Note
Click here to download the full example code
Text rendering With LaTeX¶
Rendering text with LaTeX in Matplotlib.
Matplotlib has the option to use LaTeX to manage all text layout. This option is available with the following backends:
- Agg
- PS
The LaTeX option is activated by setting text.usetex : True
in your rc
settings. Text handling with matplotlib's LaTeX support is slower than
matplotlib's very capable mathtext, but is
more flexible, since different LaTeX packages (font packages, math packages,
etc.) can be used. The results can be striking, especially when you take care
to use the same fonts in your figures as in the main document.
Matplotlib's LaTeX support requires a working LaTeX installation, dvipng
(which may be included with your LaTeX installation), and Ghostscript
(GPL Ghostscript 9.0 or later is required). The executables for these
external dependencies must all be located on your PATH
.
There are a couple of options to mention, which can be changed using rc settings. Here is an example matplotlibrc file:
font.family : serif
font.serif : Times, Palatino, New Century Schoolbook, Bookman, Computer Modern Roman
font.sans-serif : Helvetica, Avant Garde, Computer Modern Sans serif
font.cursive : Zapf Chancery
font.monospace : Courier, Computer Modern Typewriter
text.usetex : true
The first valid font in each family is the one that will be loaded. If the fonts are not specified, the Computer Modern fonts are used by default. All of the other fonts are Adobe fonts. Times and Palatino each have their own accompanying math fonts, while the other Adobe serif fonts make use of the Computer Modern math fonts. See the PSNFSS documentation for more details.
To use LaTeX and select Helvetica as the default font, without editing matplotlibrc use:
import matplotlib as mpl
plt.rcParams.update({
"text.usetex": True,
"font.family": "sans-serif",
"font.sans-serif": ["Helvetica"]})
## for Palatino and other serif fonts use:
plt.rcParams.update({
"text.usetex": True,
"font.family": "serif",
"font.serif": ["Palatino"],
})
Here is the standard example,
/gallery/text_labels_and_annotations/tex_demo
:
Note that display math mode ($$ e=mc^2 $$
) is not supported, but adding the
command \displaystyle
, as in the above demo, will produce the same results.
Note
Certain characters require special escaping in TeX, such as:
# $ % & ~ _ ^ \ { } \( \) \[ \]
Therefore, these characters will behave differently depending on
rcParams["text.usetex"]
(default: False
).
usetex with unicode¶
It is also possible to use unicode strings with the LaTeX text manager, here is
an example taken from /gallery/text_labels_and_annotations/tex_demo
.
The axis labels include Unicode text:
Postscript options¶
In order to produce encapsulated postscript files that can be embedded in a new
LaTeX document, the default behavior of matplotlib is to distill the output,
which removes some postscript operators used by LaTeX that are illegal in an
eps file. This step produces results which may be unacceptable to some users,
because the text is coarsely rasterized and converted to bitmaps, which are not
scalable like standard postscript, and the text is not searchable. One
workaround is to set ps.distiller.res
to a higher value (perhaps 6000)
in your rc settings, which will produce larger files but may look better and
scale reasonably. A better workaround, which requires Poppler or Xpdf, can be
activated by changing the ps.usedistiller
rc setting to xpdf
. This
alternative produces postscript without rasterizing text, so it scales
properly, can be edited in Adobe Illustrator, and searched text in pdf
documents.
Possible hangups¶
- On Windows, the
PATH
environment variable may need to be modified to include the directories containing the latex, dvipng and ghostscript executables. See Environment Variables and Setting environment variables in Windows for details. - Using MiKTeX with Computer Modern fonts, if you get odd *Agg and PNG results, go to MiKTeX/Options and update your format files
- On Ubuntu and Gentoo, the base texlive install does not ship with the type1cm package. You may need to install some of the extra packages to get all the goodies that come bundled with other latex distributions.
- Some progress has been made so matplotlib uses the dvi files directly for text layout. This allows latex to be used for text layout with the pdf and svg backends, as well as the *Agg and PS backends. In the future, a latex installation may be the only external dependency.
Troubleshooting¶
- Try deleting your
.matplotlib/tex.cache
directory. If you don't know where to find.matplotlib
, see matplotlib configuration and cache directory locations. - Make sure LaTeX, dvipng and ghostscript are each working and on your
PATH
. - Make sure what you are trying to do is possible in a LaTeX document, that your LaTeX syntax is valid and that you are using raw strings if necessary to avoid unintended escape sequences.
- Most problems reported on the mailing list have been cleared up by upgrading Ghostscript. If possible, please try upgrading to the latest release before reporting problems to the list.
- The
text.latex.preamble
rc setting is not officially supported. This option provides lots of flexibility, and lots of ways to cause problems. Please disable this option before reporting problems to the mailing list. - If you still need help, please see Getting help
Keywords: matplotlib code example, codex, python plot, pyplot Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery