matplotlib.pyplot.subplot

xiaoxiao2021-02-28  78

matplotlib.pyplot.subplot(*args, **kwargs)

Return a subplot axes positioned by the given grid definition.

Typical call signature:

subplot(nrows, ncols, plot_number)

Where nrows and ncols are used to notionally split the figure into nrows * ncols sub-axes, and plot_number is used to identify the particular subplot that this function is to create within the notional grid. plot_number starts at 1, increments across rows first and has a maximum of nrows * ncols.

In the case when nrows, ncols and plot_number are all less than 10, a convenience exists, such that the a 3 digit number can be given instead, where the hundreds represent nrows, the tens represent ncols and the units represent plot_number. For instance:

subplot(211)

produces a subaxes in a figure which represents the top plot (i.e. the first) in a 2 row by 1 column notional grid (no grid actually exists, but conceptually this is how the returned subplot has been positioned).

Note Creating a subplot will delete any pre-existing subplot 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) plt.plot(range(12)) # creates 2nd subplot with yellow background plt.subplot(212, facecolor='y')
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