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Hi I am using fill_between command in python, but it seems that the fill_between is always below the line plots.

See this example, the alpha=1, so it is not invisible. All the lines should not be seen when they are in the fill_between location. But I still see them.

iptyhon --pylab

plot([0,1],[1,1],'r')
plot([0,1],[2,2],'g')
plot([0,1],[0.5,0.5],'b')
plot([0,1],[3,3],'k')

fill_between([0,0.25],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightGreen')
fill_between([0.3,0.45],[0,3.5],facecolor='Salmon')
fill_between([0.5,0.7],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightBlue')
fill_between([0.75,0.95],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightYellow')

enter image description here

When I use alpha = 0.5 I still get something that is not correct, the correct behavior is that each line will change is color when it is in the same location as the fill_between, but you see the color of the lines does not change...

plot([0,1],[1,1],'r')
plot([0,1],[2,2],'g')
plot([0,1],[0.5,0.5],'b')
plot([0,1],[3,3],'k')

fill_between([0,0.25],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightGreen',alpha=0.5)
fill_between([0.3,0.45],[0,3.5],facecolor='Salmon',alpha=0.5)
fill_between([0.5,0.7],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightBlue',alpha=0.5)
fill_between([0.75,0.95],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightYellow',alpha=0.5)

enter image description here

1 Answer 1

12

You can fix this using the zorder kwarg:

plot([0,1],[1,1],'r',zorder=1)
plot([0,1],[2,2],'g',zorder=1)
plot([0,1],[0.5,0.5],'b',zorder=1)
plot([0,1],[3,3],'k',zorder=1)

fill_between([0,0.25],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightGreen',zorder=2)
fill_between([0.3,0.45],[0,3.5],facecolor='Salmon',zorder=2)
fill_between([0.5,0.7],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightBlue',zorder=2)
fill_between([0.75,0.95],[0,3.5],facecolor='LightYellow',zorder=2)

enter image description here

3
  • Hi thanks, it helps, but why isn't it automatically organized? as in plots, when each plot as a higher zvalue as the plots before it?
    – Oren
    Feb 16, 2015 at 14:46
  • 1
    @Oren Different matplotlib objects (e.g. lines, shapes) have different default zorders, regardless of the order in which you plot them
    – Ajean
    Feb 16, 2015 at 16:20
  • 3
    It is not quite that they have different zorders, it is that the drawing of elements with identical zorder is not defined. The current implementation is that they are grouped by type (in a fixed order) and then by the order they were added. The former is due to the internal storage of the artists in the axes (which might change in the future) and the later by the fact that python's sort is stable.
    – tacaswell
    Feb 18, 2015 at 3:35

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