How can the line width of the error bar caps in Matplotlib be changed?

I tried the following code:

(_, caplines, _) = matplotlib.pyplot.errorbar(
    data['distance'], data['energy'], yerr=data['energy sigma'],
    capsize=10, elinewidth=3)

for capline in caplines:
    capline.set_linewidth(10)
    capline.set_color('red')

pp.draw()

Unfortunately, this updates the color of the caps, but does not update the line width of the caps!

The resulting effect is similar to the "fat error bar lines / thin caps" in the following image: enter image description here

It would be nice to have "fat" bar caps, in the case; how can this be done, in Matplotlib? Drawing the bar caps "manually", one by one with plot() would work, but a simpler alternative would be best.

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1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted

EOL, you were very close..,

distance = [1,3,7,9]
energy = [10,20,30,40]
sigma = [1,3,2,5]

(_, caps, _) = plt.errorbar(distance, energy, sigma, capsize=20, elinewidth=3)

for cap in caps:
    cap.set_color('red')
    cap.set_markeredgewidth(10)

plt.show

enter image description here

set_markeredgewidth sets the width of the cap lines.

Matplotlib objects have so many attributes that often it is difficult to remember the right ones for a given object. IPython is a very useful tool for introspecting matplotlib. I used it to analyze the properties of the 2Dlines correponding to the error cap lines and I found that and other marker properties.

Cheers

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Thanks a lot! We used the same method, but I somehow missed set_markeredgewidth. :) So, the caps are actually markers, for Matplotlib, as opposed to 2D lines. It seems to me that the capsize argument of errorbar() is equivalent to the cap.set_markersize(), so the latter could be removed, no? – EOL Oct 2 '11 at 16:08
While you were commenting I was also realizing that. I changed also the picture. – joaquin Oct 2 '11 at 16:11
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