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Working on the Spigot Hub plugin we began in the last coding session. Will be posting the code soon.
#python #programming #development
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WordPress needs no introduction. It has been in the world for quite a long time. And up till now, it has given a tough fight to leading web development technology. The main reason behind its remarkable success is, it is highly customizable and also SEO-friendly. Other benefits include open-source technology, security, user-friendliness, and the thousands of free plugins it offers.
Talking of WordPress plugins, are a piece of software that enables you to add more features to the website. They are easy to integrate into your website and don’t hamper the performance of the site. WordPress, as a leading technology, has to offer many out-of-the-box plugins.
However, not always the WordPress would be able to meet your all needs. Hence you have to customize the WordPress plugin to provide you the functionality you wished. WordPress Plugins are easy to install and customize. You don’t have to build the solution from scratch and that’s one of the reasons why small and medium-sized businesses love it. It doesn’t need a hefty investment or the hiring of an in-house development team. You can use the core functionality of the plugin and expand it as your like.
In this blog, we would be talking in-depth about plugins and how to customize WordPress plugins to improve the functionality of your web applications.
What Is The Working Of The WordPress Plugins?
Developing your own plugin requires you to have some knowledge of the way they work. It ensures the better functioning of the customized plugins and avoids any mistakes that can hamper the experience on your site.
1. Hooks
Plugins operate primarily using hooks. As a hook attaches you to something, the same way a feature or functionality is hooked to your website. The piece of code interacts with the other components present on the website. There are two types of hooks: a. Action and b. Filter.
A. Action
If you want something to happen at a particular time, you need to use a WordPress “action” hook. With actions, you can add, change and improve the functionality of your plugin. It allows you to attach a new action that can be triggered by your users on the website.
There are several predefined actions available on WordPress, custom WordPress plugin development also allows you to develop your own action. This way you can make your plugin function as your want. It also allows you to set values for which the hook function. The add_ action function will then connect that function to a specific action.
B. Filters
They are the type of hooks that are accepted to a single variable or a series of variables. It sends them back after they have modified it. It allows you to change the content displayed to the user.
You can add the filter on your website with the apply_filter function, then you can define the filter under the function. To add a filter hook on the website, you have to add the $tag (the filter name) and $value (the filtered value or variable), this allows the hook to work. Also, you can add extra function values under $var.
Once you have made your filter, you can execute it with the add_filter function. This will activate your filter and would work when a specific function is triggered. You can also manipulate the variable and return it.
2. Shortcodes
Shortcodes are a good way to create and display the custom functionality of your website to visitors. They are client-side bits of code. They can be placed in the posts and pages like in the menu and widgets, etc.
There are many plugins that use shortcodes. By creating your very own shortcode, you too can customize the WordPress plugin. You can create your own shortcode with the add_shortcode function. The name of the shortcode that you use would be the first variable and the second variable would be the output of it when it is triggered. The output can be – attributes, content, and name.
3. Widgets
Other than the hooks and shortcodes, you can use the widgets to add functionality to the site. WordPress Widgets are a good way to create a widget by extending the WP_Widget class. They render a user-friendly experience, as they have an object-oriented design approach and the functions and values are stored in a single entity.
How To Customize WordPress Plugins?
There are various methods to customize the WordPress plugins. Depending on your need, and the degree of customization you wish to make in the plugin, choose the right option for you. Also, don’t forget to keep in mind that it requires a little bit of technical knowledge too. So find an expert WordPress plugin development company in case you lack the knowledge to do it by yourself.
1. Hire A Plugin Developer3
One of the best ways to customize a WordPress plugin is by hiring a plugin developer. There are many plugin developers listed in the WordPress directory. You can contact them and collaborate with world-class WordPress developers. It is quite easy to find a WordPress plugin developer.
Since it is not much work and doesn’t pay well or for the long term a lot of developers would be unwilling to collaborate but, you will eventually find people.
2. Creating A Supporting Plugin
If you are looking for added functionality in an already existing plugin go for this option. It is a cheap way to meet your needs and creating a supporting plugin takes very little time as it has very limited needs. Furthermore, you can extend a plugin to a current feature set without altering its base code.
However, to do so, you have to hire a WordPress developer as it also requires some technical knowledge.
3. Use Custom Hooks
Use the WordPress hooks to integrate some other feature into an existing plugin. You can add an action or a filter as per your need and improve the functionality of the website.
If the plugin you want to customize has the hook, you don’t have to do much to customize it. You can write your own plugin that works with these hooks. This way you don’t have to build a WordPress plugin right from scratch. If the hook is not present in the plugin code, you can contact a WordPress developer or write the code yourself. It may take some time, but it works.
Once the hook is added, you just have to manually patch each one upon the release of the new plugin update.
4. Override Callbacks
The last way to customize WordPress plugins is by override callbacks. You can alter the core functionality of the WordPress plugin with this method. You can completely change the way it functions with your website. It is a way to completely transform the plugin. By adding your own custom callbacks, you can create the exact functionality you desire.
We suggest you go for a web developer proficient in WordPress as this requires a good amount of technical knowledge and the working of a plugin.
#customize wordpress plugins #how to customize plugins in wordpress #how to customize wordpress plugins #how to edit plugins in wordpress #how to edit wordpress plugins #wordpress plugin customization
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Pandas-Bokeh provides a Bokeh plotting backend for Pandas, GeoPandas and Pyspark DataFrames, similar to the already existing Visualization feature of Pandas. Importing the library adds a complementary plotting method plot_bokeh() on DataFrames and Series.
With Pandas-Bokeh, creating stunning, interactive, HTML-based visualization is as easy as calling:
df.plot_bokeh()
Pandas-Bokeh also provides native support as a Pandas Plotting backend for Pandas >= 0.25. When Pandas-Bokeh is installed, switchting the default Pandas plotting backend to Bokeh can be done via:
pd.set_option('plotting.backend', 'pandas_bokeh')
More details about the new Pandas backend can be found below.
Please visit:
https://patrikhlobil.github.io/Pandas-Bokeh/
for an interactive version of the documentation below, where you can play with the dynamic Bokeh plots.
For more information have a look at the Examples below or at notebooks on the Github Repository of this project.
You can install Pandas-Bokeh from PyPI via pip
pip install pandas-bokeh
or conda:
conda install -c patrikhlobil pandas-bokeh
With the current release 0.5.5, Pandas-Bokeh officially supports Python 3.6 and newer. For more details, see Release Notes.
The Pandas-Bokeh library should be imported after Pandas, GeoPandas and/or Pyspark. After the import, one should define the plotting output, which can be:
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook(): Embeds the Plots in the cell outputs of the notebook. Ideal when working in Jupyter Notebooks.
pandas_bokeh.output_file(filename): Exports the plot to the provided filename as an HTML.
For more details about the plotting outputs, see the reference here or the Bokeh documentation.
import pandas as pd import pandas_bokeh pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
import pandas as pd import pandas_bokeh pandas_bokeh.output_file("Interactive Plot.html")
For pandas >= 0.25, a plotting backend switch is natively supported. It can be achievied by calling:
import pandas as pd
pd.set_option('plotting.backend', 'pandas_bokeh')
Now, the plotting API is accessible for a Pandas DataFrame via:
df.plot(...)
All additional functionalities of Pandas-Bokeh are then accessible at pd.plotting. So, setting the output to notebook is:
pd.plotting.output_notebook()
or calling the grid layout functionality:
pd.plotting.plot_grid(...)
Note: Backwards compatibility is kept since there will still be the df.plot_bokeh(...) methods for a DataFrame.
Supported plottypes are at the moment:
Also, check out the complementary chapter Outputs, Formatting & Layouts about:
This simple lineplot in Pandas-Bokeh already contains various interactive elements:
Consider the following simple example:
import numpy as np
np.random.seed(42)
df = pd.DataFrame({"Google": np.random.randn(1000)+0.2,
"Apple": np.random.randn(1000)+0.17},
index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = df.cumsum()
df = df + 50
df.plot_bokeh(kind="line") #equivalent to df.plot_bokeh.line()
Note, that similar to the regular pandas.DataFrame.plot method, there are also additional accessors to directly access the different plotting types like:
df.plot_bokeh(kind="line", ...)
→ df.plot_bokeh.line(...)
df.plot_bokeh(kind="bar", ...)
→ df.plot_bokeh.bar(...)
df.plot_bokeh(kind="hist", ...)
→ df.plot_bokeh.hist(...)
