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Interactive Applications using Matplotlib
Interactive Applications using Matplotlib

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Interactive Applications using Matplotlib

Chapter 1. Introducing Interactive Plotting

A picture is worth a thousand words

The goal of any interactive application is to provide as much information as possible while minimizing complexity. If it can't provide the information the users need, then it is useless to them. However, if the application is too complex, then the information's signal gets lost in the noise of the complexity. A graphical presentation often strikes the right balance.

The Matplotlib library can help you present your data as graphs in your application. Anybody can make a simple interactive application without knowing anything about draw buffers, event loops, or even what a GUI toolkit is. And yet, the Matplotlib library will cede as much control as desired to allow even the most savvy GUI developer to create a masterful application from scratch. Like much of the Python language, Matplotlib's philosophy is to give the developer full control, but without being stupidly unhelpful and tedious.

Installing Matplotlib

There are many ways to install Matplotlib on your system. While the library used to have a reputation for being difficult to install on non-Linux systems, it has come a long way since then, along with the rest of the Python ecosystem. Refer to the following command:

$ pip install matplotlib

Most likely, the preceding command would work just fine from the command line. Python Wheels (the next-generation Python package format that has replaced "eggs") for Matplotlib are now available from PyPi for Windows and Mac OS X systems. This method would also work for Linux users; however, it might be more favorable to install it via the system's built-in package manager.

While the core Matplotlib library can be installed with few dependencies, it is a part of a much larger scientific computing ecosystem known as SciPy. Displaying your data is often the easiest part of your application. Processing it is much more difficult, and the SciPy ecosystem most likely has the packages you need to do that. For basic numerical processing and N-dimensional data arrays, there is NumPy. For more advanced but general data processing tools, there is the SciPy package (the name was so catchy, it ended up being used to refer to many different things in the community). For more domain-specific needs, there are "Sci-Kits" such as scikit-learn for artificial intelligence, scikit-image for image processing, and statsmodels for statistical modeling. Another very useful library for data processing is pandas.

This was just a short summary of the packages available in the SciPy ecosystem. Manually managing all of their installations, updates, and dependencies would be difficult for many who just simply want to use the tools. Luckily, there are several distributions of the SciPy Stack available that can keep the menagerie under control. The following are Python distributions that include the SciPy Stack along with many other popular Python packages or make the packages easily available through package management software:

  • Anaconda from Continuum Analytics
  • Canopy from Enthought
  • SciPy Superpack
  • Python(x, y) (Windows only)
  • WinPython (Windows only)
  • Pyzo (Python 3 only)
  • Algorete Loopy from Dartmouth College

Note

For this book, we will assume at least Python 2.7 or 3.2. The requisite packages are numpy, matplotlib, basemap, and scipy. Just about any version of these packages released in the past 3 years should work for most examples in this book (exceptions are noted in this book). The version 0.14.0 of SciPy (released in May 2014) cannot be used in this book due to a (now fixed) regression in its NetCDF reader. Chapter 5, Embedding Matplotlib will have special notes with regards to GUI toolkit packages.

Show() your work

With Matplotlib installed, you are now ready to make your first simple plot. Matplotlib has multiple layers. Pylab is the topmost layer, often used for quick one-off plotting from within a live Python session. Start up your favorite Python interpreter and type the following:

>>> from pylab import *
>>> plot([1, 2, 3, 2, 1])

Nothing happened! This is because Matplotlib, by default, will not display anything until you explicitly tell it to do so. The Matplotlib library is often used for automated image generation from within Python scripts, with no need for any interactivity. Also, most users would not be done with their plotting yet and would find it distracting to have a plot come up automatically. When you are ready to see your plot, use the following command:

>>> show()

Interactive navigation

A figure window should now appear, and the Python interpreter is not available for any additional commands. By default, showing a figure will block the execution of your scripts and interpreter. However, this does not mean that the figure is not interactive. As you mouse over the plot, you will see the plot coordinates in the lower right-hand corner. The figure window will also have a toolbar:

