Changes in 1.2.xΒΆ
The
classic
option of the rc parametertoolbar
is deprecated and will be removed in the next release.The
matplotlib.cbook.isvector
method has been removed since it is no longer functional.The
rasterization_zorder
property onAxes
sets a zorder below which artists are rasterized. This has defaulted to -30000.0, but it now defaults to None, meaning no artists will be rasterized. In order to rasterize artists below a given zorder value,set_rasterization_zorder
must be explicitly called.In
scatter()
, andscatter
, when specifying a marker using a tuple, the angle is now specified in degrees, not radians.Using
twinx()
ortwiny()
no longer overrides the current locaters and formatters on the axes.In
contourf()
, the handling of the extend kwarg has changed. Formerly, the extended ranges were mapped after to 0, 1 after being normed, so that they always corresponded to the extreme values of the colormap. Now they are mapped outside this range so that they correspond to the special colormap values determined by theset_under()
andset_over()
methods, which default to the colormap end points.The new rc parameter
savefig.format
replacescairo.format
andsavefig.extension
, and sets the default file format used bymatplotlib.figure.Figure.savefig()
.In
pyplot.pie()
andaxes.Axes.pie()
, one can now set the radius of the pie; setting the radius to 'None' (the default value), will result in a pie with a radius of 1 as before.Use of
matplotlib.projections.projection_factory
is now deprecated in favour of axes class identification usingmatplotlib.projections.process_projection_requirements
followed by direct axes class invocation (at the time of writing, functions which do this are:add_axes()
,add_subplot()
andgca()
). Therefore:key = figure._make_key(*args, **kwargs) ispolar = kwargs.pop('polar', False) projection = kwargs.pop('projection', None) if ispolar: if projection is not None and projection != 'polar': raise ValueError('polar and projection args are inconsistent') projection = 'polar' ax = projection_factory(projection, self, rect, **kwargs) key = self._make_key(*args, **kwargs) # is now projection_class, kwargs, key = \ process_projection_requirements(self, *args, **kwargs) ax = projection_class(self, rect, **kwargs)
This change means that third party objects can expose themselves as Matplotlib axes by providing a
_as_mpl_axes
method. See Developer's guide for creating scales and transformations for more detail.A new keyword extendfrac in
colorbar()
andColorbarBase
allows one to control the size of the triangular minimum and maximum extensions on colorbars.A new keyword capthick in
errorbar()
has been added as an intuitive alias to the markeredgewidth and mew keyword arguments, which indirectly controlled the thickness of the caps on the errorbars. For backwards compatibility, specifying either of the original keyword arguments will override any value provided by capthick.Transform subclassing behaviour is now subtly changed. If your transform implements a non-affine transformation, then it should override the
transform_non_affine
method, rather than the generictransform
method. Previously transforms would definetransform
and then copy the method intotransform_non_affine
:class MyTransform(mtrans.Transform): def transform(self, xy): ... transform_non_affine = transform
This approach will no longer function correctly and should be changed to:
class MyTransform(mtrans.Transform): def transform_non_affine(self, xy): ...
Artists no longer have
x_isdata
ory_isdata
attributes; instead any artist's transform can be interrogated withartist_instance.get_transform().contains_branch(ax.transData)
Lines added to an axes now take into account their transform when updating the data and view limits. This means transforms can now be used as a pre-transform. For instance:
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> import matplotlib.transforms as mtrans >>> ax = plt.axes() >>> ax.plot(range(10), transform=mtrans.Affine2D().scale(10) + ax.transData) >>> print(ax.viewLim) Bbox('array([[ 0., 0.],\n [ 90., 90.]])')
One can now easily get a transform which goes from one transform's coordinate system to another, in an optimized way, using the new subtract method on a transform. For instance, to go from data coordinates to axes coordinates:
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> ax = plt.axes() >>> data2ax = ax.transData - ax.transAxes >>> print(ax.transData.depth, ax.transAxes.depth) 3, 1 >>> print(data2ax.depth) 2
for versions before 1.2 this could only be achieved in a sub-optimal way, using
ax.transData + ax.transAxes.inverted()
(depth is a new concept, but had it existed it would return 4 for this example).twinx
andtwiny
now returns an instance of SubplotBase if parent axes is an instance of SubplotBase.All Qt3-based backends are now deprecated due to the lack of py3k bindings. Qt and QtAgg backends will continue to work in v1.2.x for py2.6 and py2.7. It is anticipated that the Qt3 support will be completely removed for the next release.
matplotlib.colors.ColorConverter
,Colormap
andNormalize
now subclassesobject
ContourSet instances no longer have a
transform
attribute. Instead, access the transform with theget_transform
method.