There are various optional parameters to tune the plots, for example:
kind: Which kind of plot should be produced. Currently supported are: "line", "point", "scatter", "bar" and "histogram". In the near future many more will be implemented as horizontal barplot, boxplots, pie-charts, etc.
x: Name of the column to use for the horizontal x-axis. If the x parameter is not specified, the index is used for the x-values of the plot. Alternative, also an array of values can be passed that has the same number of elements as the DataFrame.
y: Name of column or list of names of columns to use for the vertical y-axis.
figsize: Choose width & height of the plot
title: Sets title of the plot
xlim/ylim: Set visibler range of plot for x- and y-axis (also works for datetime x-axis)
xlabel/ylabel: Set x- and y-labels
logx/logy: Set log-scale on x-/y-axis
xticks/yticks: Explicitly set the ticks on the axes
color: Defines a single color for a plot.
colormap: Can be used to specify multiple colors to plot. Can be either a list of colors or the name of a Bokeh color palette
hovertool: If True a Hovertool is active, else if False no Hovertool is drawn.
hovertool_string: If specified, this string will be used for the hovertool (@{column} will be replaced by the value of the column for the element the mouse hovers over, see also Bokeh documentation and here)
toolbar_location: Specify the position of the toolbar location (None, "above", "below", "left" or "right"). Default: "right"
zooming: Enables/Disables zooming. Default: True
panning: Enables/Disables panning. Default: True
fontsize_label/fontsize_ticks/fontsize_title/fontsize_legend: Set fontsize of labels, ticks, title or legend (int or string of form "15pt")
rangetool Enables a range tool scroller. Default False
kwargs**: Optional keyword arguments of bokeh.plotting.figure.line
Try them out to get a feeling for the effects. Let us consider now:
df.plot_bokeh.line(
figsize=(800, 450),
y="Apple",
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(0, 400),
toolbar_location=None,
colormap=["red", "blue"],
hovertool_string=r"""<img
src='https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fa/Apple_logo_black.svg/170px-Apple_logo_black.svg.png'
height="42" alt="@imgs" width="42"
style="float: left; margin: 0px 15px 15px 0px;"
border="2"></img> Apple
<h4> Stock Price: </h4> @{Apple}""",
panning=False,
zooming=False)
For lineplots, as for many other plot-kinds, there are some special keyword arguments that only work for this plotting type. For lineplots, these are:
plot_data_points: Plot also the data points on the lines
plot_data_points_size: Determines the size of the data points
marker: Defines the point type (Default: "circle"). Possible values are: 'circle', 'square', 'triangle', 'asterisk', 'circle_x', 'square_x', 'inverted_triangle', 'x', 'circle_cross', 'square_cross', 'diamond', 'cross'
kwargs**: Optional keyword arguments of bokeh.plotting.figure.line```
Let us use this information to have another version of the same plot:
df.plot_bokeh.line(
figsize=(800, 450),
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(100, 200),
xlim=("2001-01-01", "2001-02-01"),
colormap=["red", "blue"],
plot_data_points=True,
plot_data_points_size=10,
marker="asterisk")
ts = pd.Series(np.random.randn(1000), index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(1000, 4), index=ts.index, columns=list('ABCD'))
df = df.cumsum()
df.plot_bokeh(rangetool=True)
Pointplot
If you just wish to draw the date points for curves, the pointplot option is the right choice. It also accepts the kwargs of bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter like marker or size:
import numpy as np
x = np.arange(-3, 3, 0.1)
y2 = x**2
y3 = x**3
df = pd.DataFrame({"x": x, "Parabula": y2, "Cube": y3})
df.plot_bokeh.point(
x="x",
xticks=range(-3, 4),
size=5,
colormap=["#009933", "#ff3399"],
title="Pointplot (Parabula vs. Cube)",
marker="x")
With a similar API as the line- & pointplots, one can generate a stepplot. Additional keyword arguments for this plot type are passes to bokeh.plotting.figure.step, e.g. mode (before, after, center), see the following example
import numpy as np
x = np.arange(-3, 3, 1)
y2 = x**2
y3 = x**3
df = pd.DataFrame({"x": x, "Parabula": y2, "Cube": y3})
df.plot_bokeh.step(
x="x",
xticks=range(-1, 1),
colormap=["#009933", "#ff3399"],
title="Pointplot (Parabula vs. Cube)",
figsize=(800,300),
fontsize_title=30,
fontsize_label=25,
fontsize_ticks=15,
fontsize_legend=5,
)
df.plot_bokeh.step(
x="x",
xticks=range(-1, 1),
colormap=["#009933", "#ff3399"],
title="Pointplot (Parabula vs. Cube)",
mode="after",
figsize=(800,300)
)
Note that the step-plot API of Bokeh does so far not support a hovertool functionality.
A basic scatterplot can be created using the kind="scatter" option. For scatterplots, the x and y parameters have to be specified and the following optional keyword argument is allowed:
category: Determines the category column to use for coloring the scatter points
kwargs**: Optional keyword arguments of bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter
Note, that the pandas.DataFrame.plot_bokeh() method return per default a Bokeh figure, which can be embedded in Dashboard layouts with other figures and Bokeh objects (for more details about (sub)plot layouts and embedding the resulting Bokeh plots as HTML click here).
In the example below, we use the building grid layout support of Pandas-Bokeh to display both the DataFrame (using a Bokeh DataTable) and the resulting scatterplot:
# Load Iris Dataset:
df = pd.read_csv(
r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/iris/iris.csv"
)
df = df.sample(frac=1)
# Create Bokeh-Table with DataFrame:
from bokeh.models.widgets import DataTable, TableColumn
from bokeh.models import ColumnDataSource
data_table = DataTable(
columns=[TableColumn(field=Ci, title=Ci) for Ci in df.columns],
source=ColumnDataSource(df),
height=300,
)
# Create Scatterplot:
p_scatter = df.plot_bokeh.scatter(
x="petal length (cm)",
y="sepal width (cm)",
category="species",
title="Iris DataSet Visualization",
show_figure=False,
)
# Combine Table and Scatterplot via grid layout:
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[data_table, p_scatter]], plot_width=400, plot_height=350)
A possible optional keyword parameters that can be passed to bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter is size. Below, we use the sepal length of the Iris data as reference for the size:
#Change one value to clearly see the effect of the size keyword
df.loc[13, "sepal length (cm)"] = 15
#Make scatterplot:
p_scatter = df.plot_bokeh.scatter(
x="petal length (cm)",
y="sepal width (cm)",
category="species",
title="Iris DataSet Visualization with Size Keyword",
size="sepal length (cm)")
In this example you can see, that the additional dimension sepal length cannot be used to clearly differentiate between the virginica and versicolor species.
The barplot API has no special keyword arguments, but accepts optional kwargs of bokeh.plotting.figure.vbar like alpha. It uses per default the index for the bar categories (however, also columns can be used as x-axis category using the x argument).
data = {
'fruits':
['Apples', 'Pears', 'Nectarines', 'Plums', 'Grapes', 'Strawberries'],
'2015': [2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 4],
'2016': [5, 3, 3, 2, 4, 6],
'2017': [3, 2, 4, 4, 5, 3]
}
df = pd.DataFrame(data).set_index("fruits")
p_bar = df.plot_bokeh.bar(
ylabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
alpha=0.6)
Using the stacked keyword argument you also maked stacked barplots:
p_stacked_bar = df.plot_bokeh.bar(
ylabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
stacked=True,
alpha=0.6)
Also horizontal versions of the above barplot are supported with the keyword kind="barh" or the accessor plot_bokeh.barh. You can still specify a column of the DataFrame as the bar category via the x argument if you do not wish to use the index.
#Reset index, such that "fruits" is now a column of the DataFrame:
df.reset_index(inplace=True)
#Create horizontal bar (via kind keyword):
p_hbar = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="barh",
x="fruits",
xlabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
alpha=0.6,
legend = "bottom_right",
show_figure=False)
#Create stacked horizontal bar (via barh accessor):
p_stacked_hbar = df.plot_bokeh.barh(
x="fruits",
stacked=True,
xlabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
alpha=0.6,
legend = "bottom_right",
show_figure=False)
#Plot all barplot examples in a grid:
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_bar, p_stacked_bar],
[p_hbar, p_stacked_hbar]],
plot_width=450)
For drawing histograms (kind="hist"), Pandas-Bokeh has a lot of customization features. Optional keyword arguments for histogram plots are:
bins: Determines bins to use for the histogram. If bins is an int, it defines the number of equal-width bins in the given range (10, by default). If bins is a sequence, it defines the bin edges, including the rightmost edge, allowing for non-uniform bin widths. If bins is a string, it defines the method used to calculate the optimal bin width, as defined by histogram_bin_edges.
