matplotlib matshow labels matplotlib matshow labels django django

matplotlib matshow labels


What's happening is that the xticks actually extend outside of the displayed figure when using matshow. (I'm not quite sure exactly why this is. I've almost never used matshow, though.)

To demonstrate this, look at the output of ax.get_xticks(). In your case, it's array([-1., 0., 1., 2., 3., 4.]). Therefore, when you set the xtick labels, "ABC" is at <-1, -1>, and isn't displayed on the figure.

The easiest solution is just to prepend a blank label to your list of labels, e.g.

ax.set_xticklabels(['']+alpha)ax.set_yticklabels(['']+alpha)

As a full example:

import numpy as npimport matplotlib.pyplot as pltalpha = ['ABC', 'DEF', 'GHI', 'JKL']data = np.random.random((4,4))fig = plt.figure()ax = fig.add_subplot(111)cax = ax.matshow(data, interpolation='nearest')fig.colorbar(cax)ax.set_xticklabels(['']+alpha)ax.set_yticklabels(['']+alpha)plt.show()

Matshow example


The other way to do this is to specify the ticks, and then set the corresponding labels. Then you don't have to worry about the extra out of bounds tick. This comes up in lots of matplotlib demos. So here, note the extra calls the ax.set_xticks and ax.set_yticks

import numpy as npimport matplotlib.pyplot as pltalpha = ['ABC', 'DEF', 'GHI', 'JKL']data = np.random.random((4,4))fig = plt.figure()ax = fig.add_subplot(111)cax = ax.matshow(data, interpolation='nearest')fig.colorbar(cax)xaxis = np.arange(len(alpha))ax.set_xticks(xaxis)ax.set_yticks(xaxis)ax.set_xticklabels(alpha)ax.set_yticklabels(alpha)plt.show()

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