Interactive navigation

From left to right, the following are the tools:

  • Home, Back, and Forward: These are similar to that of a web browser. These buttons help you navigate through the previous views of your plot. The "Home" button will take you back to the first view when the figure was opened. "Back" will take you to the previous view, while "Forward" will return you to the previous views.
  • Pan (and zoom): This button has two modes: pan and zoom. Press the left mouse button and hold it to pan the figure. If you press x or y while panning, the motion will be constrained to just the x or y axis, respectively. Press the right mouse button to zoom. The plot will be zoomed in or out proportionate to the right/left and up/down movements. Use the X, Y, or Ctrl key to constrain the zoom to the x axis or the y axis or preserve the aspect ratio, respectively.
  • Zoom-to-rectangle: Press the left mouse button and drag the cursor to a new location and release. The axes view limits will be zoomed to the rectangle you just drew. Zoom out using your right mouse button, placing the current view into the region defined by the rectangle you just drew.
  • Subplot configuration: This button brings up a tool to modify plot spacing.
  • Save: This button brings up a dialog that allows you to save the current figure.

The figure window would also be responsive to the keyboard. The default keymap is fairly extensive (and will be covered fully later), but some of the basic hot keys are the Home key for resetting the plot view, the left and right keys for back and forward actions, p for pan/zoom mode, o for zoom-to-rectangle mode, and Ctrl + s to trigger a file save. When you are done viewing your figure, close the window as you would close any other application window, or use Ctrl + w.

Interactive plotting

When we did the previous example, no plots appeared until show() was called. Furthermore, no new commands could be entered into the Python interpreter until all the figures were closed. As you will soon learn, once a figure is closed, the plot it contains is lost, which means that you would have to repeat all the commands again in order to show() it again, perhaps with some modification or additional plot. Matplotlib ships with its interactive plotting mode off by default.

There are a couple of ways to turn the interactive plotting mode on. The main way is by calling the ion() function (for Interactive ON). Interactive plotting mode can be turned on at any time and turned off with ioff(). Once this mode is turned on, the next plotting command will automatically trigger an implicit show() command. Furthermore, you can continue typing commands into the Python interpreter. You can modify the current figure, create new figures, and close existing ones at any time, all from the current Python session.

Scripted plotting

Python is known for more than just its interactive interpreters; it is also a fully fledged programming language that allows its users to easily create programs. Having a script to display plots from daily reports can greatly improve your productivity. Alternatively, you perhaps need a tool that can produce some simple plots of the data from whatever mystery data file you have come across on the network share. Here is a simple example of how to use Matplotlib's pyplot API and the argparse Python standard library tool to create a simple CSV plotting script called plotfile.py.

Code: chp1/plotfile.py

#!/usr/bin/env python

from argparse import ArgumentParser
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

if __name__ == '__main__':
    parser = ArgumentParser(description="Plot a CSV file")
    parser.add_argument("datafile", help="The CSV File")
    # Require at least one column name
    parser.add_argument("columns", nargs='+',
                        help="Names of columns to plot")
    parser.add_argument("--save", help="Save the plot as...")
    parser.add_argument("--no-show", action="store_true",
                        help="Don't show the plot")
    args = parser.parse_args()

    plt.plotfile(args.datafile, args.columns)
    if args.save:
        plt.savefig(args.save)
    if not args.no_show:
        plt.show()

Note the two optional command-line arguments: --save and --no-show. With the --save option, the user can have the plot automatically saved (the graphics format is determined automatically from the filename extension). Also, the user can choose not to display the plot, which when coupled with the --save option might be desirable if the user is trying to plot several CSV files.

When calling this script to show a plot, the execution of the script will stop at the call to plt.show(). If the interactive plotting mode was on, then the execution of the script would continue past show(), terminating the script, thus automatically closing out any figures before the user has had a chance to view them. This is why the interactive plotting mode is turned off by default in Matplotlib.