histogram_type: Either "sidebyside", "topontop" or "stacked". Default: "topontop"
stacked: Boolean that overrides the histogram_type as "stacked" if given. Default: False
kwargs**: Optional keyword arguments of bokeh.plotting.figure.quad
Below examples of the different histogram types:
import numpy as np
df_hist = pd.DataFrame({
'a': np.random.randn(1000) + 1,
'b': np.random.randn(1000),
'c': np.random.randn(1000) - 1
},
columns=['a', 'b', 'c'])
#Top-on-Top Histogram (Default):
df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
bins=np.linspace(-5, 5, 41),
vertical_xlabel=True,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions (Top-on-Top)",
line_color="black")
#Side-by-Side Histogram (multiple bars share bin side-by-side) also accessible via
#kind="hist":
df_hist.plot_bokeh(
kind="hist",
bins=np.linspace(-5, 5, 41),
histogram_type="sidebyside",
vertical_xlabel=True,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions (Side-by-Side)",
line_color="black")
#Stacked histogram:
df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
bins=np.linspace(-5, 5, 41),
histogram_type="stacked",
vertical_xlabel=True,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions (Stacked)",
line_color="black")
Further, advanced keyword arguments for histograms are:
Their usage is shown in these examples:
p_hist = df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
y=["a", "b"],
bins=np.arange(-4, 6.5, 0.5),
normed=100,
vertical_xlabel=True,
ylabel="Share[%]",
title="Normal distributions (normed)",
show_average=True,
xlim=(-4, 6),
ylim=(0, 30),
show_figure=False)
p_hist_cum = df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
y=["a", "b"],
bins=np.arange(-4, 6.5, 0.5),
normed=100,
cumulative=True,
vertical_xlabel=True,
ylabel="Share[%]",
title="Normal distributions (normed & cumulative)",
show_figure=False)
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_hist, p_hist_cum]], plot_width=450, plot_height=300)
Areaplot (kind="area") can be either drawn on top of each other or stacked. The important parameters are:
stacked: If True, the areaplots are stacked. If False, plots are drawn on top of each other. Default: False
kwargs**: Optional keyword arguments of bokeh.plotting.figure.patch
Let us consider the energy consumption split by source that can be downloaded as DataFrame via:
df_energy = pd.read_csv(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/energy/energy.csv",
parse_dates=["Year"])
df_energy.head()
Year | Oil | Gas | Coal | Nuclear Energy | Hydroelectricity | Other Renewable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1970-01-01 | 2291.5 | 826.7 | 1467.3 | 17.7 | 265.8 | 5.8 |
1971-01-01 | 2427.7 | 884.8 | 1459.2 | 24.9 | 276.4 | 6.3 |
1972-01-01 | 2613.9 | 933.7 | 1475.7 | 34.1 | 288.9 | 6.8 |
1973-01-01 | 2818.1 | 978.0 | 1519.6 | 45.9 | 292.5 | 7.3 |
1974-01-01 | 2777.3 | 1001.9 | 1520.9 | 59.6 | 321.1 | 7.7 |
Creating the Areaplot can be achieved via:
df_energy.plot_bokeh.area(
x="Year",
stacked=True,
legend="top_left",
colormap=["brown", "orange", "black", "grey", "blue", "green"],
title="Worldwide energy consumption split by energy source",
ylabel="Million tonnes oil equivalent",
ylim=(0, 16000))
Note that the energy consumption of fossile energy is still increasing and renewable energy sources are still small in comparison 😢!!! However, when we norm the plot using the normed keyword, there is a clear trend towards renewable energies in the last decade:
df_energy.plot_bokeh.area(
x="Year",
stacked=True,
normed=100,
legend="bottom_left",
colormap=["brown", "orange", "black", "grey", "blue", "green"],
title="Worldwide energy consumption split by energy source",
ylabel="Million tonnes oil equivalent")
Pieplot
For Pieplots, let us consider a dataset showing the results of all Bundestags elections in Germany since 2002:
df_pie = pd.read_csv(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/Bundestagswahl/Bundestagswahl.csv")
df_pie
Partei | 2002 | 2005 | 2009 | 2013 | 2017 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CDU/CSU | 38.5 | 35.2 | 33.8 | 41.5 | 32.9 |
SPD | 38.5 | 34.2 | 23.0 | 25.7 | 20.5 |
FDP | 7.4 | 9.8 | 14.6 | 4.8 | 10.7 |
Grünen | 8.6 | 8.1 | 10.7 | 8.4 | 8.9 |
Linke/PDS | 4.0 | 8.7 | 11.9 | 8.6 | 9.2 |
AfD | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 12.6 |
Sonstige | 3.0 | 4.0 | 6.0 | 11.0 | 5.0 |
We can create a Pieplot of the last election in 2017 by specifying the "Partei" (german for party) column as the x column and the "2017" column as the y column for values:
df_pie.plot_bokeh.pie(
x="Partei",
y="2017",
colormap=["blue", "red", "yellow", "green", "purple", "orange", "grey"],
title="Results of German Bundestag Election 2017",
)
When you pass several columns to the y parameter (not providing the y-parameter assumes you plot all columns), multiple nested pieplots will be shown in one plot:
df_pie.plot_bokeh.pie(
x="Partei",
colormap=["blue", "red", "yellow", "green", "purple", "orange", "grey"],
title="Results of German Bundestag Elections [2002-2017]",
line_color="grey")
Mapplot
The mapplot method of Pandas-Bokeh allows for plotting geographic points stored in a Pandas DataFrame on an interactive map. For more advanced Geoplots for line and polygon shapes have a look at the Geoplots examples for the GeoPandas API of Pandas-Bokeh.
For mapplots, only (latitude, longitude) pairs in geographic projection (WGS84) can be plotted on a map. The basic API has the following 2 base parameters:
The other optional keyword arguments are discussed in the section about the GeoPandas API, e.g. category for coloring the points.
Below an example of plotting all cities for more than 1 million inhabitants:
df_mapplot = pd.read_csv(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/populated%20places/populated_places.csv")
df_mapplot.head()
name | pop_max | latitude | longitude | size |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mesa | 1085394 | 33.423915 | -111.736084 | 1.085394 |
Sharjah | 1103027 | 25.371383 | 55.406478 | 1.103027 |
Changwon | 1081499 | 35.219102 | 128.583562 | 1.081499 |
Sheffield | 1292900 | 53.366677 | -1.499997 | 1.292900 |
Abbottabad | 1183647 | 34.149503 | 73.199501 | 1.183647 |
df_mapplot["size"] = df_mapplot["pop_max"] / 1000000
df_mapplot.plot_bokeh.map(
x="longitude",
y="latitude",
hovertool_string="""<h2> @{name} </h2>
<h3> Population: @{pop_max} </h3>""",
tile_provider="STAMEN_TERRAIN_RETINA",
size="size",
figsize=(900, 600),
title="World cities with more than 1.000.000 inhabitants")
Pandas-Bokeh also allows for interactive plotting of Maps using GeoPandas by providing a geopandas.GeoDataFrame.plot_bokeh() method. It allows to plot the following geodata on a map :
Note: t is not possible to mix up the objects types, i.e. a GeoDataFrame with Points and Lines is for example not allowed.
Les us start with a simple example using the "World Borders Dataset" . Let us first import all neccessary libraries and read the shapefile:
import geopandas as gpd
import pandas as pd
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
#Read in GeoJSON from URL:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_states.head()
STATE_NAME | REGION | POPESTIMATE2010 | POPESTIMATE2011 | POPESTIMATE2012 | POPESTIMATE2013 | POPESTIMATE2014 | POPESTIMATE2015 | POPESTIMATE2016 | POPESTIMATE2017 | geometry |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hawaii | 4 | 1363817 | 1378323 | 1392772 | 1408038 | 1417710 | 1426320 | 1428683 | 1427538 | (POLYGON ((-160.0738033454681 22.0041773479577... |
Washington | 4 | 6741386 | 6819155 | 6890899 | 6963410 | 7046931 | 7152818 | 7280934 | 7405743 | (POLYGON ((-122.4020153103835 48.2252163723779... |
Montana | 4 | 990507 | 996866 | 1003522 | 1011921 | 1019931 | 1028317 | 1038656 | 1050493 | POLYGON ((-111.4754253002074 44.70216236909688... |
Maine | 1 | 1327568 | 1327968 | 1328101 | 1327975 | 1328903 | 1327787 | 1330232 | 1335907 | (POLYGON ((-69.77727626137293 44.0741483685119... |
North Dakota | 2 | 674518 | 684830 | 701380 | 722908 | 738658 | 754859 | 755548 | 755393 | POLYGON ((-98.73043728833767 45.93827137024809... |
Plotting the data on a map is as simple as calling:
df_states.plot_bokeh(simplify_shapes=10000)
We also passed the optional parameter simplify_shapes (~meter) to improve plotting performance (for a reference see shapely.object.simplify). The above geolayer thus has an accuracy of about 10km.
Many keyword arguments like xlabel, ylabel, xlim, ylim, title, colormap, hovertool, zooming, panning, ... for costumizing the plot are also available for the geoplotting API and can be uses as in the examples shown above. There are however also many other options especially for plotting geodata:
One of the most common usage of map plots are choropleth maps, where the color of a the objects is determined by the property of the object itself. There are 3 ways of drawing choropleth maps using Pandas-Bokeh, which are described below.
This is the simplest way. Just provide the category keyword for the selection of the property column:
Let us now draw the regions as a choropleth plot using the category keyword (at the moment, only numerical columns are supported for choropleth plots):
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
simplify_shapes=5000,
category="REGION",
show_colorbar=False,
colormap=["blue", "yellow", "green", "red"],
hovertool_columns=["STATE_NAME", "REGION"],
tile_provider="STAMEN_TERRAIN_RETINA")
When hovering over the states, the state-name and the region are shown as specified in the hovertool_columns argument.
By passing a list of column names of the GeoDataFrame as the dropdown keyword argument, a dropdown menu is shown above the map. This dropdown menu can be used to select the choropleth layer by the user. :
df_states["STATE_NAME_SMALL"] = df_states["STATE_NAME"].str.lower()
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
simplify_shapes=5000,
dropdown=["POPESTIMATE2010", "POPESTIMATE2017"],
colormap="Viridis",
hovertool_string="""
<img
src="https://www.states101.com/img/flags/gif/small/@STATE_NAME_SMALL.gif"
height="42" alt="@imgs" width="42"
style="float: left; margin: 0px 15px 15px 0px;"
border="2"></img>
<h2> @STATE_NAME </h2>
<h3> 2010: @POPESTIMATE2010 </h3>
<h3> 2017: @POPESTIMATE2017 </h3>""",
tile_provider_url=r"http://c.tile.stamen.com/watercolor/{Z}/{X}/{Y}.jpg",
tile_attribution='Map tiles by <a href="http://stamen.com">Stamen Design</a>, under <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0">CC BY 3.0</a>. Data by <a href="http://openstreetmap.org">OpenStreetMap</a>, under <a href="http://www.openstreetmap.org/copyright">ODbL</a>.'
)
Using hovertool_string, one can pass a string that can contain arbitrary HTML elements (including divs, images, ...) that is shown when hovering over the geographies (@{column} will be replaced by the value of the column for the element the mouse hovers over, see also Bokeh documentation).
Here, we also used an OSM tile server with watercolor style via tile_provider_url and added the attribution via tile_attribution.
