You are reading documentation for the unreleased version of Matplotlib. Try searching for the released version of this page instead?
Version 2.0.0b1.post7580.dev0+ge487118
matplotlib
Fork me on GitHub

Related Topics

This Page

Demo Parasite Axes2ΒΆ

Parasite axis demo

The following code is an example of a parasite axis. It aims to show a user how to plot multiple different values onto one single plot. Notice how in this example, par1 and par2 are both calling twinx meaning both are tied directly to the x-axis. From there, each of those two axis can behave separately from the each other, meaning they can take on separate values from themselves as well as the x-axis.

../../_images/sphx_glr_demo_parasite_axes2_001.png
from mpl_toolkits.axes_grid1 import host_subplot
import mpl_toolkits.axisartist as AA
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

host = host_subplot(111, axes_class=AA.Axes)
plt.subplots_adjust(right=0.75)

par1 = host.twinx()
par2 = host.twinx()

offset = 60
new_fixed_axis = par2.get_grid_helper().new_fixed_axis
par2.axis["right"] = new_fixed_axis(loc="right",
                                    axes=par2,
                                    offset=(offset, 0))

par1.axis["right"].toggle(all=True)
par2.axis["right"].toggle(all=True)

host.set_xlim(0, 2)
host.set_ylim(0, 2)

host.set_xlabel("Distance")
host.set_ylabel("Density")
par1.set_ylabel("Temperature")
par2.set_ylabel("Velocity")

p1, = host.plot([0, 1, 2], [0, 1, 2], label="Density")
p2, = par1.plot([0, 1, 2], [0, 3, 2], label="Temperature")
p3, = par2.plot([0, 1, 2], [50, 30, 15], label="Velocity")

par1.set_ylim(0, 4)
par2.set_ylim(1, 65)

host.legend()

host.axis["left"].label.set_color(p1.get_color())
par1.axis["right"].label.set_color(p2.get_color())
par2.axis["right"].label.set_color(p3.get_color())

plt.draw()
plt.show()

Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery