71

The labels on my horizontal colorbar are too close together and I don't want to reduce text size further:

cbar = plt.colorbar(shrink=0.8, orientation='horizontal', extend='both', pad=0.02)
cbar.ax.tick_params(labelsize=8)

horizontal colorbar with bad labels

I'd like to preserve all ticks, but remove every other label.

Most examples I've found pass a user-specified list of strings to cbar.set_ticklabels(). I'm looking for a general solution.

I played around with variations of

cbar.set_ticklabels(cbar.get_ticklabels()[::2])

and

cbar.ax.xaxis.set_major_locator(matplotlib.ticker.MaxNLocator(nbins=4))

but I haven't found the magic combination.

I know there must be a clean way to do this using a locator object.

3

5 Answers 5

96

For loop the ticklabels, and call set_visible():

for label in cbar.ax.xaxis.get_ticklabels()[::2]:
    label.set_visible(False)
7
  • 9
    Just as an alternate way of doing the exact same thing: You can do plt.setp(cbar.ax.get_xticklabels()[::2], visible=False). This is identical, of course, but it can be handy to at least know about setp. Then again, a for loop is clearer and instantly readable, while setp isn't clear unless you're familiar with matplotlib. Dec 3, 2013 at 2:27
  • 3
    If your colorbar is oriented vertically, you will need to use cbar.ax.yaxis.get_ticklabels() instead
    – aseagram
    Jul 27, 2014 at 2:09
  • 3
    Also, you can of course use get_xticklabels()[1::2] to hide very other label. This will usually be necessary if the start of your axis does not coincide with a tick but you still want to keep the first (visible) tick visible.
    – inVader
    Jul 22, 2015 at 13:58
  • Is there a way to alternate the label position so that they go top, bottom, top, bottom ... ? That could help preserve all labels without overlapping.
    – Jason
    May 11, 2016 at 9:55
  • 1
    An alternative way is to alternate top and bottom labels, rather than removing every other one. To do that I've come up with a solution: stackoverflow.com/q/37161022/2005415
    – Jason
    Sep 14, 2017 at 8:39
28

One-liner for those who are into that!

n = 7  # Keeps every 7th label
[l.set_visible(False) for (i,l) in enumerate(ax.xaxis.get_ticklabels()) if i % n != 0]
4
  • 2
    Fantastic! This is the better than higher rated answers as it is more flexible. More than every second label can be hidden.
    – Pixel78
    Jul 27, 2021 at 22:53
  • 1
    for those who wish to copy-paste this magnificent one-liner: make sure you've assigned a variable name "ax" to any plot command you have written in your script (e.g. use ax = plt.subplot(); ax.plot(), instead of plt.subplot(); plt.plot())
    – Brandon
    Jan 20, 2022 at 19:22
  • I tried other proposed solutions. This worked for me (Python 2.7)
    – Samsky
    Mar 5, 2023 at 23:06
  • @Brandon You can also use plt.gca() to get the current axis after doing a plot. I.e. do some plt.plot, then do ax = plt.gca() afterwards. Same goes for the figure, we can use plt.gcf()
    – Joe Iddon
    Mar 27, 2023 at 10:43
17

Just came across this thread, nice answers. I was looking for a way to hide every tick between the nth ticks. And found the enumerate function. So if anyone else is looking for something similar you can do it like this.

for index, label in enumerate(ax.xaxis.get_ticklabels()):
    if index % n != 0:
        label.set_visible(False)
6

I use the following to show every 7th x label:

plt.scatter(x, y)
ax = plt.gca()
temp = ax.xaxis.get_ticklabels()
temp = list(set(temp) - set(temp[::7]))
for label in temp:
    label.set_visible(False)
plt.show()

It's pretty flexible, as you can do whatever you want instead of plt.scatter. Hope it helps.

0

For some (mostly beginners) who aren't familiar or comfortable with the object oriented approach for matplotlib, here is a way to hide every 2nd label without needing to use ax:

        plt.plot(Allx,y)
   
        labels = []
        for i in range(len(Allx)): 
            if i % 2 == 0: 
                labels.append(Allx[i])
            else: 
                labels.append("")

         plt.xticks(ticks=Allx,labels=labels)
        

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