Another option for interactive choropleth maps is the slider implementation of Pandas-Bokeh. The possible keyword arguments are here:
This can be used to display the change in population relative to the year 2010:
#Calculate change of population relative to 2010:
for i in range(8):
df_states["Delta_Population_201%d"%i] = ((df_states["POPESTIMATE201%d"%i] / df_states["POPESTIMATE2010"]) -1 ) * 100
#Specify slider columns:
slider_columns = ["Delta_Population_201%d"%i for i in range(8)]
#Specify slider-range (Maps "Delta_Population_2010" -> 2010,
# "Delta_Population_2011" -> 2011, ...):
slider_range = range(2010, 2018)
#Make slider plot:
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
simplify_shapes=5000,
slider=slider_columns,
slider_range=slider_range,
slider_name="Year",
colormap="Inferno",
hovertool_columns=["STATE_NAME"] + slider_columns,
title="Change of Population [%]")
If you wish to display multiple geolayers, you can pass the Bokeh figure of a Pandas-Bokeh plot via the figure keyword to the next plot_bokeh() call:
import geopandas as gpd
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
# Read in GeoJSONs from URL:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_cities = gpd.read_file(
r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/populated%20places/ne_10m_populated_places_simple_bigcities.geojson"
)
df_cities["size"] = df_cities.pop_max / 400000
#Plot shapes of US states (pass figure options to this initial plot):
figure = df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(800, 450),
simplify_shapes=10000,
show_figure=False,
xlim=[-170, -80],
ylim=[10, 70],
category="REGION",
colormap="Dark2",
legend="States",
show_colorbar=False,
)
#Plot cities as points on top of the US states layer by passing the figure:
df_cities.plot_bokeh(
figure=figure, # <== pass figure here!
category="pop_max",
colormap="Viridis",
colormap_uselog=True,
size="size",
hovertool_string="""<h1>@name</h1>
<h3>Population: @pop_max </h3>""",
marker="inverted_triangle",
legend="Cities",
)
Below, you can see an example that use Pandas-Bokeh to plot point data on a map. The plot shows all cities with a population larger than 1.000.000. For point plots, you can select the marker as keyword argument (since it is passed to bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter). Here an overview of all available marker types:
gdf = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/populated%20places/ne_10m_populated_places_simple_bigcities.geojson")
gdf["size"] = gdf.pop_max / 400000
gdf.plot_bokeh(
category="pop_max",
colormap="Viridis",
colormap_uselog=True,
size="size",
hovertool_string="""<h1>@name</h1>
<h3>Population: @pop_max </h3>""",
xlim=[-15, 35],
ylim=[30,60],
marker="inverted_triangle");
In a similar way, also GeoDataFrames with (multi)line shapes can be drawn using Pandas-Bokeh.
If you want to display the numerical labels on your colorbar with an alternative to the scientific format, you can pass in a one of the bokeh number string formats or an instance of one of the bokeh.models.formatters to the colorbar_tick_format
argument in the geoplot
An example of using the string format argument:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_states["STATE_NAME_SMALL"] = df_states["STATE_NAME"].str.lower()
# pass in a string format to colorbar_tick_format to display the ticks as 10m rather than 1e7
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
category="POPESTIMATE2017",
simplify_shapes=5000,
colormap="Inferno",
colormap_uselog=True,
colorbar_tick_format="0.0a")
An example of using the bokeh PrintfTickFormatter
:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_states["STATE_NAME_SMALL"] = df_states["STATE_NAME"].str.lower()
for i in range(8):
df_states["Delta_Population_201%d"%i] = ((df_states["POPESTIMATE201%d"%i] / df_states["POPESTIMATE2010"]) -1 ) * 100
# pass in a PrintfTickFormatter instance colorbar_tick_format to display the ticks with 2 decimal places
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
category="Delta_Population_2017",
simplify_shapes=5000,
colormap="Inferno",
colorbar_tick_format=PrintfTickFormatter(format="%4.2f"))
The pandas.DataFrame.plot_bokeh API has the following additional keyword arguments:
If you have a Bokeh figure or layout, you can also use the pandas_bokeh.embedded_html function to generate an embeddable HTML representation of the plot. This can be included into any valid HTML (note that this is not possible directly with the HTML generated by the pandas_bokeh.output_file output option, because it includes an HTML header). Let us consider the following simple example:
#Import Pandas and Pandas-Bokeh (if you do not specify an output option, the standard is
#output_file):
import pandas as pd
import pandas_bokeh
#Create DataFrame to Plot:
import numpy as np
x = np.arange(-10, 10, 0.1)
sin = np.sin(x)
cos = np.cos(x)
tan = np.tan(x)
df = pd.DataFrame({"x": x, "sin(x)": sin, "cos(x)": cos, "tan(x)": tan})
#Make Bokeh plot from DataFrame using Pandas-Bokeh. Do not show the plot, but export
#it to an embeddable HTML string:
html_plot = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="line",
x="x",
y=["sin(x)", "cos(x)", "tan(x)"],
xticks=range(-20, 20),
title="Trigonometric functions",
show_figure=False,
return_html=True,
ylim=(-1.5, 1.5))
#Write some HTML and embed the HTML plot below it. For production use, please use
#Templates and the awesome Jinja library.
html = r"""
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
MathJax.Hub.Config({tex2jax: {inlineMath: [['$','$'], ['\\(','\\)']]}});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<h1> Trigonometric functions </h1>
<p> The basic trigonometric functions are:</p>
<p>$ sin(x) $</p>
<p>$ cos(x) $</p>
<p>$ tan(x) = \frac{sin(x)}{cos(x)}$</p>
<p>Below is a plot that shows them</p>
""" + html_plot
#Export the HTML string to an external HTML file and show it:
with open("test.html" , "w") as f:
f.write(html)
import webbrowser
webbrowser.open("test.html")
This code will open up a webbrowser and show the following page. As you can see, the interactive Bokeh plot is embedded nicely into the HTML layout. The return_html option is ideal for the use in a templating engine like Jinja.
For single plots that have a number of x axis values or for larger monitors, you can auto scale the figure to the width of the entire jupyter cell by setting the sizing_mode
parameter.
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.rand(10, 4), columns=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']) df.plot_bokeh(kind="bar", figsize=(500, 200), sizing_mode="scale_width")
The figsize
parameter can be used to change the height and width as well as act as a scaling multiplier against the axis that is not being scaled.
To change the formats of numbers in the hovertool, use the number_format keyword argument. For a documentation about the format to pass, have a look at the Bokeh documentation.Let us consider some examples for the number 3.141592653589793:
Format | Output |
---|---|
0 | 3 |
0.000 | 3.141 |
0.00 $ | 3.14 $ |
This number format will be applied to all numeric columns of the hovertool. If you want to make a very custom or complicated hovertool, you should probably use the hovertool_string keyword argument, see e.g. this example. Below, we use the number_format parameter to specify the "Stock Price" format to 2 decimal digits and an additional $ sign.
import numpy as np
#Lineplot:
np.random.seed(42)
df = pd.DataFrame({
"Google": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.2,
"Apple": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.17
},
index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = df.cumsum()
df = df + 50
df.plot_bokeh(
kind="line",
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(0, 400),
colormap=["red", "blue"],
number_format="1.00 $")
If you want to suppress the scientific notation for axes, you can use the disable_scientific_axes parameter, which accepts one of "x", "y", "xy":
df = pd.DataFrame({"Animal": ["Mouse", "Rabbit", "Dog", "Tiger", "Elefant", "Wale"],
"Weight [g]": [19, 3000, 40000, 200000, 6000000, 50000000]})
p_scientific = df.plot_bokeh(x="Animal", y="Weight [g]", show_figure=False)
p_non_scientific = df.plot_bokeh(x="Animal", y="Weight [g]", disable_scientific_axes="y", show_figure=False,)
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_scientific, p_non_scientific]], plot_width = 450)
As shown in the Scatterplot Example, combining plots with plots or other HTML elements is straighforward in Pandas-Bokeh due to the layout capabilities of Bokeh. The easiest way to generate a dashboard layout is using the pandas_bokeh.plot_grid method (which is an extension of bokeh.layouts.gridplot):
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
#Barplot:
data = {
'fruits':
['Apples', 'Pears', 'Nectarines', 'Plums', 'Grapes', 'Strawberries'],
'2015': [2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 4],
'2016': [5, 3, 3, 2, 4, 6],
'2017': [3, 2, 4, 4, 5, 3]
}
df = pd.DataFrame(data).set_index("fruits")
p_bar = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="bar",
ylabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
show_figure=False)
#Lineplot:
np.random.seed(42)
df = pd.DataFrame({
"Google": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.2,
"Apple": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.17
},
index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = df.cumsum()
df = df + 50
p_line = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="line",
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(0, 400),
colormap=["red", "blue"],
show_figure=False)
#Scatterplot:
from sklearn.datasets import load_iris
iris = load_iris()
df = pd.DataFrame(iris["data"])
df.columns = iris["feature_names"]
df["species"] = iris["target"]
df["species"] = df["species"].map(dict(zip(range(3), iris["target_names"])))
p_scatter = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="scatter",
x="petal length (cm)",
y="sepal width (cm)",
category="species",
title="Iris DataSet Visualization",
show_figure=False)
#Histogram:
df_hist = pd.DataFrame({
'a': np.random.randn(1000) + 1,
'b': np.random.randn(1000),
'c': np.random.randn(1000) - 1
},
columns=['a', 'b', 'c'])
p_hist = df_hist.plot_bokeh(
kind="hist",
bins=np.arange(-6, 6.5, 0.5),
vertical_xlabel=True,
normed=100,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions",
show_figure=False)
#Make Dashboard with Grid Layout:
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_line, p_bar],
[p_scatter, p_hist]], plot_width=450)
Using a combination of row and column elements (see also Bokeh Layouts) allow for a very easy general arrangement of elements. An alternative layout to the one above is:
p_line.plot_width = 900
p_hist.plot_width = 900
layout = pandas_bokeh.column(p_line,
pandas_bokeh.row(p_scatter, p_bar),
p_hist)
pandas_bokeh.show(layout)
Release Notes
Release Notes can be found here.
Contributing to Pandas-Bokeh
If you wish to contribute to the development of Pandas-Bokeh
you can follow the instructions on the CONTRIBUTING.md.
Author: PatrikHlobil
Source Code: https://github.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh
License: MIT License
1561523460
This Matplotlib cheat sheet introduces you to the basics that you need to plot your data with Python and includes code samples.
Data visualization and storytelling with your data are essential skills that every data scientist needs to communicate insights gained from analyses effectively to any audience out there.
