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Mastering Matplotlib

You're reading from   Mastering Matplotlib A practical guide that takes you beyond the basics of matplotlib and gives solutions to plot complex data

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783987542
Length 292 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Up to Speed FREE CHAPTER 2. The matplotlib Architecture 3. matplotlib APIs and Integrations 4. Event Handling and Interactive Plots 5. High-level Plotting and Data Analysis 6. Customization and Configuration 7. Deploying matplotlib in Cloud Environments 8. matplotlib and Big Data 9. Clustering for matplotlib Index

Working with large data sources


Most of the data that users feed into matplotlib when generating plots is from NumPy. NumPy is one of the fastest ways of processing numerical and array-based data in Python (if not the fastest), so this makes sense. However by default, NumPy works on in-memory database. If the dataset that you want to plot is larger than the total RAM available on your system, performance is going to plummet.

In the following section, we're going to take a look at an example that illustrates this limitation. But first, let's get our notebook set up, as follows:

In [1]: import matplotlib
        matplotlib.use('nbagg')
        %matplotlib inline

Here are the modules that we are going to use:

In [2]: import glob, io, math, os
        import psutil
        import numpy as np
        import pandas as pd
        import tables as tb
        from scipy import interpolate
        from scipy.stats import burr, norm
        import matplotlib as mpl
        import matplotlib.pyplot as...
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