matplotlib.pyplot.subplot#
- matplotlib.pyplot.subplot(*args, **kwargs)[source]#
Add an Axes to the current figure or retrieve an existing Axes.
This is a wrapper of
Figure.add_subplot
which provides additional behavior when working with the implicit API (see the notes section).Call signatures:
subplot(nrows, ncols, index, **kwargs) subplot(pos, **kwargs) subplot(**kwargs) subplot(ax)
- Parameters:
- *argsint, (int, int, index), or
SubplotSpec
, default: (1, 1, 1) The position of the subplot described by one of
Three integers (nrows, ncols, index). The subplot will take the index position on a grid with nrows rows and ncols columns. index starts at 1 in the upper left corner and increases to the right. index can also be a two-tuple specifying the (first, last) indices (1-based, and including last) of the subplot, e.g.,
fig.add_subplot(3, 1, (1, 2))
makes a subplot that spans the upper 2/3 of the figure.A 3-digit integer. The digits are interpreted as if given separately as three single-digit integers, i.e.
fig.add_subplot(235)
is the same asfig.add_subplot(2, 3, 5)
. Note that this can only be used if there are no more than 9 subplots.A
SubplotSpec
.
- projection{None, 'aitoff', 'hammer', 'lambert', 'mollweide', 'polar', 'rectilinear', str}, optional
The projection type of the subplot (
Axes
). str is the name of a custom projection, seeprojections
. The default None results in a 'rectilinear' projection.- polarbool, default: False
If True, equivalent to projection='polar'.
- sharex, sharey
Axes
, optional Share the x or y
axis
with sharex and/or sharey. The axis will have the same limits, ticks, and scale as the axis of the shared axes.- labelstr
A label for the returned axes.
- *argsint, (int, int, index), or
- Returns:
axes.SubplotBase
, or another subclass ofAxes
The axes of the subplot. The returned axes base class depends on the projection used. It is
Axes
if rectilinear projection is used andprojections.polar.PolarAxes
if polar projection is used. The returned axes is then a subplot subclass of the base class.
- Other Parameters:
- **kwargs
This method also takes the keyword arguments for the returned axes base class; except for the figure argument. The keyword arguments for the rectilinear base class
Axes
can be found in the following table but there might also be other keyword arguments if another projection is used.Property
Description
{'box', 'datalim'}
a filter function, which takes a (m, n, 3) float array and a dpi value, and returns a (m, n, 3) array and two offsets from the bottom left corner of the image
scalar or None
(float, float) or {'C', 'SW', 'S', 'SE', 'E', 'NE', ...}
bool
{'auto', 'equal'} or float
bool
unknown
unknown
Callable[[Axes, Renderer], Bbox]
bool or 'line'
float or None
bool
Patch or (Path, Transform) or None
facecolor
or fccolor
bool
str
bool
object
bool
bool
unknown
None or bool or float or callable
[left, bottom, width, height] or
Bbox
unknown
float or None
bool
(scale: float, length: float, randomness: float)
bool or None
str
str
bool
unknown
str
(bottom: float, top: float)
float greater than -0.5
unknown
unknown
unknown
unknown
str
(bottom: float, top: float)
float greater than -0.5
unknown
unknown
unknown
float
Notes
Creating a new Axes will delete any preexisting Axes that overlaps with it beyond sharing a boundary:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt # plot a line, implicitly creating a subplot(111) plt.plot([1, 2, 3]) # now create a subplot which represents the top plot of a grid # with 2 rows and 1 column. Since this subplot will overlap the # first, the plot (and its axes) previously created, will be removed plt.subplot(211)
If you do not want this behavior, use the
Figure.add_subplot
method or thepyplot.axes
function instead.If no kwargs are passed and there exists an Axes in the location specified by args then that Axes will be returned rather than a new Axes being created.
If kwargs are passed and there exists an Axes in the location specified by args, the projection type is the same, and the kwargs match with the existing Axes, then the existing Axes is returned. Otherwise a new Axes is created with the specified parameters. We save a reference to the kwargs which we use for this comparison. If any of the values in kwargs are mutable we will not detect the case where they are mutated. In these cases we suggest using
Figure.add_subplot
and the explicit Axes API rather than the implicit pyplot API.Examples
plt.subplot(221) # equivalent but more general ax1 = plt.subplot(2, 2, 1) # add a subplot with no frame ax2 = plt.subplot(222, frameon=False) # add a polar subplot plt.subplot(223, projection='polar') # add a red subplot that shares the x-axis with ax1 plt.subplot(224, sharex=ax1, facecolor='red') # delete ax2 from the figure plt.delaxes(ax2) # add ax2 to the figure again plt.subplot(ax2) # make the first axes "current" again plt.subplot(221)
Examples using matplotlib.pyplot.subplot
#
Controlling view limits using margins and sticky_edges
Resizing axes with tight layout
Managing multiple figures in pyplot