With say 3 rows of subplots in matplotlib, xlabels of one row can overlap the title of the next;
one has to fiddle with pl.subplots_adjust( hspace ), annoying.
Is there a recipe for hspace that prevents overlaps and works for any nrow ?

""" matplotlib xlabels overlap titles ? """
import sys
import numpy as np
import pylab as pl

nrow = 3
hspace = .4  # of plot height, titles and xlabels both fall within this ??
exec "\n".join( sys.argv[1:] )  # nrow= ...

y = np.arange(10)
pl.subplots_adjust( hspace=hspace )

for jrow in range( 1, nrow+1 ):
    pl.subplot( nrow, 1, jrow )
    pl.plot( y**jrow )
    pl.title( 5 * ("title %d " % jrow) )
    pl.xlabel( 5 * ("xlabel %d " % jrow) )

pl.show()

My versions: matplotlib 0.99.1.1, python 2.6.4, Mac osx 10.4.11,
backend: Qt4Agg (TkAgg => Exception in Tkinter callback)

(For many extra points, can anyone outline how matplotlib's packer / spacer works, along the lines of chapter 17 "the packer" in the Tcl/Tk book ?)

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47% accept rate
You probably want to file a bug/wishlist entry for this on the matplotlib bugtracker sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=80706 – honk Mar 18 '10 at 1:16
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3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

I find this quite tricky, but there is some information on here. It is rather cumbersome, and requires finding out about what space individual elements (ticklabels) take up...

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accept, but cumbersome indeed -- mttiw, more trouble than it's worth – Denis Apr 2 '10 at 10:45
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You can use plt.subplots_adjust to change the spacing between the subplots Link

subplots_adjust(left=None, bottom=None, right=None, top=None, wspace=None, hspace=None)

left  = 0.125  # the left side of the subplots of the figure
right = 0.9    # the right side of the subplots of the figure
bottom = 0.1   # the bottom of the subplots of the figure
top = 0.9      # the top of the subplots of the figure
wspace = 0.2   # the amount of width reserved for blank space between subplots
hspace = 0.2   # the amount of height reserved for white space between subplots
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The question said "one has to fiddle with pl.subplots_adjust( hspace ), annoying." – Denis Jul 1 '11 at 8:23
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The link posted by Jose has been updated and pylab now has a tight_layout() function that does this automatically (in matplotlib version 1.1.0).

http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/api/pyplot_api.html#matplotlib.pyplot.tight_layout

http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/users/tight_layout_guide.html#plotting-guide-tight-layout

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