Also note that the call to plt.savefig() is before the call to plt.show(). As mentioned before, when the figure window is closed, the plot is lost. You cannot save a plot after it has been closed.

Getting help

We have covered how to install Matplotlib and went over how to make very simple plots from a Python session or a Python script. Most likely, this went very smoothly for you. The rest of this book will focus on how to use Matplotlib to make an interactive application, rather than the many ways to display data. You may be very curious and want to learn more about the many kinds of plots this library has to offer, or maybe you want to learn how to make new kinds of plots.

Help comes in many forms. The Matplotlib website (http://matplotlib.org) is the primary online resource for Matplotlib. It contains examples, FAQs, API documentation, and, most importantly, the gallery.

Gallery

Many users of Matplotlib are often faced with the question, "I want to make a plot that has this data along with that data in the same figure, but it needs to look like this other plot I have seen." Text-based searches on graphing concepts are difficult, especially if you are unfamiliar with the terminology. The gallery showcases the variety of ways in which one can make plots, all using the Matplotlib library. Browse through the gallery, click on any figure that has pieces of what you want in your plot, and see the code that generated it. Soon enough, you will be like a chef, mixing and matching components to produce that perfect graph.

Mailing lists and forums

When you are just simply stuck and cannot figure out how to get something to work or just need some hints on how to get started, you will find much of the community at the Matplotlib-users mailing list. This mailing list is an excellent resource of information with many friendly members who just love to help out newcomers. Be persistent! While many questions do get answered fairly quickly, some will fall through the cracks. Try rephrasing your question or with a plot showing your attempts so far. The people at Matplotlib-users love plots, so an image that shows what is wrong often gets the quickest response. A newer community resource is StackOverflow, which has many very knowledgeable users who are able to answer difficult questions.

From front to backend

So far, we have shown you bits and pieces of two of Matplotlib's topmost abstraction layers: pylab and pyplot. The layer below them is the object-oriented layer (the OO layer). To develop any type of application, you will want to use this layer. Mixing the pylab/pyplot layers with the OO layer will lead to very confusing behaviors when dealing with multiple plots and figures.

Below the OO layer is the backend interface. Everything above this interface level in Matplotlib is completely platform-agnostic. It will work the same regardless of whether it is in an interactive GUI or comes from a driver script running on a headless server. The backend interface abstracts away all those considerations so that you can focus on what is most important: writing code to visualize your data.

There are several backend implementations that are shipped with Matplotlib. These backends are responsible for taking the figures represented by the OO layer and interpreting it for whichever "display device" they implement. The backends are chosen automatically but can be explicitly set, if needed (see Chapter 5, Embedding Matplotlib).

Interactive versus non-interactive

There are two main classes of backends: ones that provide interactive figures and ones that don't. Interactive backends are ones that support a particular GUI, such as Tcl/Tkinter, GTK, Qt, Cocoa/Mac OS X, wxWidgets, and Cairo. With the exception of the Cocoa/Mac OS X backend, all interactive backends can be used on Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X. Therefore, when you make an interactive Matplotlib application that you wish to distribute to users of any of those platforms, unless you are embedding Matplotlib (again, see Chapter 5, Embedding Matplotlib), you will not have to concern yourself with writing a single line of code for any of these toolkits—it has already been done for you!

Non-interactive backends are used to produce image files. There are backends to produce Postscript/EPS, Adobe PDF, and Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) as well as rasterized image files such as PNG, BMP, and JPEGs.

Anti-grain geometry

The open secret behind the high quality of Matplotlib's rasterized images is its use of the Anti-Grain Geometry (AGG) library (http://agg.sourceforge.net/antigrain.com/index.html). The quality of the graphics generated from AGG is far superior than most other toolkits available. Therefore, not only is AGG used to produce rasterized image files, but it is also utilized in most of the interactive backends as well. Matplotlib maintains and ships with its own fork of the library in order to ensure you have consistent, high quality image products across all platforms and toolkits. What you see on your screen in your interactive figure window will be the same as the PNG file that is produced when you call savefig().

