# write an upright mu in matplotlib

I'm trying to put an upright mu in my axes labels, but matplotlib just shows a square box.

Example code:

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
from matplotlib import pyplot as plt

plt.plot([1,2],[3,4])
plt.xlabel(u"A distance (μm)")
plt.show()


The weird thing is: when I run this directly in the interactive python interpreter that spyder has open when it starts, the μ shows up fine. When I run it from a .py file in a dedicated interpreter however, it shows up as '?' or as a square.

What does spyder's python interpreter do that I'm not? What do I need to import to make it work regardless of where the script is run from?

note: I know I could also do something like "A distance ($\mu$m)$, but that creates an italic mu which is typographically incorrect for units... - Do the terminal and editor you're using support utf-8? Does your locale enable utf8? – Brian Cain Sep 9 at 13:21 You can avoid italic characters by writing '$\mathrm{...}\$'. Sadly for you, this has no effect on the \mu. You might want to change the LaTeX Preamble to include a package like upgreek to work around that? –  Faultier Sep 9 at 13:26
Perhaps this question (and answer) help? –  Evert Sep 9 at 13:32
@BrianCain: I don't know... The editor and interpreter do I suppose, since the character shows up ok when I type (ctrl-v) it. How can I check whether or not my locale enables is? –  jkokorian Sep 9 at 13:35
@Faultier: I know, I've done that in the past, but it's complicated and slower. A unicode μ would just make everything much easier. –  jkokorian Sep 9 at 13:36

The suggestion from Non-ASCII characters in Matplotlib to add this line did the trick:

plt.rc('font', **{'sans-serif' : 'Arial', 'family' : 'sans-serif'})


plt.rcParams.update({'font.sans-serif': 'Arial', 'font.family': 'sans-serif'})

setting text.usetex=True will let you use \textmu as well. –  tcaswell Sep 9 at 20:06