Is it possible to zoom into a plot if inline is activated? Especially regarding to 3d-plots rotating and zooming is a necessary feature.
5 Answers
You can now use %matplotlib notebook
instead of %matplotlib inline
and you'll be able to interact with your plots.
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1This a great solution. If you try it and it doesn't work, check your version of matplotlib. I think this was introduced in version 1.5– jpobstCommented May 19, 2017 at 14:14
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Doesn't work as well as I'd hoped with subplots; can zoom and pan for an individual subplot but can't increase/decrease the size of the entire plot image. Which, to be fair, wasn't the original question asked above.– ijosephCommented Dec 11, 2017 at 22:49
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1@ijoseph you can increase the size of the entire image as well. Just drag the right bottom corner of the plot.. Commented Dec 12, 2017 at 16:09
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4You may need to restart your notebook if you already called %matplotlib inline– GuidoCommented Feb 6, 2018 at 12:28
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16
Now thanks to mpld3 it's super easy to enable zooming in inline plots!
All you have to do is install mpld3 (pip install mpld3
), and then add this to your notebook:
%matplotlib inline
import mpld3
mpld3.enable_notebook()
Now your plots will get a toolbar menu at the bottom left, in which you can enable mouse zooming :)
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It seems 3D plots are not supported yet : github.com/jakevdp/mpld3/issues/223– Théo TCommented Dec 2, 2014 at 17:14
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3This is great, but one should add that with some of the heavier duty plots (plots containing millions of points, for instance), it is very slow.– user2321808Commented Sep 24, 2015 at 15:00
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2I implemented this in my Jupyter Notebook 4.2.2 and zooming in caused the figure to go blank. Adding origin='lower' as an argument to the imshow() call fixed it. (e.g. imshow(res, origin='lower', cmap = cm.gray)) Commented Sep 6, 2016 at 19:15
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7
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1
mpld3 slowed down the execution of my notebooks. I found it better to use the nbagg backend that provides the same interactive tools but also allows to save graphs by the right-click menu:
import matplotlib
matplotlib.use('nbagg')
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
At present, the closest you can come is to redraw it at a larger size using the figsize
function. It expects dimensions in inches, which caught me out the first time I tried to use it.
There are some plants for a rich backend that would allow plots to be manipulated live, using HTML5, but I think it will be a few more months before that's ready.
If you're using the notebook on your local computer, for now the easiest option might be not to use inline mode, so the plots pop up as separate windows.
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1Yes it is - with a recent version of matplotlib, you can now select the nbagg backend.– Thomas KCommented Dec 4, 2014 at 22:09
matplotlib.use('nbagg')
didnt work for me either. I did find mdplt3
quite slow. Instead of zooming, I ended up resizing my figure (making it big), using this post: Plot width settings in ipython notebook