Selecting your backend

When you install Matplotlib, a default backend is chosen for you based upon your OS and the available GUI toolkits. For example, on Mac OS X systems, your installation of the library will most likely set the default interactive backend to MacOSX or CocoaAgg for older Macs. Meanwhile, Windows users will most likely have a default of TkAgg or Qt5Agg. In most situations, the choice of interactive backends will not matter. However, in certain situations, it may be necessary to force a particular backend to be used. For example, on a headless server without an active graphics session, you would most likely need to force the use of the non-interactive Agg backend:

import matplotlib
matplotlib.use("Agg")

When done prior to any plotting commands, this will avoid loading any GUI toolkits, thereby bypassing problems that occur when a GUI fails on a headless server. Any call to show() effectively becomes a no-op (and the execution of the script is not blocked). Another purpose of setting your backend is for scenarios when you want to embed your plot in a native GUI application. Therefore, you will need to explicitly state which GUI toolkit you are using (see Chapter 5, Embedding Matplotlib). Finally, some users simply like the look and feel of some GUI toolkits better than others. They may wish to change the default backend via the backend parameter in the matplotlibrc configuration file. Most likely, your rc file can be found in the .matplotlib directory or the .config/matplotlib directory under your home folder. If you can't find it, then use the following set of commands:

>>> import matplotlib
>>> matplotlib.matplotlib_fname()
u'/home/ben/.config/matplotlib/matplotlibrc'

Here is an example of the relevant section in my matplotlibrc file:

#### CONFIGURATION BEGINS HERE 

# the default backend; one of GTK GTKAgg GTKCairo GTK3Agg
# GTK3Cairo CocoaAgg MacOSX QtAgg Qt4Agg TkAgg WX WXAgg Agg Cairo
# PS PDF SVG
# You can also deploy your own backend outside of matplotlib by 
# referring to the module name (which must be in the PYTHONPATH)
# as 'module://my_backend' 
#backend      : GTKAgg 
#backend      : QT4Agg 
backend      : TkAgg 
# If you are using the Qt4Agg backend, you can choose here 
# to use the PyQt4 bindings or the newer PySide bindings to 
# the underlying Qt4 toolkit. 
#backend.qt4 : PyQt4        # PyQt4 | PySide

This is the global configuration file that is used if one isn't found in the current working directory when Matplotlib is imported. The settings contained in this configuration serves as default values for many parts of Matplotlib. In particular, we see that the choice of backends can be easily set without having to use a single line of code.

The Matplotlib figure-artist hierarchy

Everything that can be drawn in Matplotlib is called an artist. Any artist can have child artists that are also drawable. This forms the basis of a hierarchy of artist objects that Matplotlib sends to a backend for rendering. At the root of this artist tree is the figure.

In the examples so far, we have not explicitly created any figures. The pylab and pyplot interfaces will create the figures for us. However, when creating advanced interactive applications, it is highly recommended that you explicitly create your figures. You will especially want to do this if you have multiple figures being displayed at the same time. This is the entry into the OO layer of Matplotlib:

fig = plt.figure()

Canvassing the figure

The figure is, quite literally, your canvas. Its primary component is the FigureCanvas instance upon which all drawing occurs. Unless you are embedding your Matplotlib figures into a GUI application, it is very unlikely that you will need to interact with this object directly. Instead, as plotting commands are issued, artist objects are added to the canvas automatically.

