How to display a matrix in the Matplotlib annotations

I'm trying to plot a matrix using the annotations of a Matplotlib-Plot. Is this even possible?

Tried around with the most basic example, which all break the plot:

ax.annotate(r"$\begin{matrix} a & b & c \\ d & e & f \\ g & h & i \end{matrix}$", (0.25, 0.25),
textcoords='axes fraction', size=20)


Edit:

Part of the problem was that I was missing "texlive-latex-extra" which contains "type1cm", which is needed to render this correctly. See also: Python: Unable to Render Tex in Matplotlib

MatPlotLib uses its own typesetting framework (MathText). Your system's LaTeX rendering can be enabled by, rcParams['text.usetex'] = True.

The other problem that you have is a double-quoted multi-line string. This isn't really allowed without using a \, and that is difficult to manage with your existing \\.

Try this:

from matplotlib import rcParams

rcParams['text.usetex'] = True

ax.annotate(
r"$\begin{array}{ccc} a & b & c \\ d & e & f \\ g & h & i \end{array}$",
(0.25, 0.25),
textcoords='axes fraction', size=20)


Here I have used the array environment, rather than matrix because I don't think the latter is a LaTeX built-in. If you really want matrix--or other amsmath items--you can add the amsmath package to the MatPlotLib LaTeX preamble:

rcParams['text.latex.preamble'] = r'\usepackage{amsmath}'


Then the matrix environment will work,

ax.annotate(
r"$\begin{matrix} a & b & c \\ d & e & f \\ g & h & i \end{matrix}$",
(0.25, 0.25),
textcoords='axes fraction', size=20)

• It seems like there is a bug in the current 1.5 build of matplotlib, because I can't get either of the two solutions to work. – tobias47n9e Oct 13 '14 at 9:17
• Do you have LaTeX installed on your system? – farenorth Oct 13 '14 at 15:57
• I have no idea how you guessed that, but you are right. I edited the question to what solved the problem. I am now using your first suggestion which looks exactly like what I wanted to do. Thank you again! – tobias47n9e Oct 13 '14 at 17:28