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I am using python 2.7.9 on win8. When I tried to plot using matplotlib, the following error showed up:

from pylab import *
plot([1,2,3,4])

[matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x0392A9D0]

I tried the test code "python simple_plot.py --verbose-helpful", and the following warning showed up:

$HOME=C:\Users\XX matplotlib data path C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\matplotlib\mpl-data


You have the following UNSUPPORTED LaTeX preamble customizations:

Please do not ask for support with these customizations active.


loaded rc file C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\matplotlib\mpl-data\matplotlibrc matplotlib version 1.4.3 verbose.level helpful interactive is False platform is win32 CACHEDIR=C:\Users\XX.matplotlib Using fontManager instance from C:\Users\XX.matplotlib\fontList.cache backend TkAgg version 8.5 findfont: Matching :family=sans-serif:style=normal:variant=normal:weight=normal:stretch=normal:size=medium to Bitstream Vera Sans (u'C:\Python27\lib\site-packages\matplotlib\mpl-data\fonts\ttf\Vera.ttf') with score of 0.000000

What does this mean? How could I get matplotlib working?

5 Answers 5

55

That isn't an error. That has created a plot object but you need to show the window. That's done using pyplot.show(). As stated in the comments, please do not use pylab, but use matplotlib.pyplot instead as pylab has been deprecated. As such, all you have to do is call:

plt.show()

Just for reproducibility, here's a trace from the Python REPL (using IPython):

In [1]: import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

In [2]: plt.plot([1,2,3,4])
Out[2]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0x123245290>]

In [3]: plt.show()

We get:

enter image description here


What about in a Jupyter notebook?

If you are using this in a Jupyter notebook, instead of having to use show(), you can place the following in a separate cell after you import matplotlib.pyplot:

%matplotlib inline

This will automatically draw the figure once you create it and you will not have to use show() after you're done.

11
  • 1
    you should not use pylab, the recommended method is now import matplotlib.pyplot as plt plt.plot(...)
    – tacaswell
    Sep 25, 2015 at 4:00
  • @tcaswell - I'm copying the OP's code. That is obviously what I recommend to. I'm editing my post actually to mention this.
    – rayryeng
    Sep 25, 2015 at 4:00
  • @tcaswell - Edited. Thanks for the spot... and thanks for matplotlib :)
    – rayryeng
    Sep 25, 2015 at 4:02
  • @rayryeng Thank you! I did the thing you recommended, and it worked! But I still have the following problem. When I saved the following code as a .py file in notepad++ and then ran it in powershell, an error popped up. But if I typed the code in powershell one line by line, it worked. Why is that? >import matplotlib.pyplot as plt plt.plot([1,2,3,4]) plt.show() >C:\Python27\python.exe: can't open file 'plot': [Errno 2] No such file or directory Sep 25, 2015 at 13:36
  • @susansecret - Python is a whitespace delimited language. Did you make sure that there is no leading or trailing white space for each line of code? Also, make sure that each line of code is on a separate line... and it's not all on a single line! :)
    – rayryeng
    Sep 25, 2015 at 15:04
3

In Jupyter nodebook, you could just insert

%matplotlib inline

before you use matplotlib.

0
0

When you run plt.plot() on Spider, you will now receive the following notification:

Figures now render in the Plots pane by default. To make them also appear inline in the Console, uncheck "Mute Inline Plotting" under the Plots pane options menu.

I followed this instruction, and it works.

0

These are good answers but I suspect many people will come here because they are in Google colab and they copied a Jupyter notebook from someone else that has

 %matplotlib

somewhere in it. Just delete it.

(or as noted in other answers, add the inline)

-1

Had this problem. You just have to use show() function to show it in a window. Use pyplot.show()

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