While any artist can be added directly to the figure, usually only Axes objects are added. A figure can have many axes objects, typically called subplots. Much like the figure object, our examples so far have not explicitly created any axes objects to use. This is because the pylab and pyplot interfaces will also automatically create and manage axes objects for a figure if needed. For the same reason as for figures, you will want to explicitly create these objects when building your interactive applications. If an axes or a figure is not provided, then the pyplot layer will have to make assumptions about which axes or figure you mean to apply a plotting command to. While this might be fine for simple situations, these assumptions get hairy very quickly in non-trivial applications. Luckily, it is easy to create both your figure and its axes using a single command:

fig, axes = plt.subplots(2, 1)  # 2x1 grid of subplots

These objects are highly advanced complex units that most developers will utilize for their plotting needs. Once placed on the figure canvas, the axes object will provide the ticks, axis labels, axes title(s), and the plotting area. An axes is an artist that manages all of its scale and coordinate transformations (for example, log scaling and polar coordinates), automated tick labeling, and automated axis limits. In addition to these responsibilities, an axes object provides a wide assortment of plotting functions. A sampling of plotting functions is as follows:

Function

Description

bar

Make a bar plot

barbs

Plot a two-dimensional field of barbs

boxplot

Make a box and whisker plot

cohere

Plot the coherence between x and y

contour

Plot contours

errorbar

Plot an errorbar graph

hexbin

Make a hexagonal binning plot

hist

Plot a histogram

imshow

Display an image on the axes

pcolor

Create a pseudocolor plot of a two-dimensional array

pcolormesh

Plot a quadrilateral mesh

pie

Plot a pie chart

plot

Plot lines and/or markers

quiver

Plot a two-dimensional field of arrows

sankey

Create a Sankey flow diagram

scatter

Make a scatter plot of x versus y

stem

Create a stem plot

streamplot

Draw streamlines of a vector flow

Throughout the rest of this book, we will build a single interactive application piece by piece, demonstrating concepts and features that are available through Matplotlib. This application will be a storm track editing application. Given a series of radar images, the user can circle each storm cell they see in the radar image and link those storm cells across time. The application will need the ability to save and load track data and provide the user with mechanisms to edit the data. Along the way, we will learn about Matplotlib's structure, its artists, the callback system, doing animations, and finally, embedding this application within a larger GUI application.

So, to begin, we first need to be able to view a radar image. There are many ways to load data into a Python program but one particular favorite among meteorologists is the Network Common Data Form (NetCDF) file. The SciPy package has built-in support for NetCDF version 3, so we will be using an hour's worth of radar reflectivity data prepared using this format from a NEXRAD site near Oklahoma City, OK on the evening of May 10, 2010, which produced numerous tornadoes and severe storms.

The NetCDF binary file is particularly nice to work with because it can hold multiple data variables in a single file, with each variable having an arbitrary number of dimensions. Furthermore, metadata can be attached to each variable and to the dataset itself, allowing you to self-document data files. This particular data file has three variables, namely Reflectivity, lat, and lon to record the radar reflectivity values and the latitude and longitude coordinates of each pixel in the reflectivity data. The reflectivity data is three-dimensional, with the first dimension as time and the other two dimensions as latitude and longitude. The following code example shows how easy it is to load this data and display the first image frame using SciPy and Matplotlib.

Code: chp1/simple_radar_viewer.py

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from scipy.io import netcdf_file

ncf = netcdf_file('KTLX_20100510_22Z.nc')
data = ncf.variables['Reflectivity']
lats = ncf.variables['lat']
lons = ncf.variables['lon']
i = 0

cmap = plt.get_cmap('gist_ncar')
cmap.set_under('lightgrey')

fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 1)
im = ax.imshow(data[i], origin='lower',
               extent=(lons[0], lons[-1], lats[0], lats[-1]),
               vmin=0.1, vmax=80, cmap='gist_ncar')
cb = fig.colorbar(im)

cb.set_label('Reflectivity (dBZ)')
ax.set_xlabel('Longitude')
ax.set_ylabel('Latitude')
plt.show()

Running this script should result in a figure window that will display the first frame of our storms that we will become very familiar with over the next few chapters. The plot has a colorbar and the axes ticks label the latitudes and longitudes of our data. What is probably most important in this example is the imshow() call. Being an image, traditionally, the origin of the image data is shown in the upper-left corner and Matplotlib follows this tradition by default. However, this particular dataset was saved with its origin in the lower-left corner, so we need to state this with the origin parameter. The extent parameter is a tuple describing the data extent of the image. By default, it is assumed to be at (0, 0) and (N – 1, M – 1) for an MxN shaped image. The vmin and vmax parameters are a good way to ensure consistency of your colormap regardless of your input data. If these two parameters are not supplied, then imshow() will use the minimum and maximum of the input data to determine the colormap. This would be undesirable as we move towards displaying arbitrary frames of radar data. Finally, one can explicitly specify the colormap to use for the image. The gist_ncar colormap is very similar to the official NEXRAD colormap for radar data, so we will use it here:

Canvassing the figure

Note

The gist_ncar colormap, along with some other colormaps packaged with Matplotlib such as the default jet colormap, are actually terrible for visualization. See the Choosing Colormaps page of the Matplotlib website for an explanation of why, and guidance on how to choose a better colormap.

The menagerie of artists

Whenever a plotting function is called, the input data and parameters are processed to produce new artists to represent the data. These artists are either primitives or collections thereof. They are called primitives because they represent basic drawing components such as lines, images, polygons, and text. It is with these primitives that your data can be represented as bar charts, line plots, errorbars, or any other kinds of plots.

Primitives

There are four drawing primitives in Matplotlib: Line2D, AxesImage, Patch, and Text. It is through these primitive artists that all other artist objects are derived from, and they comprise everything that can be drawn in a figure.

A Line2D object uses a list of coordinates to draw line segments in between. Typically, the individual line segments are straight, and curves can be approximated with many vertices; however, curves can be specified to draw arcs, circles, or any other Bezier-approximated curves.

An AxesImage class will take two-dimensional data and coordinates and display an image of that data with a colormap applied to it. There are actually other kinds of basic image artists available besides AxesImage, but they are typically for very special uses. AxesImage objects can be very tricky to deal with, so it is often best to use the imshow() plotting method to create and return these objects.

A Patch object is an arbitrary two-dimensional object that has a single color for its "face." A polygon object is a specific instance of the slightly more general patch. These objects have a "path" (much like a Line2D object) that specifies segments that would enclose a face with a single color. The path is known as an "edge," and can have its own color as well. Besides the Polygons that one sees for bar plots and pie charts, Patch objects are also used to create arrows, legend boxes, and the markers used in scatter plots and elsewhere.

Finally, the Text object takes a Python string, a point coordinate, and various font parameters to form the text that annotates plots. Matplotlib primarily uses TrueType fonts. It will search for fonts available on your system as well as ship with a few FreeType2 fonts, and it uses Bitstream Vera by default. Additionally, a Text object can defer to LaTeX to render its text, if desired.

While specific artist classes will have their own set of properties that make sense for the particular art object they represent, there are several common properties that can be set. The following table is a listing of some of these properties.

Property

Meaning

alpha

0 represents transparent and 1 represents opaque

color

Color name or other color specification

visible

boolean to flag whether to draw the artist or not

zorder

value of the draw order in the layering engine

Let's extend the radar image example by loading up already saved polygons of storm cells in the tutorial.py file.

