| .. redirect-from:: /tutorials/toolkits/axisartist |
|
|
| .. _axisartist: |
|
|
| ====================== |
| The axisartist toolkit |
| ====================== |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
| *axisartist* uses a custom Axes class |
| (derived from the Matplotlib's original Axes class). |
| As a side effect, some commands (mostly tick-related) do not work. |
|
|
| The *axisartist* contains a custom Axes class that is meant to support |
| curvilinear grids (e.g., the world coordinate system in astronomy). |
| Unlike Matplotlib's original Axes class which uses Axes.xaxis and Axes.yaxis |
| to draw ticks, ticklines, etc., axisartist uses a special |
| artist (AxisArtist) that can handle ticks, ticklines, etc. for |
| curved coordinate systems. |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_floating_axis_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_floating_axis.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| Since it uses special artists, some Matplotlib commands that work on |
| Axes.xaxis and Axes.yaxis may not work. |
|
|
| .. _axisartist_users-guide-index: |
|
|
| axisartist |
| ========== |
|
|
| The *axisartist* module provides a custom (and very experimental) Axes |
| class, where each axis (left, right, top, and bottom) have a separate |
| associated artist which is responsible for drawing the axis-line, ticks, |
| ticklabels, and labels. You can also create your own axis, which can pass |
| through a fixed position in the axes coordinate, or a fixed position |
| in the data coordinate (i.e., the axis floats around when viewlimit |
| changes). |
|
|
| The axes class, by default, has its xaxis and yaxis invisible, and |
| has 4 additional artists which are responsible for drawing the 4 axis spines in |
| "left", "right", "bottom", and "top". They are accessed as |
| ax.axis["left"], ax.axis["right"], and so on, i.e., ax.axis is a |
| dictionary that contains artists (note that ax.axis is still a |
| callable method and it behaves as an original Axes.axis method in |
| Matplotlib). |
|
|
| To create an Axes, :: |
|
|
| import mpl_toolkits.axisartist as AA |
| fig = plt.figure() |
| fig.add_axes([0.1, 0.1, 0.8, 0.8], axes_class=AA.Axes) |
|
|
| or to create a subplot :: |
|
|
| fig.add_subplot(111, axes_class=AA.Axes) |
| |
| fig.add_subplot(axes_class=AA.Axes) |
|
|
| For example, you can hide the right and top spines using:: |
|
|
| ax.axis["right"].set_visible(False) |
| ax.axis["top"].set_visible(False) |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_simple_axisline3_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/simple_axisline3.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| It is also possible to add a horizontal axis. For example, you may have an |
| horizontal axis at y=0 (in data coordinate). :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["y=0"] = ax.new_floating_axis(nth_coord=0, value=0) |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_simple_axisartist1_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/simple_axisartist1.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| Or a fixed axis with some offset :: |
|
|
| |
| ax.axis["right2"] = ax.new_fixed_axis(loc="right", offset=(20, 0)) |
|
|
| axisartist with ParasiteAxes |
| |
|
|
| Most commands in the axes_grid1 toolkit can take an axes_class keyword |
| argument, and the commands create an Axes of the given class. For example, |
| to create a host subplot with axisartist.Axes, :: |
|
|
| import mpl_toolkits.axisartist as AA |
| from mpl_toolkits.axes_grid1 import host_subplot |
|
|
| host = host_subplot(111, axes_class=AA.Axes) |
|
|
| Here is an example that uses ParasiteAxes. |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_parasite_axes2_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_parasite_axes2.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| Curvilinear Grid |
| |
|
|
| The motivation behind the AxisArtist module is to support a curvilinear grid |
| and ticks. |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_curvelinear_grid_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_curvelinear_grid.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| Floating Axes |
| |
|
|
| AxisArtist also supports a Floating Axes whose outer axes are defined as |
| floating axis. |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_floating_axes_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_floating_axes.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| axisartist namespace |
| ==================== |
|
|
| The *axisartist* namespace includes a derived Axes implementation. The |
| biggest difference is that the artists responsible to draw axis line, |
| ticks, ticklabel and axis labels are separated out from the Matplotlib's Axis |
| class, which are much more than artists in the original Matplotlib. This |
| change was strongly motivated to support curvilinear grid. Here are a |
| few things that mpl_toolkits.axisartist.Axes is different from original |
| Axes from Matplotlib. |
|
