytext=(3, 4), arrowprops=dict(facecolor='black', shrink=0.05)) plt.show()Labels for x- and y-axis#
Specifying the labels for the x- and y-axis is straightforward, via the set_xlabel
and set_ylabel
methods.
The x- and y-labels are automatically placed so that they clear the x- and y-ticklabels. Compare the plot below with that above, and note the y-label is to the left of the one above.
If you want to move the labels, you can specify the labelpad keyword argument, where the value is points (1/72", the same unit used to specify font sizes).
Alternatively, the labels accept all the Text
keyword arguments, including position, via which we can manually specify the label positions. Here we put the xlabel to the far left of the axis. Note, that the y-coordinate of this position has no effect - to adjust the y-position we need to use the labelpad keyword argument.
All the labelling in this tutorial can be changed by manipulating the matplotlib.font_manager.FontProperties
method, or by named keyword arguments to set_xlabel
.
Finally, we can use native TeX rendering in all text objects and have multiple lines:
Titles#Subplot titles are set in much the same way as labels, but there is the loc keyword argument that can change the position and justification (the default value is "center").
fig, axs = plt.subplots(3, 1, figsize=(5, 6), tight_layout=True) locs = ['center', 'left', 'right'] for ax, loc in zip(axs, locs): ax.plot(x1, y1) ax.set_title('Title with loc at ' + loc, loc=loc) plt.show()
Vertical spacing for titles is controlled via rcParams["axes.titlepad"]
(default: 6.0
). Setting to a different value moves the title.
Placing ticks and ticklabels is a very tricky aspect of making a figure. Matplotlib does its best to accomplish the task automatically, but it also offers a very flexible framework for determining the choices for tick locations, and how they are labelled.
Terminology#Axes have a matplotlib.axis.Axis
object for the ax.xaxis
and ax.yaxis
that contain the information about how the labels in the axis are laid out.
The axis API is explained in detail in the documentation to axis
.
An Axis object has major and minor ticks. The Axis has Axis.set_major_locator
and Axis.set_minor_locator
methods that use the data being plotted to determine the location of major and minor ticks. There are also Axis.set_major_formatter
and Axis.set_minor_formatter
methods that format the tick labels.
It is often convenient to simply define the tick values, and sometimes the tick labels, overriding the default locators and formatters. However, this is discouraged because it breaks interactive navigation of the plot. It also can reset the axis limits: note that the second plot has the ticks we asked for, including ones that are well outside the automatic view limits.
We can of course fix this after the fact, but it does highlight a weakness of hard-coding the ticks. This example also changes the format of the ticks:
Tick locators and formatters#Instead of making a list of all the ticklabels, we could have used matplotlib.ticker.StrMethodFormatter
(new-style str.format()
format string) or matplotlib.ticker.FormatStrFormatter
(old-style '%' format string) and passed it to the ax.xaxis
. A matplotlib.ticker.StrMethodFormatter
can also be created by passing a str
without having to explicitly create the formatter.
And of course we could have used a non-default locator to set the tick locations. Note we still pass in the tick values, but the x-limit fix used above is not needed.
The default formatter is the matplotlib.ticker.MaxNLocator
called as ticker.MaxNLocator(self, nbins='auto', steps=[1, 2, 2.5, 5, 10])
. The steps
argument contains a list of multiples that can be used for tick values. In this case, 2, 4, 6 would be acceptable ticks, as would 20, 40, 60 or 0.2, 0.4, 0.6. However, 3, 6, 9 would not be acceptable because 3 doesn't appear in the list of steps.
Setting nbins=auto
uses an algorithm to determine how many ticks will be acceptable based on the axis length. The fontsize of the ticklabel is taken into account, but the length of the tick string is not (because it's not yet known.) In the bottom row, the ticklabels are quite large, so we set nbins=4
to make the labels fit in the right-hand plot.
fig, axs = plt.subplots(2, 2, figsize=(8, 5), tight_layout=True) for n, ax in enumerate(axs.flat): ax.plot(x1*10., y1) formatter = matplotlib.ticker.FormatStrFormatter('%1.1f') locator = matplotlib.ticker.MaxNLocator(nbins='auto', steps=[1, 4, 10]) axs[0, 1].xaxis.set_major_locator(locator) axs[0, 1].xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter) formatter = matplotlib.ticker.FormatStrFormatter('%1.5f') locator = matplotlib.ticker.AutoLocator() axs[1, 0].xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter) axs[1, 0].xaxis.set_major_locator(locator) formatter = matplotlib.ticker.FormatStrFormatter('%1.5f') locator = matplotlib.ticker.MaxNLocator(nbins=4) axs[1, 1].xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter) axs[1, 1].xaxis.set_major_locator(locator) plt.show()
Finally, we can specify functions for the formatter using matplotlib.ticker.FuncFormatter
. Further, like matplotlib.ticker.StrMethodFormatter
, passing a function will automatically create a matplotlib.ticker.FuncFormatter
.
Matplotlib can accept datetime.datetime
and numpy.datetime64
objects as plotting arguments. Dates and times require special formatting, which can often benefit from manual intervention. In order to help, dates have special locators and formatters, defined in the matplotlib.dates
module.
The following simple example illustrates this concept. Note how we rotate the tick labels so that they don't overlap.
import datetime fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(5, 3), tight_layout=True) base = datetime.datetime(2017, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1) time = [base + datetime.timedelta(days=x) for x in range(len(x1))] ax.plot(time, y1) ax.tick_params(axis='x', rotation=70) plt.show()
We can pass a format to matplotlib.dates.DateFormatter
. If two tick labels are very close together, we can use the dates.DayLocator
class, which allows us to specify a list of days of the month to use. Similar formatters are listed in the matplotlib.dates
module.
Total running time of the script: (0 minutes 7.012 seconds)
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