For most beginners, the first package that they use to get in touch with data visualization and storytelling is, naturally, Matplotlib: it is a Python 2D plotting library that enables users to make publication-quality figures. But, what might be even more convincing is the fact that other packages, such as Pandas, intend to build more plotting integration with Matplotlib as time goes on.
However, what might slow down beginners is the fact that this package is pretty extensive. There is so much that you can do with it and it might be hard to still keep a structure when you're learning how to work with Matplotlib.
DataCamp has created a Matplotlib cheat sheet for those who might already know how to use the package to their advantage to make beautiful plots in Python, but that still want to keep a one-page reference handy. Of course, for those who don't know how to work with Matplotlib, this might be the extra push be convinced and to finally get started with data visualization in Python.
You'll see that this cheat sheet presents you with the six basic steps that you can go through to make beautiful plots.
Check out the infographic by clicking on the button below:
With this handy reference, you'll familiarize yourself in no time with the basics of Matplotlib: you'll learn how you can prepare your data, create a new plot, use some basic plotting routines to your advantage, add customizations to your plots, and save, show and close the plots that you make.
What might have looked difficult before will definitely be more clear once you start using this cheat sheet! Use it in combination with the Matplotlib Gallery, the documentation.
Matplotlib
Matplotlib is a Python 2D plotting library which produces publication-quality figures in a variety of hardcopy formats and interactive environments across platforms.
>>> import numpy as np
>>> x = np.linspace(0, 10, 100)
>>> y = np.cos(x)
>>> z = np.sin(x)
>>> data = 2 * np.random.random((10, 10))
>>> data2 = 3 * np.random.random((10, 10))
>>> Y, X = np.mgrid[-3:3:100j, -3:3:100j]
>>> U = 1 X** 2 + Y
>>> V = 1 + X Y**2
>>> from matplotlib.cbook import get_sample_data
>>> img = np.load(get_sample_data('axes_grid/bivariate_normal.npy'))
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
>>> fig = plt.figure()
>>> fig2 = plt.figure(figsize=plt.figaspect(2.0))
>>> fig.add_axes()
>>> ax1 = fig.add_subplot(221) #row-col-num
>>> ax3 = fig.add_subplot(212)
>>> fig3, axes = plt.subplots(nrows=2,ncols=2)
>>> fig4, axes2 = plt.subplots(ncols=3)
>>> plt.savefig('foo.png') #Save figures
>>> plt.savefig('foo.png', transparent=True) #Save transparent figures
>>> plt.show()
>>> fig, ax = plt.subplots()
>>> lines = ax.plot(x,y) #Draw points with lines or markers connecting them
>>> ax.scatter(x,y) #Draw unconnected points, scaled or colored
>>> axes[0,0].bar([1,2,3],[3,4,5]) #Plot vertical rectangles (constant width)
>>> axes[1,0].barh([0.5,1,2.5],[0,1,2]) #Plot horiontal rectangles (constant height)
>>> axes[1,1].axhline(0.45) #Draw a horizontal line across axes
>>> axes[0,1].axvline(0.65) #Draw a vertical line across axes
>>> ax.fill(x,y,color='blue') #Draw filled polygons
>>> ax.fill_between(x,y,color='yellow') #Fill between y values and 0
>>> fig, ax = plt.subplots()
>>> im = ax.imshow(img, #Colormapped or RGB arrays
cmap= 'gist_earth',
interpolation= 'nearest',
vmin=-2,
vmax=2)
>>> axes2[0].pcolor(data2) #Pseudocolor plot of 2D array
>>> axes2[0].pcolormesh(data) #Pseudocolor plot of 2D array
>>> CS = plt.contour(Y,X,U) #Plot contours
>>> axes2[2].contourf(data1) #Plot filled contours
>>> axes2[2]= ax.clabel(CS) #Label a contour plot
>>> axes[0,1].arrow(0,0,0.5,0.5) #Add an arrow to the axes
>>> axes[1,1].quiver(y,z) #Plot a 2D field of arrows
>>> axes[0,1].streamplot(X,Y,U,V) #Plot a 2D field of arrows
>>> ax1.hist(y) #Plot a histogram
>>> ax3.boxplot(y) #Make a box and whisker plot
>>> ax3.violinplot(z) #Make a violin plot
y-axis
x-axis
The basic steps to creating plots with matplotlib are:
1 Prepare Data
2 Create Plot
3 Plot
4 Customized Plot
5 Save Plot
6 Show Plot
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
>>> x = [1,2,3,4] #Step 1
>>> y = [10,20,25,30]
>>> fig = plt.figure() #Step 2
>>> ax = fig.add_subplot(111) #Step 3
>>> ax.plot(x, y, color= 'lightblue', linewidth=3) #Step 3, 4
>>> ax.scatter([2,4,6],
[5,15,25],
color= 'darkgreen',
marker= '^' )
>>> ax.set_xlim(1, 6.5)
>>> plt.savefig('foo.png' ) #Step 5
>>> plt.show() #Step 6
>>> plt.cla() #Clear an axis
>>> plt.clf(). #Clear the entire figure
>>> plt.close(). #Close a window
>>> plt.plot(x, x, x, x**2, x, x** 3)
>>> ax.plot(x, y, alpha = 0.4)
>>> ax.plot(x, y, c= 'k')
>>> fig.colorbar(im, orientation= 'horizontal')
>>> im = ax.imshow(img,
cmap= 'seismic' )
>>> fig, ax = plt.subplots()
>>> ax.scatter(x,y,marker= ".")
>>> ax.plot(x,y,marker= "o")
>>> plt.plot(x,y,linewidth=4.0)
>>> plt.plot(x,y,ls= 'solid')
>>> plt.plot(x,y,ls= '--')
>>> plt.plot(x,y,'--' ,x**2,y**2,'-.' )
>>> plt.setp(lines,color= 'r',linewidth=4.0)
>>> ax.text(1,
-2.1,
'Example Graph',
style= 'italic' )
>>> ax.annotate("Sine",
xy=(8, 0),
xycoords= 'data',
xytext=(10.5, 0),
textcoords= 'data',
arrowprops=dict(arrowstyle= "->",
connectionstyle="arc3"),)
>>> plt.title(r '$sigma_i=15$', fontsize=20)
Limits & Autoscaling
>>> ax.margins(x=0.0,y=0.1) #Add padding to a plot
>>> ax.axis('equal') #Set the aspect ratio of the plot to 1
>>> ax.set(xlim=[0,10.5],ylim=[-1.5,1.5]) #Set limits for x-and y-axis
>>> ax.set_xlim(0,10.5) #Set limits for x-axis
Legends
>>> ax.set(title= 'An Example Axes', #Set a title and x-and y-axis labels
ylabel= 'Y-Axis',
xlabel= 'X-Axis')
>>> ax.legend(loc= 'best') #No overlapping plot elements
Ticks
>>> ax.xaxis.set(ticks=range(1,5), #Manually set x-ticks
ticklabels=[3,100, 12,"foo" ])
>>> ax.tick_params(axis= 'y', #Make y-ticks longer and go in and out
direction= 'inout',
length=10)
Subplot Spacing
>>> fig3.subplots_adjust(wspace=0.5, #Adjust the spacing between subplots
hspace=0.3,
left=0.125,
right=0.9,
top=0.9,
bottom=0.1)
>>> fig.tight_layout() #Fit subplot(s) in to the figure area
Axis Spines
>>> ax1.spines[ 'top'].set_visible(False) #Make the top axis line for a plot invisible
>>> ax1.spines['bottom' ].set_position(( 'outward',10)) #Move the bottom axis line outward
Have this Cheat Sheet at your fingertips
Original article source at https://www.datacamp.com
#matplotlib #cheatsheet #python
1642995900
Pandas-Bokeh provides a Bokeh plotting backend for Pandas, GeoPandas and Pyspark DataFrames, similar to the already existing Visualization feature of Pandas. Importing the library adds a complementary plotting method plot_bokeh() on DataFrames and Series.
With Pandas-Bokeh, creating stunning, interactive, HTML-based visualization is as easy as calling:
df.plot_bokeh()
Pandas-Bokeh also provides native support as a Pandas Plotting backend for Pandas >= 0.25. When Pandas-Bokeh is installed, switchting the default Pandas plotting backend to Bokeh can be done via:
pd.set_option('plotting.backend', 'pandas_bokeh')
More details about the new Pandas backend can be found below.
Please visit:
https://patrikhlobil.github.io/Pandas-Bokeh/
for an interactive version of the documentation below, where you can play with the dynamic Bokeh plots.
For more information have a look at the Examples below or at notebooks on the Github Repository of this project.
You can install Pandas-Bokeh from PyPI via pip
pip install pandas-bokeh
or conda:
conda install -c patrikhlobil pandas-bokeh
With the current release 0.5.5, Pandas-Bokeh officially supports Python 3.6 and newer. For more details, see Release Notes.
The Pandas-Bokeh library should be imported after Pandas, GeoPandas and/or Pyspark. After the import, one should define the plotting output, which can be:
For more details about the plotting outputs, see the reference here or the Bokeh documentation.
import pandas as pd
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
import pandas as pd
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_file("Interactive Plot.html")
For pandas >= 0.25, a plotting backend switch is natively supported. It can be achievied by calling:
import pandas as pd
pd.set_option('plotting.backend', 'pandas_bokeh')
Now, the plotting API is accessible for a Pandas DataFrame via:
df.plot(...)
All additional functionalities of Pandas-Bokeh are then accessible at pd.plotting. So, setting the output to notebook is:
pd.plotting.output_notebook()
or calling the grid layout functionality:
pd.plotting.plot_grid(...)
Note: Backwards compatibility is kept since there will still be the df.plot_bokeh(...) methods for a DataFrame.