|
| * Axis elements (axis line(spine), ticks, ticklabel and axis labels) |
| are drawn by a AxisArtist instance. Unlike Axis, left, right, top |
| and bottom axis are drawn by separate artists. And each of them may |
| have different tick location and different tick labels. |
|
|
| * gridlines are drawn by a Gridlines instance. The change was |
| motivated that in curvilinear coordinate, a gridline may not cross |
| axis-lines (i.e., no associated ticks). In the original Axes class, |
| gridlines are tied to ticks. |
|
|
| * ticklines can be rotated if necessary (i.e, along the gridlines) |
|
|
| In summary, all these changes was to support |
|
|
| * a curvilinear grid. |
| * a floating axis |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_floating_axis_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_floating_axis.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| *mpl_toolkits.axisartist.Axes* class defines a *axis* attribute, which |
| is a dictionary of AxisArtist instances. By default, the dictionary |
| has 4 AxisArtist instances, responsible for drawing of left, right, |
| bottom and top axis. |
|
|
| xaxis and yaxis attributes are still available, however they are set |
| to not visible. As separate artists are used for rendering axis, some |
| axis-related method in Matplotlib may have no effect. |
| In addition to AxisArtist instances, the mpl_toolkits.axisartist.Axes will |
| have *gridlines* attribute (Gridlines), which obviously draws grid |
| lines. |
|
|
| In both AxisArtist and Gridlines, the calculation of tick and grid |
| location is delegated to an instance of GridHelper class. |
| mpl_toolkits.axisartist.Axes class uses GridHelperRectlinear as a grid |
| helper. The GridHelperRectlinear class is a wrapper around the *xaxis* |
| and *yaxis* of Matplotlib's original Axes, and it was meant to work as the |
| way how Matplotlib's original axes works. For example, tick location changes |
| using set_ticks method and etc. should work as expected. But change in |
| artist properties (e.g., color) will not work in general, although |
| some effort has been made so that some often-change attributes (color, |
| etc.) are respected. |
|
|
| AxisArtist |
| ========== |
|
|
| AxisArtist can be considered as a container artist with following |
| attributes which will draw ticks, labels, etc. |
|
|
| * line |
| * major_ticks, major_ticklabels |
| * minor_ticks, minor_ticklabels |
| * offsetText |
| * label |
|
|
| line |
| |
|
|
| Derived from Line2D class. Responsible for drawing a spinal(?) line. |
|
|
| major_ticks, minor_ticks |
| |
|
|
| Derived from Line2D class. Note that ticks are markers. |
|
|
| major_ticklabels, minor_ticklabels |
| |
|
|
| Derived from Text. Note that it is not a list of Text artist, but a |
| single artist (similar to a collection). |
|
|
| axislabel |
| |
|
|
| Derived from Text. |
|
|
| Default AxisArtists |
| =================== |
|
|
| By default, following for axis artists are defined.:: |
|
|
| ax.axis["left"], ax.axis["bottom"], ax.axis["right"], ax.axis["top"] |
|
|
| The ticklabels and axislabel of the top and the right axis are set to |
| not visible. |
|
|
| For example, if you want to change the color attributes of |
| major_ticklabels of the bottom x-axis :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["bottom"].major_ticklabels.set_color("b") |
|
|
| Similarly, to make ticklabels invisible :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["bottom"].major_ticklabels.set_visible(False) |
|
|
| AxisArtist provides a helper method to control the visibility of ticks, |
| ticklabels, and label. To make ticklabel invisible, :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["bottom"].toggle(ticklabels=False) |
|
|
| To make all of ticks, ticklabels, and (axis) label invisible :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["bottom"].toggle(all=False) |
|
|
| To turn all off but ticks on :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["bottom"].toggle(all=False, ticks=True) |
|
|
| To turn all on but (axis) label off :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["bottom"].toggle(all=True, label=False) |
|
|
| ax.axis's __getitem__ method can take multiple axis names. For |
| example, to turn ticklabels of "top" and "right" axis on, :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["top", "right"].toggle(ticklabels=True) |
|
|
| Note that ``ax.axis["top", "right"]`` returns a simple proxy object that |
| translate above code to something like below. :: |
|
|
| for n in ["top", "right"]: |
| ax.axis[n].toggle(ticklabels=True) |
|
|
| So, any return values in the for loop are ignored. And you should not |
| use it anything more than a simple method. |
|
|
| Like the list indexing ":" means all items, i.e., :: |
|
|
| ax.axis[:].major_ticks.set_color("r") |
|
|
| changes tick color in all axis. |
|
|
| HowTo |
| ===== |
|
|
| 1. Changing tick locations and label. |
|
|
| Same as the original Matplotlib's axes:: |
|
|
| ax.set_xticks([1, 2, 3]) |
|
|
| 2. Changing axis properties like color, etc. |
