3

I just created the following heatmap. enter image description here

In the legend, the max (vmax) is set to 0.10. I did this because I wanted to avoid colouring more "extreme" values. But in the legend, is it possible to modify it and write ">= 0.10" So adding a "greater or equal to"?

1
  • can you make a reproducible example?
    – Paul H
    May 5, 2016 at 15:59

1 Answer 1

8

So this is a pretty hacky solution and think there's almost certainly a smarter way to do this and hopefully @mwaskom can weigh in, but I was able to access the color-bar object by explicitly passing it as a parameter when calling the heatmap function like so:

import seaborn as sns; sns.set()
import numpy as np; np.random.seed(0)
from matplotlib import pyplot as plt

fig, ax = plt.subplots()
fig.set_size_inches(14, 7)
uniform_data = np.random.rand(10, 12)
cbar_ax = fig.add_axes([.92, .3, .02, .4])
sns.heatmap(uniform_data, ax=ax, cbar_ax=cbar_ax)

Producing this:

enter image description here

I was able to find the ticks themselves in ax.get_yticks():

In [41]: cbar_ax.get_yticks()
Out [41]: array([ 0.19823662,  0.39918933,  0.60014204,  0.80109475])

The labels themselves are strings:

In [44]: [x.get_text() for x in cbar_ax.get_yticklabels()]
Out [44]: [u'0.2', u'0.4', u'0.6', u'0.8']

So we can simply change the text objects in our yticklabels for the last element and hopefully get a corrected axis, here's my final code:

fig, ax = plt.subplots()
fig.set_size_inches(14, 7)
uniform_data = np.random.rand(10, 12)
#add an axis to our plot for our cbar, tweak the numbers there to play with the sizing. 
cbar_ax = fig.add_axes([.92, .3, .02, .4])
#assign the cbar to be in that axis using the cbar_ax kw
sns.heatmap(uniform_data, ax=ax, cbar_ax=cbar_ax)

#hacky solution to change the highest (last) yticklabel
changed_val = ">= " + cbar_ax.get_yticklabels()[-1].get_text()

#make a new list of labels with the changed value.
labels = [x.get_text() for x in cbar_ax.get_yticklabels()[:-1]] + [changed_val]

#set the yticklabels to the new labels we just created. 
cbar_ax.set_yticklabels(labels)

Which produces:

enter image description here

Some additional resources on the subject can be found here, where I drew some info from mwaskom's response.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.