12

There are only 4 types of line style in matplotlib: ['--', '-.', '-', ':']. Can one make more than 4 different types of line style in matplotlib?

1
  • you can change color, thickness and so on as well
    – Julien
    Oct 26, 2015 at 4:19

3 Answers 3

14

You can create far more than these four types using the dashes argument to specify custom dash styles. For example:

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

x = np.linspace(0, 10)
y = np.sin(x)
plt.plot(x, y, dashes=[10, 5, 20, 5], linewidth=2, color='black')

enter image description here

The dashes argument is a list of integers which specify the size of dashes and spaces in points: in the example above there is a 10-point dash, a 5-point space, a 20-point dash, and another 5-point space, and then the sequence repeats.

9

Here's another example which you can use to try out different custom line styles (defined as elements in the list 'dashList'), and adapt if you want to use multiple different custom line styles in your plots:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

dashList = [(5,2),(2,5),(4,10),(3,3,2,2),(5,2,20,2)] 
# List of Dash styles, each as integers in the format: (first line length, first space length, second line length, second space length...)

# set up the axes to look nice:
frame1 = plt.gca() 
frame1.axes.xaxis.set_ticklabels([]) # hide x axis numbers
plt.xlim(0,6) # set x and y axis extents
plt.ylim(-0.5,len(dashList)-0.5)
plt.ylabel("dashList element") # add a label to the y axis

for n in range(0,len(dashList)):
    plt.plot([0.5,4],[n,n], color = 'black', linestyle='--', dashes=dashList[n]) # plot a horizontal line using each custom line style
    # NB plot.plt draws a line between the following points: ([x0,x1],[y0,y1])
    plt.text(4.5,n,dashList[n]) # ...and show the numbers used to generate each custom linestyle
plt.show()

enter image description here

7

The latest matplotlib documentation (currently unreleased) includes many custom linestyle examples right now. Here's a screen shot:

enter image description here

For easier copy paste, here's part of the code used to make that plot:

linestyle_tuple = [
     ('loosely dotted',        (0, (1, 10))),
     ('dotted',                (0, (1, 1))),
     ('densely dotted',        (0, (1, 1))),

     ('loosely dashed',        (0, (5, 10))),
     ('dashed',                (0, (5, 5))),
     ('densely dashed',        (0, (5, 1))),

     ('loosely dashdotted',    (0, (3, 10, 1, 10))),
     ('dashdotted',            (0, (3, 5, 1, 5))),
     ('densely dashdotted',    (0, (3, 1, 1, 1))),

     ('dashdotdotted',         (0, (3, 5, 1, 5, 1, 5))),
     ('loosely dashdotdotted', (0, (3, 10, 1, 10, 1, 10))),
     ('densely dashdotdotted', (0, (3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1)))]

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