24

You turn on xkcd style by:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.xkcd()

But how to disable it?

I try:

self.fig.clf()

But it won't work.

7 Answers 7

42

In a nutshell, either use the context manager as @Valentin mentioned, or call plt.rcdefaults() afterwards.

What's happening is that the rc parameters are being changed by plt.xkcd() (which is basically how it works).

plt.xkcd() saves the current rc params returns a context manager (so that you can use a with statement) that resets them at the end. If you didn't hold on to the context manager that plt.xkcd() returns, then you can't revert to the exact same rc params that you had before.

In other words, let's say you had done something like plt.rc('lines', linewidth=2, color='r') before calling plt.xkcd(). If you didn't do with plt.xkcd(): or manager = plt.xkcd(), then the state of rcParams after calling plt.rc will be lost.

However, you can revert back to the default rcParams by calling plt.rcdefaults(). You just won't retain any specific changes you made before calling plt.xkcd().

18

I see this in the doc, does it help?

with plt.xkcd():
    # This figure will be in XKCD-style
    fig1 = plt.figure()
    # ...

# This figure will be in regular style
fig2 = plt.figure()

If not, you can look at matplotlib.pyplot.xkcd's code and see how they generate the context manager that allows reversing the config

8

Just use that

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

plt.rcdefaults()
# before showing the plot
7

You could try

manager = plt.xkcd()
# my xkcd plot here
mpl.rcParams.update(manager._rcparams)

this should reset the previous state, emulating the context manager. Obviously, it has not all the features for a context manager, e.g., the reset in case of exceptions, etc.

Or, w/o messing with the internals of the context manager

saved_state = mpl.rcParams.copy()
mpl.xkcd()
# my xkcd plot here
mpl.rcParams.update(saved_state)
0

add this to the beginning of your code

import matplotlib as mpl

mpl.rcParams.update(mpl.rcParamsDefault)
0

you can simply use plt.rcdefaults or pyplot.rcdefaults before plt.show().

it will surely reset the rcparams to defaults. I tried and it worked.

0

simply use ,

plt.xkcd(False)

that worked good for me

2
  • consider adding helpful links to the documentation like this. It will make your answer stand out more. Also, avoid one-liners. They are poorly received.
    – tornikeo
    Sep 7, 2020 at 4:00
  • Fonts don't get reset I noticed though squiggly lines go.
    – rhody
    Jan 15, 2021 at 20:50

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