| ======================= |
| MEP26: Artist styling |
| ======================= |
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| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
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| Status |
| ====== |
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| **Rejected** |
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| Branches and Pull requests |
| ========================== |
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| Abstract |
| ======== |
|
|
| This MEP proposes a new stylesheet implementation to allow more |
| comprehensive and dynamic styling of artists. |
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| The current version of matplotlib (1.4.0) allows stylesheets based on |
| the rcParams syntax to be applied before creation of a plot. The |
| methodology below proposes a new syntax, based on CSS, which would |
| allow styling of individual artists and properties, which can be |
| applied dynamically to existing objects. |
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| This is related to (and makes steps toward) the overall goal of moving |
| to a DOM/tree-like architecture. |
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| Detailed description |
| ==================== |
|
|
| Currently, the look and appearance of existing artist objects (figure, |
| axes, Line2D, etc.) can only be updated via ``set_`` and ``get_`` methods |
| on the artist object, which is quite laborious, especially if no |
| reference to the artist(s) has been stored. The new style sheets |
| introduced in 1.4 allow styling before a plot is created, but do not |
| offer any means to dynamically update plots or distinguish between |
| artists of the same type (i.e. to specify the ``line color`` and ``line |
| style`` separately for differing `.Line2D` objects). |
|
|
| The initial development should concentrate on allowing styling of |
| artist primitives (those `.Artist`\s that do not contain other |
| `.Artist`\s), and further development could expand the CSS syntax rules |
| and parser to allow more complex styling. See the appendix for a list |
| of primitives. |
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| The new methodology would require development of a number of steps: |
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| - A new stylesheet syntax (likely based on CSS) to allow selection of |
| artists by type, class, id, etc. |
| - A mechanism by which to parse a stylesheet into a tree |
| - A mechanism by which to translate the parse-tree into something |
| which can be used to update the properties of relevant |
| artists. Ideally this would implement a method by which to traverse |
| the artists in a tree-like structure. |
| - A mechanism by which to generate a stylesheet from existing artist |
| properties. This would be useful to allow a user to export a |
| stylesheet from an existing figure (where the appearance may have |
| been set using the matplotlib API)... |
|
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| Implementation |
| ============== |
|
|
| It will be easiest to allow a '3rd party' to modify/set the style of an artist |
| if the 'style' is created as a separate class and store against the artist as a |
| property. The `.GraphicsContextBase` class already provides a the basis of a |
| ``Style`` class and an artist's `~.Artist.draw` method can be refactored to use |
| the ``Style`` class rather than setting up its own `.GraphicsContextBase` and |
| transferring its style-related properties to it. A minimal example of how this |
| could be implemented is shown here: https://github.com/JamesRamm/mpl_experiment |
|
|
| IMO, this will also make the API and code base much neater as |
| individual get/set methods for artist style properties are now |
| redundant... Indirectly related would be a general drive to replace |
| get/set methods with properties. Implementing the style class with |
| properties would be a big stride toward this... |
|
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| For initial development, I suggest developing a syntax based on a much |
| (much much) simplified version of CSS. I am in favour of dubbing this |
| Artist Style Sheets :+1: : |
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| BNF Grammar |
| ----------- |
|
|
| I propose a very simple syntax to implement initially (like a proof of |
| concept), which can be expanded upon in the future. The BNF form of |
| the syntax is given below and then explained :: |
| |
| RuleSet ::= SelectorSequence "{"Declaration"}" |
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| SelectorSequence :: = Selector {"," Selector} |
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| Declaration ::= propName":" propValue";" |
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| Selector ::= ArtistIdent{"#"Ident} |
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| propName ::= Ident |
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| propValue ::= Ident | Number | Colour | "None" |
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| ``ArtistIdent``, ``Ident``, ``Number`` and ``Colour`` are tokens (the basic |
| building blocks of the expression) which are defined by regular |
| expressions. |
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| Syntax |
| ------ |
|
|
| A CSS stylesheet consists of a series of **rule sets** in hierarchical |
| order (rules are applied from top to bottom). Each rule follows the |
| syntax :: |
| |
| selector {attribute: value;} |
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| Each rule can have any number of ``attribute: value`` pairs, and a |
| stylesheet can have any number of rules. |
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| The initial syntax is designed only for `.Artist` primitives. It does |
| not address the question of how to set properties on `.Container` types |
| (whose properties may themselves be `.Artist`\s with settable |
| properties), however, a future solution to this could simply be nested |
| ``RuleSet``\s |
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| Selectors |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
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| Selectors define the object to which the attribute updates should be |
| applied. As a starting point, I propose just 2 selectors to use in |
| initial development: |
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| Artist Type Selector |
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| Select an `.Artist` by it's type. E.g `.Line2D` or `.Text`:: |
| |
| Line2D {attribute: value} |
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| The regex for matching the artist type selector (``ArtistIdent`` in the BNF grammar) would be:: |
| |
| ArtistIdent = r'(?P<ArtistIdent>\bLine2D\b|\bText\b|\bAxesImage\b|\bFigureImage\b|\bPatch\b)' |
|
|
| GID selector |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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| Select an `.Artist` by its ``gid``:: |
| |
| Line2D#myGID {attribute: value} |
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| A ``gid`` can be any string, so the regex could be as follows:: |
| |
| Ident = r'(?P<Ident>[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*)' |
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| The above selectors roughly correspond to their CSS counterparts |
| (http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/selector.html) |
|
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| Attributes and values |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
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| - ``Attributes`` are any valid (settable) property for the `.Artist` in question. |
| - ``Values`` are any valid value for the property (Usually a string, or number). |
|
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| Parsing |
| ------- |
|
|
| Parsing would consist of breaking the stylesheet into tokens (the |
| python cookbook gives a nice tokenizing recipe on page 66), applying |
| the syntax rules and constructing a ``Tree``. This requires defining the |
| grammar of the stylesheet (again, we can borrow from CSS) and writing |
| a parser. Happily, there is a recipe for this in the python cookbook |
| as well. |
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| Visitor pattern for matplotlib figure |
| ------------------------------------- |
|
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| In order to apply the stylesheet rules to the relevant artists, we |
| need to 'visit' each artist in a figure and apply the relevant rule. |
| Here is a visitor class (again, thanks to python cookbook), where each |
| ``node`` would be an artist in the figure. A ``visit_`` method would need |
| to be implemented for each mpl artist, to handle the different |
| properties for each :: |
| |
| class Visitor: |
| def visit(self, node): |
| name = 'visit_' + type(node).__name__ |
| meth = getattr(self, name, None) |
| if meth is None: |
| raise NotImplementedError |
| return meth(node) |
|
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| An ``evaluator`` class would then take the stylesheet rules and |
| implement the visitor on each one of them. |
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| Backward compatibility |
| ====================== |
|
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| Implementing a separate ``Style`` class would break backward |
| compatibility as many get/set methods on an artist would become |
| redundant. While it would be possible to alter these methods to hook |
| into the ``Style`` class (stored as a property against the artist), I |
| would be in favor of simply removing them to both neaten/simplify the |
| codebase and to provide a simple, uncluttered API... |
|
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| Alternatives |
| ============ |
|
|
| No alternatives, but some of the ground covered here overlaps with |
| MEP25, which may assist in this development |
|
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| Appendix |
| ======== |
|
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| Matplotlib primitives |
| --------------------- |
|
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| This will form the initial selectors which stylesheets can use. |
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| * Line2D |
| * Text |
| * AxesImage |
| * FigureImage |
| * Patch |
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