matplotlib
Backend management
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matplotlib.use(backend, warn=<deprecated parameter>, force=True)
[source] -
Select the backend used for rendering and GUI integration.
Parameters: -
backendstr
-
The backend to switch to. This can either be one of the standard backend names, which are case-insensitive:
- interactive backends: GTK3Agg, GTK3Cairo, MacOSX, nbAgg, Qt4Agg, Qt4Cairo, Qt5Agg, Qt5Cairo, TkAgg, TkCairo, WebAgg, WX, WXAgg, WXCairo
- non-interactive backends: agg, cairo, pdf, pgf, ps, svg, template
or a string of the form:
module://my.module.name
. -
warnbool, optional, default: False
-
If True and not force, emit a warning if a failure-to-switch
ImportError
has been suppressed. This parameter is deprecated. -
forcebool, optional, default: True
-
If True (the default), raise an
ImportError
if the backend cannot be set up (either because it fails to import, or because an incompatible GUI interactive framework is already running); if False, ignore the failure.
See also
-
-
matplotlib.get_backend()
[source] -
Return the name of the current backend.
See also
-
matplotlib.interactive(b)
[source] -
Set whether to redraw after every plotting command (e.g.
pyplot.xlabel
).
-
matplotlib.is_interactive()
[source] -
Return whether to redraw after every plotting command.
Default values and styling
-
matplotlib.rcParams
-
An instance of
RcParams
for handling default Matplotlib values.
-
class matplotlib.RcParams(*args, **kwargs)
[source] -
A dictionary object including validation.
Validating functions are defined and associated with rc parameters in
matplotlib.rcsetup
.See also
-
find_all(self, pattern)
[source] -
Return the subset of this RcParams dictionary whose keys match, using
re.search()
, the givenpattern
.Note
Changes to the returned dictionary are not propagated to the parent RcParams dictionary.
-
-
matplotlib.rc_context(rc=None, fname=None)
[source] -
Return a context manager for managing rc settings.
This allows one to do:
with mpl.rc_context(fname='screen.rc'): plt.plot(x, a) # uses 'screen.rc' with mpl.rc_context(fname='print.rc'): plt.plot(x, b) # uses 'print.rc' plt.plot(x, c) # uses 'screen.rc'
A dictionary can also be passed to the context manager:
with mpl.rc_context(rc={'text.usetex': True}, fname='screen.rc'): plt.plot(x, a)
The 'rc' dictionary takes precedence over the settings loaded from 'fname'. Passing a dictionary only is also valid. For example a common usage is:
with mpl.rc_context(rc={'interactive': False}): fig, ax = plt.subplots() ax.plot(range(3), range(3)) fig.savefig('A.png', format='png') plt.close(fig)
-
matplotlib.rc(group, **kwargs)
[source] -
Set the current rc params. group is the grouping for the rc, e.g., for
lines.linewidth
the group islines
, foraxes.facecolor
, the group isaxes
, and so on. Group may also be a list or tuple of group names, e.g., (xtick, ytick). kwargs is a dictionary attribute name/value pairs, e.g.,:rc('lines', linewidth=2, color='r')
sets the current rc params and is equivalent to:
rcParams['lines.linewidth'] = 2 rcParams['lines.color'] = 'r'
The following aliases are available to save typing for interactive users:
Alias Property 'lw' 'linewidth' 'ls' 'linestyle' 'c' 'color' 'fc' 'facecolor' 'ec' 'edgecolor' 'mew' 'markeredgewidth' 'aa' 'antialiased' Thus you could abbreviate the above rc command as:
rc('lines', lw=2, c='r')
Note you can use python's kwargs dictionary facility to store dictionaries of default parameters. e.g., you can customize the font rc as follows:
font = {'family' : 'monospace', 'weight' : 'bold', 'size' : 'larger'} rc('font', **font) # pass in the font dict as kwargs
This enables you to easily switch between several configurations. Use
matplotlib.style.use('default')
orrcdefaults()
to restore the default rc params after changes.Notes
Similar functionality is available by using the normal dict interface, i.e.
rcParams.update({"lines.linewidth": 2, ...})
(butrcParams.update
does not support abbreviations or grouping).
-
matplotlib.rcdefaults()
[source] -
Restore the rc params from Matplotlib's internal default style.
Style-blacklisted rc params (defined in
matplotlib.style.core.STYLE_BLACKLIST
) are not updated.See also
-
rc_file_defaults
- Restore the rc params from the rc file originally loaded by Matplotlib.
-
matplotlib.style.use
- Use a specific style file. Call
style.use('default')
to restore the default style.
-
-
matplotlib.rc_file_defaults()
[source] -
Restore the rc params from the original rc file loaded by Matplotlib.
Style-blacklisted rc params (defined in
matplotlib.style.core.STYLE_BLACKLIST
) are not updated.
-
matplotlib.rc_file(fname, *, use_default_template=True)
[source] -
Update rc params from file.
Style-blacklisted rc params (defined in
matplotlib.style.core.STYLE_BLACKLIST
) are not updated.Parameters: -
fnamestr
-
Name of file parsed for matplotlib settings.
-
use_default_templatebool
-
If True, initialize with default parameters before updating with those in the given file. If False, the current configuration persists and only the parameters specified in the file are updated.
-
-
matplotlib.rc_params(fail_on_error=False)
[source] -
Construct a
RcParams
instance from the default Matplotlib rc file.
-
matplotlib.rc_params_from_file(fname, fail_on_error=False, use_default_template=True)
[source] -
Construct a
RcParams
from file fname.Parameters: -
fnamestr or path-like
-
Name of file parsed for Matplotlib settings.
-
fail_on_errorbool
-
If True, raise an error when the parser fails to convert a parameter.
-
use_default_templatebool
-
If True, initialize with default parameters before updating with those in the given file. If False, the configuration class only contains the parameters specified in the file. (Useful for updating dicts.)
-
-
matplotlib.matplotlib_fname()
[source] -
Get the location of the config file.
The file location is determined in the following order
$PWD/matplotlibrc
-
$MATPLOTLIBRC
if it is not a directory $MATPLOTLIBRC/matplotlibrc
$MPLCONFIGDIR/matplotlibrc
-
- On Linux,
-
-
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/matplotlib/matplotlibrc
(if$XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is defined) - or
$HOME/.config/matplotlib/matplotlibrc
(if$XDG_CONFIG_HOME
is not defined)
-
- On other platforms, -
$HOME/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc
if$HOME
is defined - Lastly, it looks in
$MATPLOTLIBDATA/matplotlibrc
, which should always exist.
-
matplotlib.get_data_path(*, _from_rc=None)
[source] -
Return the path to Matplotlib data.
Logging
-
matplotlib.set_loglevel(level)
[source] -
Sets the Matplotlib's root logger and root logger handler level, creating the handler if it does not exist yet.
Typically, one should call
set_loglevel("info")
orset_loglevel("debug")
to get additional debugging information.Parameters: -
level{"notset", "debug", "info", "warning", "error", "critical"}
-
The log level of the handler.
Notes
The first time this function is called, an additional handler is attached to Matplotlib's root handler; this handler is reused every time and this function simply manipulates the logger and handler's level.
-
© 2012–2018 Matplotlib Development Team. All rights reserved.
Licensed under the Matplotlib License Agreement.
https://matplotlib.org/3.2.2/api/matplotlib_configuration_api.html