|
|
| Change the properties of appropriate artists. For example, to change |
| the color of the ticklabels:: |
|
|
| ax.axis["left"].major_ticklabels.set_color("r") |
|
|
| 3. To change the attributes of multiple axis:: |
|
|
| ax.axis["left", "bottom"].major_ticklabels.set_color("r") |
|
|
| or to change the attributes of all axis:: |
|
|
| ax.axis[:].major_ticklabels.set_color("r") |
|
|
| 4. To change the tick size (length), you need to use |
| axis.major_ticks.set_ticksize method. To change the direction of |
| the ticks (ticks are in opposite direction of ticklabels by |
| default), use axis.major_ticks.set_tick_out method. |
|
|
| To change the pad between ticks and ticklabels, use |
| axis.major_ticklabels.set_pad method. |
|
|
| To change the pad between ticklabels and axis label, |
| axis.label.set_pad method. |
|
|
| Rotation and Alignment of TickLabels |
| ==================================== |
|
|
| This is also quite different from standard Matplotlib and can be |
| confusing. When you want to rotate the ticklabels, first consider |
| using "set_axis_direction" method. :: |
|
|
| ax1.axis["left"].major_ticklabels.set_axis_direction("top") |
| ax1.axis["right"].label.set_axis_direction("left") |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_simple_axis_direction01_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/simple_axis_direction01.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| The parameter for set_axis_direction is one of ["left", "right", |
| "bottom", "top"]. |
|
|
| You must understand some underlying concept of directions. |
|
|
| - There is a reference direction which is defined as the direction |
| of the axis line with increasing coordinate. For example, the |
| reference direction of the left x-axis is from bottom to top. |
|
|
| The direction, text angle, and alignments of the ticks, ticklabels and |
| axis-label is determined with respect to the reference direction |
|
|
| - *label_direction* and *ticklabel_direction* are either the right-hand side |
| (+) of the reference direction or the left-hand side (-). |
|
|
| - ticks are by default drawn toward the opposite direction of the ticklabels. |
|
|
| - text rotation of ticklabels and label is determined in reference |
| to the *ticklabel_direction* or *label_direction*, |
| respectively. The rotation of ticklabels and label is anchored. |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_axis_direction_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/axis_direction.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| On the other hand, there is a concept of "axis_direction". This is a |
| default setting of above properties for each, "bottom", "left", "top", |
| and "right" axis. |
|
|
| ========== =========== ========= ========== ========= ========== |
| ? ? left bottom right top |
| |
| axislabel direction '-' '+' '+' '-' |
| axislabel rotation 180 0 0 180 |
| axislabel va center top center bottom |
| axislabel ha right center right center |
| ticklabel direction '-' '+' '+' '-' |
| ticklabels rotation 90 0 -90 180 |
| ticklabel ha right center right center |
| ticklabel va center baseline center baseline |
| ========== =========== ========= ========== ========= ========== |
|
|
| And, 'set_axis_direction("top")' means to adjust the text rotation |
| etc, for settings suitable for "top" axis. The concept of axis |
| direction can be more clear with curved axis. |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_axis_direction_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_axis_direction.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| The axis_direction can be adjusted in the AxisArtist level, or in the |
| level of its child artists, i.e., ticks, ticklabels, and axis-label. :: |
|
|
| ax1.axis["left"].set_axis_direction("top") |
|
|
| changes axis_direction of all the associated artist with the "left" |
| axis, while :: |
|
|
| ax1.axis["left"].major_ticklabels.set_axis_direction("top") |
|
|
| changes the axis_direction of only the major_ticklabels. Note that |
| set_axis_direction in the AxisArtist level changes the |
| ticklabel_direction and label_direction, while changing the |
| axis_direction of ticks, ticklabels, and axis-label does not affect |
| them. |
|
|
| If you want to make ticks outward and ticklabels inside the axes, |
| use invert_ticklabel_direction method. :: |
|
|
| ax.axis[:].invert_ticklabel_direction() |
|
|
| A related method is "set_tick_out". It makes ticks outward (as a |
| matter of fact, it makes ticks toward the opposite direction of the |
| default direction). :: |
|
|
| ax.axis[:].major_ticks.set_tick_out(True) |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_simple_axis_direction03_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/simple_axis_direction03.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| So, in summary, |
|
|
| * AxisArtist's methods |
|
|
| - set_axis_direction: "left", "right", "bottom", or "top" |
| - set_ticklabel_direction: "+" or "-" |
