问题
Problem
I am working with data on a logarithmic scale and would like to rotate it to fit a line. I know the model but am unsure quite what angle I should be plugging into transform_angles
to recover the correct rotation. After a bit of trial and error I know the answer is around 10 degrees for the axes limits I require.
MWE
import matplotlib.pylab as plt
import numpy as np
plt.clf()
plt.yscale('log')
plt.ylim((1e-11, 1e-1)) # Other data is usually plotted and these are the ranges I need.
plt.xlim((-0.2, 7.2))
x_fit = np.linspace(0.8, 3.2, 1000)
y_ols = (lambda x: np.exp(np.log(2)*(-20.8 + -1.23 * x)))(x_fit) # I get these numbers from OLS fitting.
plt.plot(x_fit, y_ols, 'b-', dashes='', label='__nolegend__')
plt.gca().text(np.min(x_fit), 1.2*y_ols[0], r'$O(2^{{ {:.3}x }})$'.format(-1.23), rotation=-10).set_bbox(dict(facecolor='w', alpha=0.7, edgecolor='k', linewidth=0)) # There are several others lines which have been omitted.
Similar questions (keeps text rotated in data coordinate system after resizing?) only use linear axes, as do the matplotlib demos.
Remarks on the plot to answer comments
- In my full plot I use a dual axis (both on log scales) with the
twinx()
feature. All the data are plotted onax1
which uses a log-10 scale (as shown). (I could be more explicit and writeyscale('log', basey=10)
...). Ultimately I want a base-10 axis.- The model used in making
y_ols
comes from a regression fit to some original data and requires base-2. On a log scale it is easy enough to recover the gradient in any required base.
Using gradients
It is easy enough to recover the gradient on a logarithmic scale, using a mix of np.gradient
and an angle (in radians) using np.arctan
, but I can't seem to recover a number close to the 10 degrees (0.17 radians).
transData.transform_angles(np.array((np.mean(np.gradient(np.log10(y_ols), np.mean(np.diff(x_fit)))),)), np.array([np.min(x_fit), 1.2*y_ols[0]]).reshape((1, 2)), radians=True)[0]
gives -1.6
radians (approximately -90 degrees), whereas I require a number closer to 0.17
radians. Perhaps I should be using a different base, or I am doing this all wrong (hence the post).
Extras - vertical offset
As can be seen in the code, I have added a vertical offset for the anchor point when using 1.2*y_ols[0]
. If a solution needs to take this into consideration then all the better.
回答1:
Note that I provided a general purpose class to achieve this as an answer to the original question. This will update itself on axes limits changes or zoom events etc. And it will work with log scales as well.
In the following I will hence only provide a comparisson between between linear and log scale to help understand that there isn't actually any difference between using a log or a linear scale with the approach from the linked matplotlib "text_rotation_relative_to_line" example.
You first calculate the angle in data coordinates. This can easily be done with numpy.arctan2 and the difference of the first two data (or any other pair of close-by data) as arguments.
Then you use ax.transData.transform_angles to transform the angle given in data coordinates to the angle in screen coordinates.
Below is an example (taking the data from the other answer) for the same case on a linear and a log scale.
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
fig, (ax1, ax2) = plt.subplots(nrows=2, figsize=(6, 4), sharex=True)
ax2.set_yscale('log')
ax2.set(ylim=(1e-11, 1e-1), xlim=(-0.2, 7.2))
x = np.linspace(0.8, 6.2, 100)
y = (lambda x: 10**(( -2 - x)))(x)
# angle in data coordinates
angle_data = np.rad2deg(np.arctan2(y[1]-y[0], x[1]-x[0]))
# Apply the exact same code to linear and log axes
for ax in (ax1, ax2):
ax.plot(x, y, 'b-')
# angle in screen coordinates
angle_screen = ax.transData.transform_angles(np.array((angle_data,)),
np.array([x[0], y[0]]).reshape((1, 2)))[0]
# using `annotate` allows to specify an offset in units of points
ax.annotate("Text", xy=(x[0],y[0]), xytext=(2,2), textcoords="offset points",
rotation_mode='anchor', rotation=angle_screen)
plt.show()
回答2:
It does not really matters for the textbox
which kind of axis you use. You only need to adjust its angle to the figure
properties. To demonstrate it better, I will change a little your MWE. I will use y(x)=10^(2-x)
function, and on logarithmic scale it should provide linear function with -45 degrees slope. And if you examine the grid values, it is the case (the function drops one decade for each unit). But, since the figure aspect ratio is deformed, the visual angle is different (only one square for two units), and you need to adjust to it. So for the given figure, the correct value of the slope is -26.259 degrees. See the value of adjusted_slope
in the code.
As for the vertical offset of the textbox
you can choose the value that provides best visual results.
# you can set whatever size you need
plt.figure(figsize=(6, 4))
# these are the original settings
plt.yscale('log')
plt.ylim((1e-11, 1e-1))
plt.xlim((-0.2, 7.2))
x_fit = np.linspace(0.8, 6.2, 100)
slope = -1.0
# a slight change in the function
y_ols = (lambda x: 10**(( -2 + slope * x)))(x_fit)
plt.plot(x_fit, y_ols, 'b-', dashes='', label='__nolegend__')
# estimate the "right" slope
calc_slope = np.mean(np.gradient(np.log10(y_ols), np.mean(np.diff(x_fit))))
# get current figure properties
x_min, x_max = plt.xlim()
y_min, y_max = plt.ylim()
x_sz, y_sz = plt.gcf().get_size_inches()
x_factor = x_sz / (x_max - x_min)
y_factor = y_sz / (np.log10(y_max) - np.log10(y_min)) # adjust to logarithmic values
# calculate adjustment
adjusted_slope = (calc_slope * y_factor / x_factor) # in radians
plt.gca().text(np.min(x_fit), 1.2*y_ols[0], r'$O(10^{{ {:.3}x }})$'.format(slope),
rotation_mode='anchor', rotation=np.arctan(adjusted_slope)*180/np.pi).set_bbox(
dict(facecolor='w', alpha=0.7, edgecolor='k', linewidth=0))
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/52928360/rotating-text-onto-a-line-on-a-log-scale-in-matplotlib