Code: chp1/simple_storm_cell_viewer.py

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from scipy.io import netcdf_file
from matplotlib.patches import Polygon
from tutorial import polygon_loader

ncf = netcdf_file('KTLX_20100510_22Z.nc')
data = ncf.variables['Reflectivity']
lats = ncf.variables['lat']
lons = ncf.variables['lon']
i = 0

cmap = plt.get_cmap('gist_ncar')
cmap.set_under('lightgrey')

fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 1)
im = ax.imshow(data[i], origin='lower',
               extent=(lons[0], lons[-1], lats[0], lats[-1]),
               vmin=0.1, vmax=80, cmap='gist_ncar')
cb = fig.colorbar(im)

polygons = polygon_loader('polygons.shp')
for poly in polygons[i]:
    p = Polygon(poly, lw=3, fc='k', ec='w', alpha=0.45)
    ax.add_artist(p)
cb.set_label("Reflectivity (dBZ)") 
ax.set_xlabel("Longitude") 
ax.set_ylabel("Latitude")
plt.show()

The polygon data returned from polygon_loader() is a dictionary of lists keyed by a frame index. The list contains Nx2 numpy arrays of vertex coordinates in longitude and latitude. The vertices form the outline of a storm cell. The Polygon constructor, like all other artist objects, takes many optional keyword arguments. First, lw is short for linewidth, (referring to the outline of the polygon), which we specify to be three points wide. Next is fc, which is short for facecolor, and is set to black ('k'). This is the color of the filled-in region of the polygon. Then edgecolor (ec) is set to white ('w') to help the polygons stand out against a dark background. Finally, we set the alpha argument to be slightly less than half to make the polygon fairly transparent so that one can still see the reflectivity data beneath the polygons.

Primitives

Note a particular difference between how we plotted the image using imshow() and how we plotted the polygons using polygon artists. For polygons, we called a constructor and then explicitly called ax.add_artist() to add each polygon instance as a child of the axes. Meanwhile, imshow() is a plotting function that will do all of the hard work in validating the inputs, building the AxesImage instance, making all necessary modifications to the axes instance (such as setting the limits and aspect ratio), and most importantly, adding the artist object to the axes. Finally, all plotting functions in Matplotlib return artists or a list of artist objects that it creates. In most cases, you will not need to save this return value in a variable because there is nothing else to do with them. In this case, we only needed the returned AxesImage so that we could pass it to the fig.colorbar() method. This is so that it would know what to base the colorbar upon.

The plotting functions in Matplotlib exist to provide convenience and simplicity to what can often be very tricky to get right by yourself. They are not magic! They use the same OO interface that is accessible to application developers. Therefore, anyone can write their own plotting functions to make complicated plots easier to perform.

Collections

Any artist that has child artists (such as a figure or an axes) is called a container. A special kind of container in Matplotlib is called a Collection. A collection usually contains a list of primitives of the same kind that should all be treated similarly. For example, a CircleCollection would have a list of Circle objects, all with the same color, size, and edge width. Individual values for artists in the collection can also be set. A collection makes management of many artists easier. This becomes especially important when considering the number of artist objects that may be needed for scatter plots, bar charts, or any other kind of plot or diagram.

Some collections are not just simply a list of primitives, but are artists in their own right. These special kinds of collections take advantage of various optimizations that can be assumed when rendering similar or identical things. RegularPolyCollection, for example, just needs to know the points of a single polygon relative to its center (such as a star or box) and then just needs a list of all the center coordinates, avoiding the need to store all the vertices of every polygon in its collection in memory.

In the following example, we will display storm tracks as LineCollection. Note that instead of using ax.add_artist() (which would work), we will use ax.add_collection() instead. This has the added benefit of performing special handling on the object to determine its bounding box so that the axes object can incorporate the limits of this collection with any other plotted objects to automatically set its own limits which we trigger with the ax.autoscale(True) call.

Code: chp1/linecoll_track_viewer.py

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from matplotlib.collections import LineCollection
from tutorial import track_loader

tracks = track_loader('polygons.shp')
# Filter out non-tracks (unassociated polygons given trackID of -9)
tracks = {tid: t for tid, t in tracks.items() if tid != -9}

fig, ax = plt.subplots(1, 1)
lc = LineCollection(tracks.values(), color='b')
ax.add_collection(lc)
ax.autoscale(True)
ax.set_xlabel("Longitude")
ax.set_ylabel("Latitude")
plt.show()
Collections

Much easier than the radar images, Matplotlib took care of all the limit setting automatically. Such features are extremely useful for writing generic applications that do not wish to concern themselves with such details. We will come back to the handling of LineCollections later in the book as we develop this application.