Supported plottypes are at the moment:
Also, check out the complementary chapter Outputs, Formatting & Layouts about:
This simple lineplot in Pandas-Bokeh already contains various interactive elements:
Consider the following simple example:
import numpy as np
np.random.seed(42)
df = pd.DataFrame({"Google": np.random.randn(1000)+0.2,
"Apple": np.random.randn(1000)+0.17},
index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = df.cumsum()
df = df + 50
df.plot_bokeh(kind="line") #equivalent to df.plot_bokeh.line()
Note, that similar to the regular pandas.DataFrame.plot method, there are also additional accessors to directly access the different plotting types like:
df.plot_bokeh(kind="line", ...)
→ df.plot_bokeh.line(...)
df.plot_bokeh(kind="bar", ...)
→ df.plot_bokeh.bar(...)
df.plot_bokeh(kind="hist", ...)
→ df.plot_bokeh.hist(...)
There are various optional parameters to tune the plots, for example:
Try them out to get a feeling for the effects. Let us consider now:
df.plot_bokeh.line(
figsize=(800, 450),
y="Apple",
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(0, 400),
toolbar_location=None,
colormap=["red", "blue"],
hovertool_string=r"""<img
src='https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/fa/Apple_logo_black.svg/170px-Apple_logo_black.svg.png'
height="42" alt="@imgs" width="42"
style="float: left; margin: 0px 15px 15px 0px;"
border="2"></img> Apple
<h4> Stock Price: </h4> @{Apple}""",
panning=False,
zooming=False)
For lineplots, as for many other plot-kinds, there are some special keyword arguments that only work for this plotting type. For lineplots, these are:
Let us use this information to have another version of the same plot:
df.plot_bokeh.line(
figsize=(800, 450),
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(100, 200),
xlim=("2001-01-01", "2001-02-01"),
colormap=["red", "blue"],
plot_data_points=True,
plot_data_points_size=10,
marker="asterisk")
ts = pd.Series(np.random.randn(1000), index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(1000, 4), index=ts.index, columns=list('ABCD'))
df = df.cumsum()
df.plot_bokeh(rangetool=True)
If you just wish to draw the date points for curves, the pointplot option is the right choice. It also accepts the kwargs of bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter like marker or size:
import numpy as np
x = np.arange(-3, 3, 0.1)
y2 = x**2
y3 = x**3
df = pd.DataFrame({"x": x, "Parabula": y2, "Cube": y3})
df.plot_bokeh.point(
x="x",
xticks=range(-3, 4),
size=5,
colormap=["#009933", "#ff3399"],
title="Pointplot (Parabula vs. Cube)",
marker="x")
With a similar API as the line- & pointplots, one can generate a stepplot. Additional keyword arguments for this plot type are passes to bokeh.plotting.figure.step, e.g. mode (before, after, center), see the following example
import numpy as np
x = np.arange(-3, 3, 1)
y2 = x**2
y3 = x**3
df = pd.DataFrame({"x": x, "Parabula": y2, "Cube": y3})
df.plot_bokeh.step(
x="x",
xticks=range(-1, 1),
colormap=["#009933", "#ff3399"],
title="Pointplot (Parabula vs. Cube)",
figsize=(800,300),
fontsize_title=30,
fontsize_label=25,
fontsize_ticks=15,
fontsize_legend=5,
)
df.plot_bokeh.step(
x="x",
xticks=range(-1, 1),
colormap=["#009933", "#ff3399"],
title="Pointplot (Parabula vs. Cube)",
mode="after",
figsize=(800,300)
)
Note that the step-plot API of Bokeh does so far not support a hovertool functionality.
A basic scatterplot can be created using the kind="scatter" option. For scatterplots, the x and y parameters have to be specified and the following optional keyword argument is allowed:
category: Determines the category column to use for coloring the scatter points
kwargs**: Optional keyword arguments of bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter
Note, that the pandas.DataFrame.plot_bokeh() method return per default a Bokeh figure, which can be embedded in Dashboard layouts with other figures and Bokeh objects (for more details about (sub)plot layouts and embedding the resulting Bokeh plots as HTML click here).
In the example below, we use the building grid layout support of Pandas-Bokeh to display both the DataFrame (using a Bokeh DataTable) and the resulting scatterplot:
# Load Iris Dataset:
df = pd.read_csv(
r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/iris/iris.csv"
)
df = df.sample(frac=1)
# Create Bokeh-Table with DataFrame:
from bokeh.models.widgets import DataTable, TableColumn
from bokeh.models import ColumnDataSource
data_table = DataTable(
columns=[TableColumn(field=Ci, title=Ci) for Ci in df.columns],
source=ColumnDataSource(df),
height=300,
)
# Create Scatterplot:
p_scatter = df.plot_bokeh.scatter(
x="petal length (cm)",
y="sepal width (cm)",
category="species",
title="Iris DataSet Visualization",
show_figure=False,
)
# Combine Table and Scatterplot via grid layout:
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[data_table, p_scatter]], plot_width=400, plot_height=350)
A possible optional keyword parameters that can be passed to bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter is size. Below, we use the sepal length of the Iris data as reference for the size:
#Change one value to clearly see the effect of the size keyword
df.loc[13, "sepal length (cm)"] = 15
#Make scatterplot:
p_scatter = df.plot_bokeh.scatter(
x="petal length (cm)",
y="sepal width (cm)",
category="species",
title="Iris DataSet Visualization with Size Keyword",
size="sepal length (cm)")
In this example you can see, that the additional dimension sepal length cannot be used to clearly differentiate between the virginica and versicolor species.
The barplot API has no special keyword arguments, but accepts optional kwargs of bokeh.plotting.figure.vbar like alpha. It uses per default the index for the bar categories (however, also columns can be used as x-axis category using the x argument).
data = {
'fruits':
['Apples', 'Pears', 'Nectarines', 'Plums', 'Grapes', 'Strawberries'],
'2015': [2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 4],
'2016': [5, 3, 3, 2, 4, 6],
'2017': [3, 2, 4, 4, 5, 3]
}
df = pd.DataFrame(data).set_index("fruits")
p_bar = df.plot_bokeh.bar(
ylabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
alpha=0.6)
Using the stacked keyword argument you also maked stacked barplots:
p_stacked_bar = df.plot_bokeh.bar(
ylabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
stacked=True,
alpha=0.6)
Also horizontal versions of the above barplot are supported with the keyword kind="barh" or the accessor plot_bokeh.barh. You can still specify a column of the DataFrame as the bar category via the x argument if you do not wish to use the index.
#Reset index, such that "fruits" is now a column of the DataFrame:
df.reset_index(inplace=True)
#Create horizontal bar (via kind keyword):
p_hbar = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="barh",
x="fruits",
xlabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
alpha=0.6,
legend = "bottom_right",
show_figure=False)
#Create stacked horizontal bar (via barh accessor):
p_stacked_hbar = df.plot_bokeh.barh(
x="fruits",
stacked=True,
xlabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
alpha=0.6,
legend = "bottom_right",
show_figure=False)
#Plot all barplot examples in a grid:
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_bar, p_stacked_bar],
[p_hbar, p_stacked_hbar]],
plot_width=450)
For drawing histograms (kind="hist"), Pandas-Bokeh has a lot of customization features. Optional keyword arguments for histogram plots are:
Below examples of the different histogram types:
import numpy as np
df_hist = pd.DataFrame({
'a': np.random.randn(1000) + 1,
'b': np.random.randn(1000),
'c': np.random.randn(1000) - 1
},
columns=['a', 'b', 'c'])
#Top-on-Top Histogram (Default):
df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
bins=np.linspace(-5, 5, 41),
vertical_xlabel=True,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions (Top-on-Top)",
line_color="black")
#Side-by-Side Histogram (multiple bars share bin side-by-side) also accessible via
#kind="hist":
df_hist.plot_bokeh(
kind="hist",
bins=np.linspace(-5, 5, 41),
histogram_type="sidebyside",
vertical_xlabel=True,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions (Side-by-Side)",
line_color="black")
#Stacked histogram:
df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
bins=np.linspace(-5, 5, 41),
histogram_type="stacked",
vertical_xlabel=True,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions (Stacked)",
line_color="black")
Further, advanced keyword arguments for histograms are:
Their usage is shown in these examples:
p_hist = df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
y=["a", "b"],
bins=np.arange(-4, 6.5, 0.5),
normed=100,
vertical_xlabel=True,
ylabel="Share[%]",
title="Normal distributions (normed)",
show_average=True,
xlim=(-4, 6),
ylim=(0, 30),
show_figure=False)
p_hist_cum = df_hist.plot_bokeh.hist(
y=["a", "b"],
bins=np.arange(-4, 6.5, 0.5),
normed=100,
cumulative=True,
vertical_xlabel=True,
ylabel="Share[%]",
title="Normal distributions (normed & cumulative)",
show_figure=False)
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_hist, p_hist_cum]], plot_width=450, plot_height=300)
Areaplot (kind="area") can be either drawn on top of each other or stacked. The important parameters are:
stacked: If True, the areaplots are stacked. If False, plots are drawn on top of each other. Default: False
kwargs**: Optional keyword arguments of bokeh.plotting.figure.patch
Let us consider the energy consumption split by source that can be downloaded as DataFrame via:
df_energy = pd.read_csv(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/energy/energy.csv",
parse_dates=["Year"])
df_energy.head()
Year | Oil | Gas | Coal | Nuclear Energy | Hydroelectricity | Other Renewable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1970-01-01 | 2291.5 | 826.7 | 1467.3 | 17.7 | 265.8 | 5.8 |
1971-01-01 | 2427.7 | 884.8 | 1459.2 | 24.9 | 276.4 | 6.3 |
1972-01-01 | 2613.9 | 933.7 | 1475.7 | 34.1 | 288.9 | 6.8 |
1973-01-01 | 2818.1 | 978.0 | 1519.6 | 45.9 | 292.5 | 7.3 |
1974-01-01 | 2777.3 | 1001.9 | 1520.9 | 59.6 | 321.1 | 7.7 |
Creating the Areaplot can be achieved via:
df_energy.plot_bokeh.area(
x="Year",
stacked=True,
legend="top_left",
colormap=["brown", "orange", "black", "grey", "blue", "green"],
title="Worldwide energy consumption split by energy source",
ylabel="Million tonnes oil equivalent",
ylim=(0, 16000))
Note that the energy consumption of fossile energy is still increasing and renewable energy sources are still small in comparison 😢!!! However, when we norm the plot using the normed keyword, there is a clear trend towards renewable energies in the last decade:
df_energy.plot_bokeh.area(
x="Year",
stacked=True,
normed=100,
legend="bottom_left",
colormap=["brown", "orange", "black", "grey", "blue", "green"],
title="Worldwide energy consumption split by energy source",
ylabel="Million tonnes oil equivalent")
For Pieplots, let us consider a dataset showing the results of all Bundestags elections in Germany since 2002:
df_pie = pd.read_csv(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/Bundestagswahl/Bundestagswahl.csv")
df_pie
Partei | 2002 | 2005 | 2009 | 2013 | 2017 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CDU/CSU | 38.5 | 35.2 | 33.8 | 41.5 | 32.9 |
SPD | 38.5 | 34.2 | 23.0 | 25.7 | 20.5 |
FDP | 7.4 | 9.8 | 14.6 | 4.8 | 10.7 |
Grünen | 8.6 | 8.1 | 10.7 | 8.4 | 8.9 |
Linke/PDS | 4.0 | 8.7 | 11.9 | 8.6 | 9.2 |
AfD | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 12.6 |
Sonstige | 3.0 | 4.0 | 6.0 | 11.0 | 5.0 |
We can create a Pieplot of the last election in 2017 by specifying the "Partei" (german for party) column as the x column and the "2017" column as the y column for values:
df_pie.plot_bokeh.pie(
x="Partei",
y="2017",
colormap=["blue", "red", "yellow", "green", "purple", "orange", "grey"],
title="Results of German Bundestag Election 2017",
)
When you pass several columns to the y parameter (not providing the y-parameter assumes you plot all columns), multiple nested pieplots will be shown in one plot:
df_pie.plot_bokeh.pie(
x="Partei",
colormap=["blue", "red", "yellow", "green", "purple", "orange", "grey"],
title="Results of German Bundestag Elections [2002-2017]",
line_color="grey")
The mapplot method of Pandas-Bokeh allows for plotting geographic points stored in a Pandas DataFrame on an interactive map. For more advanced Geoplots for line and polygon shapes have a look at the Geoplots examples for the GeoPandas API of Pandas-Bokeh.
