# How to create 'normal' looking axis labels using latex in matplotlib

I have the following piece of code to create axis labels with German umlauts:

plt.xlabel('Daten')
plt.ylabel(r'$H\ddot{a}ufigkeit$')


which basically works, and prints the a-umlaut correctly, But the font of the x and y labels are now different, as the x label is printed in math mode. Changing the second line to

plt.ylabel(r'$\textrm{H\ddot{a}ufigkeit}$')


should work as far as I know (in order to create a rm like font instead of the math mode font), but gives a python error:

matplotlib.pyparsing.ParseFatalException: Expected end of math '$'  How can I fix this issue in order to have the same font on both axis, but with umlauts possible? - ## 1 Answer The non-math umlaut is \": plt.ylabel(r'H\"{a}ufigkeit')  If you need \ddot only put the $ around that:

plt.ylabel(r'H$\ddot{a}$ufigkeit')


As an aside, the \textrm command only works in text mode. The math-mode equivalent is \mathrm:

plt.ylabel(r'$\mathrm{H\ddot{a}ufigkeit}$')


UPDATE

All of the above assume that you have told matplotlib to render with tex. To do this, add the following at the top of your code:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.rc('text', usetex=True)

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Your suggestion does not work. The label is now: H\"{a}ufigkeit instead of Häufigkeit. Maybe I need to setup something special for matplotlib...? –  Alex Sep 19 '13 at 18:52
Have you told matplotlib to render with tex? –  SethMMorton Sep 19 '13 at 18:56
Right, I new I forgot something. Thanks a lot... –  Alex Sep 19 '13 at 19:06