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You're reading from  Python Data Visualization Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2013
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781782163367
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Igor Milovanovic
Igor Milovanovic
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Igor Milovanovic

Igor Milovanović is an experienced developer, with strong background in Linux system knowledge and software engineering education. He is skilled in building scalable data-driven distributed software rich systems. An evangelist for high-quality systems design, he has a strong interest in software architecture and development methodologies. Igor is always committed to advocating methodologies that promote high-quality software, such as test-driven development, one-step builds, and continuous integration. He also possesses solid knowledge of product development. With field experience and official training, he is capable of transferring knowledge and communication flow from business to developers and vice versa. Igor is most grateful to his girlfriend for letting him spend hours on work instead with her and being an avid listener to his endless book monologues. He thanks his brother for being the strongest supporter. He is also thankful to his parents for letting him develop in various ways to become a person he is today.
Read more about Igor Milovanovic

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Setting the transparency and size of axis labels


The Axes label describes what the data in the figure represents and is quite important in the viewer's understanding of the figure itself. By providing labels to the axes background, we help the viewer comprehend the information in an appropriate way.

Getting ready

Before we dive into the code, it is important to understand how matplotlib organizes our figures.

At the top level, there is a Figure instance containing all that we see and some more (that we don't see). The figure contains, among other things, instances of the Axes class as a field Figure.axes. The Axes instances contain almost everything we care about: all the lines, points, and ticks and labels. So, when we call plot(), we are adding a line (matplotlib.lines.Line2D) to the Axes.lines list. If we plot a histogram (hist()), we are adding rectangles to the list of Axes.patches ("patches" is the term inherited from MATLAB™, and represents the "patch of color" concept).

An instance of...

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Python Data Visualization Cookbook
Published in: Nov 2013Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781782163367

Author (1)

author image
Igor Milovanovic

Igor Milovanović is an experienced developer, with strong background in Linux system knowledge and software engineering education. He is skilled in building scalable data-driven distributed software rich systems. An evangelist for high-quality systems design, he has a strong interest in software architecture and development methodologies. Igor is always committed to advocating methodologies that promote high-quality software, such as test-driven development, one-step builds, and continuous integration. He also possesses solid knowledge of product development. With field experience and official training, he is capable of transferring knowledge and communication flow from business to developers and vice versa. Igor is most grateful to his girlfriend for letting him spend hours on work instead with her and being an avid listener to his endless book monologues. He thanks his brother for being the strongest supporter. He is also thankful to his parents for letting him develop in various ways to become a person he is today.
Read more about Igor Milovanovic