For mapplots, only (latitude, longitude) pairs in geographic projection (WGS84) can be plotted on a map. The basic API has the following 2 base parameters:
The other optional keyword arguments are discussed in the section about the GeoPandas API, e.g. category for coloring the points.
Below an example of plotting all cities for more than 1 million inhabitants:
df_mapplot = pd.read_csv(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/populated%20places/populated_places.csv")
df_mapplot.head()
name | pop_max | latitude | longitude | size |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mesa | 1085394 | 33.423915 | -111.736084 | 1.085394 |
Sharjah | 1103027 | 25.371383 | 55.406478 | 1.103027 |
Changwon | 1081499 | 35.219102 | 128.583562 | 1.081499 |
Sheffield | 1292900 | 53.366677 | -1.499997 | 1.292900 |
Abbottabad | 1183647 | 34.149503 | 73.199501 | 1.183647 |
df_mapplot["size"] = df_mapplot["pop_max"] / 1000000
df_mapplot.plot_bokeh.map(
x="longitude",
y="latitude",
hovertool_string="""<h2> @{name} </h2>
<h3> Population: @{pop_max} </h3>""",
tile_provider="STAMEN_TERRAIN_RETINA",
size="size",
figsize=(900, 600),
title="World cities with more than 1.000.000 inhabitants")
Pandas-Bokeh also allows for interactive plotting of Maps using GeoPandas by providing a geopandas.GeoDataFrame.plot_bokeh() method. It allows to plot the following geodata on a map :
Note: t is not possible to mix up the objects types, i.e. a GeoDataFrame with Points and Lines is for example not allowed.
Les us start with a simple example using the "World Borders Dataset" . Let us first import all neccessary libraries and read the shapefile:
import geopandas as gpd
import pandas as pd
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
#Read in GeoJSON from URL:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_states.head()
STATE_NAME | REGION | POPESTIMATE2010 | POPESTIMATE2011 | POPESTIMATE2012 | POPESTIMATE2013 | POPESTIMATE2014 | POPESTIMATE2015 | POPESTIMATE2016 | POPESTIMATE2017 | geometry |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hawaii | 4 | 1363817 | 1378323 | 1392772 | 1408038 | 1417710 | 1426320 | 1428683 | 1427538 | (POLYGON ((-160.0738033454681 22.0041773479577... |
Washington | 4 | 6741386 | 6819155 | 6890899 | 6963410 | 7046931 | 7152818 | 7280934 | 7405743 | (POLYGON ((-122.4020153103835 48.2252163723779... |
Montana | 4 | 990507 | 996866 | 1003522 | 1011921 | 1019931 | 1028317 | 1038656 | 1050493 | POLYGON ((-111.4754253002074 44.70216236909688... |
Maine | 1 | 1327568 | 1327968 | 1328101 | 1327975 | 1328903 | 1327787 | 1330232 | 1335907 | (POLYGON ((-69.77727626137293 44.0741483685119... |
North Dakota | 2 | 674518 | 684830 | 701380 | 722908 | 738658 | 754859 | 755548 | 755393 | POLYGON ((-98.73043728833767 45.93827137024809... |
Plotting the data on a map is as simple as calling:
df_states.plot_bokeh(simplify_shapes=10000)
We also passed the optional parameter simplify_shapes (~meter) to improve plotting performance (for a reference see shapely.object.simplify). The above geolayer thus has an accuracy of about 10km.
Many keyword arguments like xlabel, ylabel, xlim, ylim, title, colormap, hovertool, zooming, panning, ... for costumizing the plot are also available for the geoplotting API and can be uses as in the examples shown above. There are however also many other options especially for plotting geodata:
One of the most common usage of map plots are choropleth maps, where the color of a the objects is determined by the property of the object itself. There are 3 ways of drawing choropleth maps using Pandas-Bokeh, which are described below.
This is the simplest way. Just provide the category keyword for the selection of the property column:
Let us now draw the regions as a choropleth plot using the category keyword (at the moment, only numerical columns are supported for choropleth plots):
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
simplify_shapes=5000,
category="REGION",
show_colorbar=False,
colormap=["blue", "yellow", "green", "red"],
hovertool_columns=["STATE_NAME", "REGION"],
tile_provider="STAMEN_TERRAIN_RETINA")
When hovering over the states, the state-name and the region are shown as specified in the hovertool_columns argument.
By passing a list of column names of the GeoDataFrame as the dropdown keyword argument, a dropdown menu is shown above the map. This dropdown menu can be used to select the choropleth layer by the user. :
df_states["STATE_NAME_SMALL"] = df_states["STATE_NAME"].str.lower()
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
simplify_shapes=5000,
dropdown=["POPESTIMATE2010", "POPESTIMATE2017"],
colormap="Viridis",
hovertool_string="""
<img
src="https://www.states101.com/img/flags/gif/small/@STATE_NAME_SMALL.gif"
height="42" alt="@imgs" width="42"
style="float: left; margin: 0px 15px 15px 0px;"
border="2"></img>
<h2> @STATE_NAME </h2>
<h3> 2010: @POPESTIMATE2010 </h3>
<h3> 2017: @POPESTIMATE2017 </h3>""",
tile_provider_url=r"http://c.tile.stamen.com/watercolor/{Z}/{X}/{Y}.jpg",
tile_attribution='Map tiles by <a href="http://stamen.com">Stamen Design</a>, under <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0">CC BY 3.0</a>. Data by <a href="http://openstreetmap.org">OpenStreetMap</a>, under <a href="http://www.openstreetmap.org/copyright">ODbL</a>.'
)
Using hovertool_string, one can pass a string that can contain arbitrary HTML elements (including divs, images, ...) that is shown when hovering over the geographies (@{column} will be replaced by the value of the column for the element the mouse hovers over, see also Bokeh documentation).
Here, we also used an OSM tile server with watercolor style via tile_provider_url and added the attribution via tile_attribution.
Another option for interactive choropleth maps is the slider implementation of Pandas-Bokeh. The possible keyword arguments are here:
This can be used to display the change in population relative to the year 2010:
#Calculate change of population relative to 2010:
for i in range(8):
df_states["Delta_Population_201%d"%i] = ((df_states["POPESTIMATE201%d"%i] / df_states["POPESTIMATE2010"]) -1 ) * 100
#Specify slider columns:
slider_columns = ["Delta_Population_201%d"%i for i in range(8)]
#Specify slider-range (Maps "Delta_Population_2010" -> 2010,
# "Delta_Population_2011" -> 2011, ...):
slider_range = range(2010, 2018)
#Make slider plot:
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
simplify_shapes=5000,
slider=slider_columns,
slider_range=slider_range,
slider_name="Year",
colormap="Inferno",
hovertool_columns=["STATE_NAME"] + slider_columns,
title="Change of Population [%]")
If you wish to display multiple geolayers, you can pass the Bokeh figure of a Pandas-Bokeh plot via the figure keyword to the next plot_bokeh() call:
import geopandas as gpd
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
# Read in GeoJSONs from URL:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_cities = gpd.read_file(
r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/populated%20places/ne_10m_populated_places_simple_bigcities.geojson"
)
df_cities["size"] = df_cities.pop_max / 400000
#Plot shapes of US states (pass figure options to this initial plot):
figure = df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(800, 450),
simplify_shapes=10000,
show_figure=False,
xlim=[-170, -80],
ylim=[10, 70],
category="REGION",
colormap="Dark2",
legend="States",
show_colorbar=False,
)
#Plot cities as points on top of the US states layer by passing the figure:
df_cities.plot_bokeh(
figure=figure, # <== pass figure here!
category="pop_max",
colormap="Viridis",
colormap_uselog=True,
size="size",
hovertool_string="""<h1>@name</h1>
<h3>Population: @pop_max </h3>""",
marker="inverted_triangle",
legend="Cities",
)
Below, you can see an example that use Pandas-Bokeh to plot point data on a map. The plot shows all cities with a population larger than 1.000.000. For point plots, you can select the marker as keyword argument (since it is passed to bokeh.plotting.figure.scatter). Here an overview of all available marker types:
gdf = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/populated%20places/ne_10m_populated_places_simple_bigcities.geojson")
gdf["size"] = gdf.pop_max / 400000
gdf.plot_bokeh(
category="pop_max",
colormap="Viridis",
colormap_uselog=True,
size="size",
hovertool_string="""<h1>@name</h1>
<h3>Population: @pop_max </h3>""",
xlim=[-15, 35],
ylim=[30,60],
marker="inverted_triangle");
In a similar way, also GeoDataFrames with (multi)line shapes can be drawn using Pandas-Bokeh.