Summary

In this chapter, we introduced you to the foundational concepts of Matplotlib. Using show(), you showed your first plot with only three lines of Python. With this plot up on your screen, you learned some of the basic interactive features built into Matplotlib, such as panning, zooming, and the myriad of key bindings that are available. Then we discussed the difference between interactive and non-interactive plotting modes and the difference between scripted and interactive plotting. You now know where to go online for more information, examples, and forum discussions of Matplotlib when it comes time for you to work on your next Matplotlib project. Next, we discussed the architectural concepts of Matplotlib: backends, figures, axes, and artists.

Then we started our construction project for this book, an interactive storm cell tracking application. We saw how to plot a radar image using a pre-existing plotting function, as well as how to display polygons and lines as artists and collections. While creating these objects, we had a glimpse of how to customize the properties of these objects for our display needs, learning some of the property and styling names. We also learned some of the steps one needs to consider when creating their own plotting functions, such as autoscaling.

In the next chapter, we will learn how to extend the basic interactivity of Matplotlib, adding our own features and controls in order to make a truly interactive application.

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Description

This book is intended for Python programmers who want to do more than just see their data. Experience with GUI toolkits is not required, so this book can be an excellent complement to other GUI programming resources.

Who is this book for?

This book is intended for Python programmers who want to do more than just see their data. Experience with GUI toolkits is not required, so this book can be an excellent complement to other GUI programming resources.
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Table of Contents

6 Chapters
1. Introducing Interactive Plotting Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
2. Using Events and Callbacks Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
3. Animations Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
4. Widgets Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
5. Embedding Matplotlib Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Index Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

Top Reviews
Rating distribution
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Half star icon Empty star icon 3.3
(6 Ratings)
5 star 50%
4 star 0%
3 star 16.7%
2 star 0%
1 star 33.3%
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Sanjay Mishra Dec 30, 2019
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
If you need to quickly produce graphs and charts and explore data, this is the book for you.You could possibly get the same information from user manuals, blog posts and such like given enough time, but this book makes it easy to grasp the information and be quickly productive.
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Juan Nunez-Iglesias Apr 03, 2018
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
I highly recommend Ben's book. I fumbled around for a long time with minor interactive matplotlib features. Then I read his book and it completely clarified my mental model of mpl interactivity and, indeed, of GUIs in general.Here's an excerpt that describes my story quite well:"""Indeed, given that the primary audience for Matplotlib is scientific programmers for whom GUIs are, at best, an afterthought, Matplotlib provides a gradual curve to create full-fledged GUI applications. For simple GUI tasks, one can go quite far with Matplotlib without ever having to adopt a GUI platform. And, as we will see in the next chapter, taking those final steps into a GUI application would not require getting rid of any existing code."""If you're a scientist looking to add a bit of interactivity to your data, or to move from a purely command-line interface to providing some graphical interactivity and control, this is a fantastic book to start with. Even if you end up using some newer frameworks such as Bokeh, the ideas in this book about GUI loops and callbacks will be useful forever.
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Dr. Andrew G. Meigs Feb 04, 2016
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
Good book, but a bit short. Nice tidbits throughout.
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Phu ta Feb 18, 2016
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon 3
I think the overall content is okay, good for beginners who want to learned to develop interactive Python app. Keep in mind that specifically builds up a weather application in Matplotlib. So depend on your interest, it may or may not be helpful.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Philip H Sep 15, 2018
Full star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon 1
A few pages on plotting; the rest of the book is junk. I would ask for my money back if I could!
Amazon Verified review Amazon
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