plotutil - Plotting utilities¶
auto_shift |
Return a y-offset coordinate transform for the current axes. |
coordinated_colors |
Return a set of coordinated colors as c[‘base|light|dark’]. |
dhsv |
Modify color on hsv scale. |
next_color |
Return the next color in the plot color cycle. |
plot_quantiles |
Plot quantile curves for a set of lines. |
form_quantiles |
Return quantiles and values for a list of confidence intervals. |
Pylab plotting utilities.
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bumps.plotutil.
auto_shift
(offset)[source]¶ Return a y-offset coordinate transform for the current axes.
Each call to auto_shift increases the y-offset for the next line by the given number of points (with 72 points per inch).
Example:
from matplotlib import pyplot as plt from bumps.plotutil import auto_shift trans = auto_shift(plt.gca()) plot(x, y, trans=trans)
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bumps.plotutil.
coordinated_colors
(base=None)[source]¶ Return a set of coordinated colors as c[‘base|light|dark’].
If base is not provided, use the next color in the color cycle as the base. Light is bright and pale, dark is dull and saturated.
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bumps.plotutil.
dhsv
(color, dh=0.0, ds=0.0, dv=0.0, da=0.0)[source]¶ Modify color on hsv scale.
dv change intensity, e.g., +0.1 to brighten, -0.1 to darken. dh change hue ds change saturation da change transparency
Color can be any valid matplotlib color. The hsv scale is [0,1] in each dimension. Saturation, value and alpha scales are clipped to [0,1] after changing. The hue scale wraps between red to violet.
Example: Make sea green 10% darker:
>>> from bumps.plotutil import dhsv >>> darker = dhsv('seagreen', dv=-0.1) >>> print([int(v*255) for v in darker]) [37, 113, 71, 255]
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bumps.plotutil.
next_color
()[source]¶ Return the next color in the plot color cycle.
Example:
from matplotlib import pyplot as plt from bumps.plotutil import next_color, dhsv color = next_color() plt.errorbar(x, y, yerr=dy, fmt='.', color=color) # Draw the theory line with the same color as the data, but darker plt.plot(x, y, '-', color=dhsv(color, dv=-0.2))
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bumps.plotutil.
plot_quantiles
(x, y, contours, color, alpha=None)[source]¶ Plot quantile curves for a set of lines.
x is the x coordinates for all lines.
y is the y coordinates, one row for each line.
contours is a list of confidence intervals expressed as percents.
color is the color to use for the quantiles. Quantiles are draw as a filled region with alpha transparency. Higher probability regions will be covered with multiple contours, which will make them lighter and more saturated.
alpha is the transparency level to use for all fill regions. The default value, alpha=2./(#contours+1), works pretty well.
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bumps.plotutil.
form_quantiles
(y, contours)[source]¶ Return quantiles and values for a list of confidence intervals.
contours is a list of confidence interfaces [a, b,…] expressed as percents.
Returns:
quantiles is a list of intervals [[a_low, a_high], [b_low, b_high], …] in [0,1].
values is a list of intervals [[A_low, A_high], …] with one entry in A for each row in y.