If you want to display the numerical labels on your colorbar with an alternative to the scientific format, you can pass in a one of the bokeh number string formats or an instance of one of the bokeh.models.formatters to the colorbar_tick_format
argument in the geoplot
An example of using the string format argument:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_states["STATE_NAME_SMALL"] = df_states["STATE_NAME"].str.lower()
# pass in a string format to colorbar_tick_format to display the ticks as 10m rather than 1e7
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
category="POPESTIMATE2017",
simplify_shapes=5000,
colormap="Inferno",
colormap_uselog=True,
colorbar_tick_format="0.0a")
An example of using the bokeh PrintfTickFormatter
:
df_states = gpd.read_file(r"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh/master/docs/Testdata/states/states.geojson")
df_states["STATE_NAME_SMALL"] = df_states["STATE_NAME"].str.lower()
for i in range(8):
df_states["Delta_Population_201%d"%i] = ((df_states["POPESTIMATE201%d"%i] / df_states["POPESTIMATE2010"]) -1 ) * 100
# pass in a PrintfTickFormatter instance colorbar_tick_format to display the ticks with 2 decimal places
df_states.plot_bokeh(
figsize=(900, 600),
category="Delta_Population_2017",
simplify_shapes=5000,
colormap="Inferno",
colorbar_tick_format=PrintfTickFormatter(format="%4.2f"))
The pandas.DataFrame.plot_bokeh API has the following additional keyword arguments:
If you have a Bokeh figure or layout, you can also use the pandas_bokeh.embedded_html function to generate an embeddable HTML representation of the plot. This can be included into any valid HTML (note that this is not possible directly with the HTML generated by the pandas_bokeh.output_file output option, because it includes an HTML header). Let us consider the following simple example:
#Import Pandas and Pandas-Bokeh (if you do not specify an output option, the standard is
#output_file):
import pandas as pd
import pandas_bokeh
#Create DataFrame to Plot:
import numpy as np
x = np.arange(-10, 10, 0.1)
sin = np.sin(x)
cos = np.cos(x)
tan = np.tan(x)
df = pd.DataFrame({"x": x, "sin(x)": sin, "cos(x)": cos, "tan(x)": tan})
#Make Bokeh plot from DataFrame using Pandas-Bokeh. Do not show the plot, but export
#it to an embeddable HTML string:
html_plot = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="line",
x="x",
y=["sin(x)", "cos(x)", "tan(x)"],
xticks=range(-20, 20),
title="Trigonometric functions",
show_figure=False,
return_html=True,
ylim=(-1.5, 1.5))
#Write some HTML and embed the HTML plot below it. For production use, please use
#Templates and the awesome Jinja library.
html = r"""
<script type="text/x-mathjax-config">
MathJax.Hub.Config({tex2jax: {inlineMath: [['$','$'], ['\\(','\\)']]}});
</script>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.mathjax.org/mathjax/latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML">
</script>
<h1> Trigonometric functions </h1>
<p> The basic trigonometric functions are:</p>
<p>$ sin(x) $</p>
<p>$ cos(x) $</p>
<p>$ tan(x) = \frac{sin(x)}{cos(x)}$</p>
<p>Below is a plot that shows them</p>
""" + html_plot
#Export the HTML string to an external HTML file and show it:
with open("test.html" , "w") as f:
f.write(html)
import webbrowser
webbrowser.open("test.html")
This code will open up a webbrowser and show the following page. As you can see, the interactive Bokeh plot is embedded nicely into the HTML layout. The return_html option is ideal for the use in a templating engine like Jinja.
For single plots that have a number of x axis values or for larger monitors, you can auto scale the figure to the width of the entire jupyter cell by setting the sizing_mode
parameter.
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.rand(10, 4), columns=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'])
df.plot_bokeh(kind="bar", figsize=(500, 200), sizing_mode="scale_width")
The figsize
parameter can be used to change the height and width as well as act as a scaling multiplier against the axis that is not being scaled.
To change the formats of numbers in the hovertool, use the number_format keyword argument. For a documentation about the format to pass, have a look at the Bokeh documentation.Let us consider some examples for the number 3.141592653589793:
Format | Output |
---|---|
0 | 3 |
0.000 | 3.141 |
0.00 $ | 3.14 $ |
This number format will be applied to all numeric columns of the hovertool. If you want to make a very custom or complicated hovertool, you should probably use the hovertool_string keyword argument, see e.g. this example. Below, we use the number_format parameter to specify the "Stock Price" format to 2 decimal digits and an additional $ sign.
import numpy as np
#Lineplot:
np.random.seed(42)
df = pd.DataFrame({
"Google": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.2,
"Apple": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.17
},
index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = df.cumsum()
df = df + 50
df.plot_bokeh(
kind="line",
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(0, 400),
colormap=["red", "blue"],
number_format="1.00 $")
If you want to suppress the scientific notation for axes, you can use the disable_scientific_axes parameter, which accepts one of "x", "y", "xy":
df = pd.DataFrame({"Animal": ["Mouse", "Rabbit", "Dog", "Tiger", "Elefant", "Wale"],
"Weight [g]": [19, 3000, 40000, 200000, 6000000, 50000000]})
p_scientific = df.plot_bokeh(x="Animal", y="Weight [g]", show_figure=False)
p_non_scientific = df.plot_bokeh(x="Animal", y="Weight [g]", disable_scientific_axes="y", show_figure=False,)
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_scientific, p_non_scientific]], plot_width = 450)
As shown in the Scatterplot Example, combining plots with plots or other HTML elements is straighforward in Pandas-Bokeh due to the layout capabilities of Bokeh. The easiest way to generate a dashboard layout is using the pandas_bokeh.plot_grid method (which is an extension of bokeh.layouts.gridplot):
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
import pandas_bokeh
pandas_bokeh.output_notebook()
#Barplot:
data = {
'fruits':
['Apples', 'Pears', 'Nectarines', 'Plums', 'Grapes', 'Strawberries'],
'2015': [2, 1, 4, 3, 2, 4],
'2016': [5, 3, 3, 2, 4, 6],
'2017': [3, 2, 4, 4, 5, 3]
}
df = pd.DataFrame(data).set_index("fruits")
p_bar = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="bar",
ylabel="Price per Unit [€]",
title="Fruit prices per Year",
show_figure=False)
#Lineplot:
np.random.seed(42)
df = pd.DataFrame({
"Google": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.2,
"Apple": np.random.randn(1000) + 0.17
},
index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
df = df.cumsum()
df = df + 50
p_line = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="line",
title="Apple vs Google",
xlabel="Date",
ylabel="Stock price [$]",
yticks=[0, 100, 200, 300, 400],
ylim=(0, 400),
colormap=["red", "blue"],
show_figure=False)
#Scatterplot:
from sklearn.datasets import load_iris
iris = load_iris()
df = pd.DataFrame(iris["data"])
df.columns = iris["feature_names"]
df["species"] = iris["target"]
df["species"] = df["species"].map(dict(zip(range(3), iris["target_names"])))
p_scatter = df.plot_bokeh(
kind="scatter",
x="petal length (cm)",
y="sepal width (cm)",
category="species",
title="Iris DataSet Visualization",
show_figure=False)
#Histogram:
df_hist = pd.DataFrame({
'a': np.random.randn(1000) + 1,
'b': np.random.randn(1000),
'c': np.random.randn(1000) - 1
},
columns=['a', 'b', 'c'])
p_hist = df_hist.plot_bokeh(
kind="hist",
bins=np.arange(-6, 6.5, 0.5),
vertical_xlabel=True,
normed=100,
hovertool=False,
title="Normal distributions",
show_figure=False)
#Make Dashboard with Grid Layout:
pandas_bokeh.plot_grid([[p_line, p_bar],
[p_scatter, p_hist]], plot_width=450)
Using a combination of row and column elements (see also Bokeh Layouts) allow for a very easy general arrangement of elements. An alternative layout to the one above is:
p_line.plot_width = 900
p_hist.plot_width = 900
layout = pandas_bokeh.column(p_line,
pandas_bokeh.row(p_scatter, p_bar),
p_hist)
pandas_bokeh.show(layout)
Release Notes can be found here.
Contributing to Pandas-Bokeh
If you wish to contribute to the development of Pandas-Bokeh
you can follow the instructions on the CONTRIBUTING.md.
Download Details:
Author: PatrikHlobil
Source Code: https://github.com/PatrikHlobil/Pandas-Bokeh
License: MIT License
1598777890
Working on the Spigot Hub plugin we began in the last coding session. Will be posting the code soon.
#python #programming #development