6

I have a list of 150 variables that have the following possible values:

   domain = ['val1', 'val2', 'val2'] 

I want to convert these to be used as color for a matplot scatter plot. Currently I wrote a function to manually map from my data domain to a color range, something like:

  colors = ['aquamarine','purple','blue']
  color_map = dict(zip(domain, colors)) 
  colorize = lambda x : color_map[x]
  c = list(map(colorize, labels))

  #and then I explicitly pass the array to scatter: 
  scatter = ax.scatter(t_x,
                 t_y,
                 c=c,
                 alpha=0.3,
                 cmap=plt.cm.cool,
                 s = 500)

This works, however, I must specify the color individual colors that each element of my domain gets mapped to. Is there a way to have matplotlib to this for me, so I can take advantage of cmaps? D3 has a way of mapping from a data domain to color range.

2 Answers 2

4

You can import a colormap from matplotlib.cm, then select individual colors from it by calling it as a function. It accepts input numbers from 0 to 1 (or from 1 to 255, it's a little weird) and gives you a color along the colormap.

import matplotlib
from matplotlib.cm import cool

def get_n_colors(n):
    return[ cool(float(i)/n) for i in range(n) ]

Then you can generate colors for your categorical variable:

colors = get_n_colors(len(domain))
1
  • 1
    I had to change a bit for my exact situation, however, the cool(float(i)/n) worked exactly as I needed it to. Thanks. Oct 20, 2015 at 21:28
2

This is an adapted version of @C_Z_'s answer, made to be more readily usable for plotting:

# x, y, and category_values should all be the same length (the # of data points)

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from matplotlib.cm import viridis

num_categories = len(set(category_values))

colors = [viridis(float(i)/num_categories) for i in category_values]
plt.scatter(x, y, color=colors)
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