mpl_axes_aligner.align module¶
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mpl_axes_aligner.align.
xaxes
(ax1, org1, ax2, org2, pos=None)¶ Adjust the plotting range of two x axes to align the origins with the position.
Parameters: - ax1 (matplotlib.axes.Axes) – First axis object of matplotlib.
- org1 (float) – Origin of first axis to be aligned.
- ax2 (matplotlib.axes.Axes) – Second axis object of matplotlib.
- org2 (float) – Origin of second axis to be aligned.
- pos (float or None, optional) – Relative position to align the origins [0 < pos < 1]. When pos is None, the origins are aligned to the middle of them.
Raises: TypeError
– If ‘ax1’ and/or ‘ax2’ are not the Axes object of matplotlib.ValueError
– If ‘pos’ is less than or equal to 0, or more than or equal to 1.
Examples
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> from mpl_axes_aligner import align >>> fig = plt.figure() >>> ax1 = fig.add_subplot(111) >>> ax2 = ax1.twiny() >>> ax1.set_xlim(-1.0, 0.0) (-1.0, 0.0) >>> ax2.set_xlim(0.0, 1.0) (0.0, 1.0) >>> align.xaxes(ax1, -0.3, ax2, 0.3, 0.5) >>> ax1.get_xlim() (-1.0, 0.4) >>> ax2.get_xlim() (-0.4, 1.0)
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mpl_axes_aligner.align.
yaxes
(ax1, org1, ax2, org2, pos=None)¶ Adjust the plotting range of two y axes to align the origins with the position.
Parameters: - ax1 (matplotlib.axes.Axes) – First axis object of matplotlib.
- org1 (float) – Origin of first axis to be aligned.
- ax2 (matplotlib.axes.Axes) – Second axis object of matplotlib.
- org2 (float) – Origin of second axis to be aligned.
- pos (float or None, optional) – Relative position to align the origins [0 < pos < 1]. When pos is None, the origins are aligned to the middle of them.
Raises: TypeError
– If ‘ax1’ and/or ‘ax2’ are not the Axes object of matplotlib.ValueError
– If ‘pos’ is less than or equal to 0, or more than or equal to 1.
Examples
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> from mpl_axes_aligner import align >>> fig = plt.figure() >>> ax1 = fig.add_subplot(111) >>> ax2 = ax1.twinx() >>> ax1.set_ylim(-1.0, 0.0) (-1.0, 0.0) >>> ax2.set_ylim(0.0, 1.0) (0.0, 1.0) >>> align.yaxes(ax1, -0.3, ax2, 0.3, 0.5) >>> ax1.get_ylim() (-1.0, 0.4) >>> ax2.get_ylim() (-0.4, 1.0)