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In a related question, the answer to a similar question suggested using something like:

ax.set_yticks(scipy.arange(-1.5,1.5,0.25))

for setting the y axis ticks.

In my code, I have a list X (of an arbitrary range) I want to plot. I want to set the y axis so that it would show exactly, say, 5 ticks. My current code looks something like-

ax.set_yticks(scipy.arange(min(X),max(X),(max(X)-min(X))/5))

Which seems quite messy. Is there a cleaner way of setting the number of ticks on the y axis without using the min/max functions?


Moreover, I'd like to show only "round" numbers (say, numbers with the least number of significant digits possible to plot 5 values such that all values are between them) on the axis if possible (even if it means that the plot won't use the entire range).

e.g. if

X=[0.166, 0.164, 0.172, 0.169, 0.188, 0.184, 0.191, 0.183, 0.192]

Then I'd like the axis ticks to be

{0.16, 0.17, 0.18, 0.19, 0.2}

,rather then the ugly numbers I get using (max(X)-min(X))/5) increments

What is the cleanest way of acheiving this?

1 Answer 1

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You are looking for the MaxNLocator (Documentation)

Example:

ax.yaxis.set_major_locator(MaxNLocator(nbins=5-1))

This should give you 5 ticks at nice locations.

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