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I have a number of functions each of which creates one or more figures. As the figures are created, a reference is added to a dictionary, like so:

self.figures['figureKey'] = figure()

In another function, I would like to iterate this dictionary and save each of the figures; it would be nice to use the dictionary key as part or all of the filename. I have been able to iterate the dictionary but the figure() function seems to require an integer corresponding to the figure number, rejecting the reference given by the key.

    for fig in self.figures:
        figure(self.figures[fig])  #does not work
        figure(fig)                #also does not work
        savefig(fig)               #seems to let me use the key as a filename--nice

I have also attempted to use `get_fignums()' and iterate the returned array, but that loses the association with the key names. Perhaps it is possible to dereference the figure number from the figure pointer? Anyone have a slick approach to this?

Please resist the tendency to begin an answer with the phrase "why don't you just..." The answer to that is that it was not an obvious approach to me. I'm sort of new at this.

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3 Answers 3

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Maybe I'm confused as to what you're doing... If you just want to save the figure, why not use the fig object's savefig method?

pyplot.savefig saves the active figure, but using a particular figure instance's fig.savefig method saves that particular figure, regardless of which one is active.

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np

x = np.arange(10)

figures = [plt.figure() for _ in range(10)]

for i, fig in enumerate(figures):
    ax = fig.add_subplot(111)
    ax.plot(x, i*x)
    ax.axis('equal')

for i, fig in enumerate(figures):
    fig.savefig('temp_slope_%02i.png' % i)
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  • That is useful to know that each instance has it's own .savefig method May 11, 2011 at 19:15
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I might be missing something here (not really a matplotlib user), but aren't you storing the figure objects themselves in the dictionary? If so, you can iterate over both the keys and the values using for key, value in self.figures.items(), and then get the figure number using the number attribute.

As a test, I tried the following using the interactive interpreter:

>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
>>> figures = {}
>>> figures['name1'] = plt.figure()
>>> plt.plot([1, 2, 3])
>>> figures['name2'] = plt.figure()
>>> plt.plot([6, 5, 4])
>>> for key, figure in figures.items():
...     print 'Saving figure #%d as %s.' % (figure.number, key)
...     plt.figure(figure.number)
...     plt.savefig(key)
...
Saving figure #2 as name2
Saving figure #1 as name1

And it appeared to work: 2 plots (one monotonically increasing and one monotonically decreasing) were saved as the PNG files name1.png and name2.png in the current directory.

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  • my understanding is that savefig() saves the current figure, which is set by calling figure() on an existing figure number. So what you're doing (if I interpret the docs right) is saving the same figure under three different names.
    – senderle
    May 11, 2011 at 0:40
  • @senderle, you are correct. Adding some data to the plot showed my mistake. I've updated my answer with an example that does actually work on my system.
    – Blair
    May 11, 2011 at 1:05
  • I did not know about the number attribute. That does the trick nicely. May 11, 2011 at 19:15
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You can get the figure number from the figure instance. From the docs:

The returned figure objects have a number attribute holding this number.

So to access a figure by number, you could do this:

figure(self.figures[fig].number)

I don't have matplotlib installed just now to test that though.

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  • Your solution worked like a charm. Thanks for the reference to the documentation, although, other than saying that there is a "number" attribute, I ave not found it tabularized or in the documentation for pyplot_api or figure_api. I suppose this must not be the places to find exhaustive descriptions of the classes. May 11, 2011 at 19:10
  • @2NinerRomeo, that was also the only place I found any mention of the number attribute -- I even wonder if the number attribute is added by pyplot.figure().
    – senderle
    May 11, 2011 at 19:12

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