| - set_axislabel_direction: "+" or "-" |
| - invert_ticklabel_direction |
|
|
| * Ticks' methods (major_ticks and minor_ticks) |
|
|
| - set_tick_out: True or False |
| - set_ticksize: size in points |
|
|
| * TickLabels' methods (major_ticklabels and minor_ticklabels) |
|
|
| - set_axis_direction: "left", "right", "bottom", or "top" |
| - set_rotation: angle with respect to the reference direction |
| - set_ha and set_va: see below |
|
|
| * AxisLabels' methods (label) |
|
|
| - set_axis_direction: "left", "right", "bottom", or "top" |
| - set_rotation: angle with respect to the reference direction |
| - set_ha and set_va |
|
|
| Adjusting ticklabels alignment |
| |
|
|
| Alignment of TickLabels are treated specially. See below |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_ticklabel_alignment_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_ticklabel_alignment.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| Adjusting pad |
| |
|
|
| To change the pad between ticks and ticklabels :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["left"].major_ticklabels.set_pad(10) |
|
|
| Or ticklabels and axis-label :: |
|
|
| ax.axis["left"].label.set_pad(10) |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_simple_axis_pad_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/simple_axis_pad.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| GridHelper |
| ========== |
|
|
| To actually define a curvilinear coordinate, you have to use your own |
| grid helper. A generalised version of grid helper class is supplied |
| and this class should suffice in most of cases. A user may provide |
| two functions which defines a transformation (and its inverse pair) |
| from the curved coordinate to (rectilinear) image coordinate. Note that |
| while ticks and grids are drawn for curved coordinate, the data |
| transform of the axes itself (ax.transData) is still rectilinear |
| (image) coordinate. :: |
|
|
| from mpl_toolkits.axisartist.grid_helper_curvelinear \ |
| import GridHelperCurveLinear |
| from mpl_toolkits.axisartist import Axes |
|
|
| |
| def tr(x, y): |
| x, y = np.asarray(x), np.asarray(y) |
| return x, y-x |
|
|
| |
| def inv_tr(x, y): |
| x, y = np.asarray(x), np.asarray(y) |
| return x, y+x |
|
|
| grid_helper = GridHelperCurveLinear((tr, inv_tr)) |
|
|
| fig.add_subplot(axes_class=Axes, grid_helper=grid_helper) |
|
|
| You may use Matplotlib's Transform instance instead (but a |
| inverse transformation must be defined). Often, coordinate range in a |
| curved coordinate system may have a limited range, or may have |
| cycles. In those cases, a more customized version of grid helper is |
| required. :: |
|
|
| import mpl_toolkits.axisartist.angle_helper as angle_helper |
|
|
| |
| |
| tr = Affine2D().scale(np.pi/180., 1.) + PolarAxes.PolarTransform() |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| extreme_finder = angle_helper.ExtremeFinderCycle(20, 20, |
| lon_cycle=360, |
| lat_cycle=None, |
| lon_minmax=None, |
| lat_minmax=(0, np.inf), |
| ) |
|
|
| |
| |
| grid_locator1 = angle_helper.LocatorDMS(12) |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| tick_formatter1 = angle_helper.FormatterDMS() |
|
|
| grid_helper = GridHelperCurveLinear(tr, |
| extreme_finder=extreme_finder, |
| grid_locator1=grid_locator1, |
| tick_formatter1=tick_formatter1 |
| ) |
|
|
| Again, the *transData* of the axes is still a rectilinear coordinate |
| (image coordinate). You may manually do conversion between two |
| coordinates, or you may use Parasite Axes for convenience.:: |
|
|
| ax1 = SubplotHost(fig, 1, 2, 2, grid_helper=grid_helper) |
|
|
| |
| ax2 = ax1.get_aux_axes(tr, "equal") |
| |
| |
|
|
| .. figure:: /gallery/axisartist/images/sphx_glr_demo_curvelinear_grid_001.png |
| :target: /gallery/axisartist/demo_curvelinear_grid.html |
| :align: center |
|
|
| FloatingAxis |
| ============ |
|
|
| A floating axis is an axis one of whose data coordinate is fixed, i.e, |
| its location is not fixed in Axes coordinate but changes as axes data |
| limits changes. A floating axis can be created using |
| *new_floating_axis* method. However, it is your responsibility that |
| the resulting AxisArtist is properly added to the axes. A recommended |
| way is to add it as an item of Axes's axis attribute.:: |
|
|
| |
| |
|
|
| ax1.axis["lat"] = axis = ax1.new_floating_axis(0, 60) |
| axis.label.set_text(r"$\theta = 60^{\circ}$") |
| axis.label.set_visible(True) |
|
|
| See the first example of this page. |
|
|
| Current Limitations and TODO's |
| ============================== |
|
|
| The code need more refinement. Here is a incomplete list of issues and TODO's |
|
|
| * No easy way to support a user customized tick location (for |
| curvilinear grid). A new Locator class needs to be created. |
|
|
| * FloatingAxis may have coordinate limits, e.g., a floating axis of x = 0, |
| but y only spans from 0 to 1. |
|
|
| * The location of axislabel of FloatingAxis needs to be optionally |
| given as a coordinate value. ex, a floating axis of x=0 with label at y=1 |
|
|