12

Matplotlib has a feature where if you hold down the "x" or "y" keys it constrains panning or zooming to the corresponding axis.

Is there a way to cause this to be the default? For some reason my CPU does not allow touchpad movement when a letter key is held down. And I only want the x-axis to be pan/zoomed, not the y-axis.


edit: found the pan/zoom function at https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib/blob/master/lib/matplotlib/axes.py#L3001

which contains an internal function format_deltas. But I have no idea how to override the Axes class with a subclass when Axes objects are created automatically from Figure objects.

2 Answers 2

15

It is possible to use your own axes class. In your case you can inherit from matplotlib.axes.Axes and change the drag_pan method to always act as though the 'x' key is being pressed. However the zooming doesn't seem to be defined in that class. The following will only allow x axis panning:

import matplotlib
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt    

class My_Axes(matplotlib.axes.Axes):
    name = "My_Axes"
    def drag_pan(self, button, key, x, y):
        matplotlib.axes.Axes.drag_pan(self, button, 'x', x, y) # pretend key=='x'

matplotlib.projections.register_projection(My_Axes)

figure = plt.figure()
ax = figure.add_subplot(111, projection="My_Axes")
ax.plot([0, 1, 2], [0, 1, 0])
plt.show()

For the zooming, you may have to look at the toolbar control itself. The NavigationToolbar2 class has the drag_zoom method which seems to be what's relevant here, but tracking down how that works is quickly complicated by the fact that the different backends all have their own versions (e.g. NavigationToolbar2TkAgg

edit

You can monkeypatch the desired behaviour in:

import types
def press_zoom(self, event):
    event.key='x'
    matplotlib.backends.backend_tkagg.NavigationToolbar2TkAgg.press_zoom(self,event)
figure.canvas.toolbar.press_zoom=types.MethodType(press_zoom, figure.canvas.toolbar)

You could do it properly and make a subclass of the toolbar, but you have to then create instances of Figure, FigureCanvas and your NavigationToolbar and put them in a Tk app or something. I don't think there's a really straightforward way to just use your own toolbar with the simple plotting interface.

3
  • sweet! I'll have to try it. The part I was having trouble with was the subclassing + how to hook it into add_subplot.
    – Jason S
    May 23, 2013 at 15:55
  • the "monkeypatch" approach almost worked, but somehow the assignment of the press_zoom method to individual instances doesn't stick (press zoom button, then unpress it, then press it again, now the zoom doesn't work). I got it to work by changing the class method slot.
    – Jason S
    May 23, 2013 at 17:55
  • Hmm that sounds pretty weird, it doesn't seem to unstick for me though I haven't tested it very comprehensively. And I see your alternative using _zoom_mode, probably much more sensible than changing event.key
    – simonb
    May 23, 2013 at 19:04
5

simonb's approach worked but I had to tweak it for the press_zoom behavior, so that it keeps the press_zoom method a feature of the class, not the instance, but I added a hook to fixup the per-instance behavior.

import types

def constrainXPanZoomBehavior(fig):
    # make sure all figures' toolbars of this class call a postPressZoomHandler()
    def overrideZoomMode(oldZoom, target):
        def newZoom(self, event):
            oldZoom(self, event)
            if hasattr(self, 'postPressZoomHandler'):
                self.postPressZoomHandler()
        return newZoom
    def overrideToolbarZoom(fig, methodname, functransform, *args):
        toolbar = fig.canvas.toolbar
        oldMethod = getattr(toolbar.__class__, methodname)
        newMethod = functransform(oldMethod, toolbar, *args)
        setattr(toolbar.__class__, methodname, newMethod)
    overrideToolbarZoom(fig, 'press_zoom', overrideZoomMode)

    # for this specific instance, override the zoom mode to 'x' always
    def postPressZoomHandler(self):
        self._zoom_mode = 'x'
    fig.canvas.toolbar.postPressZoomHandler = types.MethodType(postPressZoomHandler, fig.canvas.toolbar)
    return fig

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.