26

I'm having a little trouble with customizing my colors for a lineplot. I want to show an ensemble of spectras with a sequential color palette. The argument "palette="blues" works fine, but does not accept any appropriate color lists (like "Blues_d"), which do not include any bright colors.

This is a representative graph showing how my plot looks like

Below you can see the code I'm using.

color = (sns.dark_palette("purple"))
sns.set()

ax = sns.lineplot(x="Wavelength", y="Absorption", hue="t (min)", lw=1, data=df1, palette=color, legend="brief")

The problem is, that I get the following error:

ValueError: The palette list has the wrong number of colors.

So the question is: How can I use the lineplot function and using a sequential color palette of blues, reds, or whatever that do not include any bright colors?

I'm using pandas version 0.23.3, matplotlib version 2.2.2 and seaborn version 0.9.0

2
  • 1
    Honestly, why can't it do this by itself, checking that the number of different series wanting plots is less than the number of colours provided instead of having an exact match
    – ifly6
    Mar 25, 2019 at 19:14
  • @ifly6 'cause matplotlib and seaborn have become a mess :-) Feb 28, 2021 at 12:14

4 Answers 4

38

Since you mention the t (min) column in the hue option, you need to know the total number of unique values of the column.

Assume that there are 5 unique values in the column. You, thus, can set the number to the n_colors option of sns.color_palette:

ax = sns.lineplot(x="Wavelength", 
                  y="Absorption", 
                  hue="t (min)", 
                  lw=1, 
                  data=df1, 
                  palette=sns.color_palette('coolwarm', n_colors=5), 
                  legend="brief")
1
  • This solution will not yield the intended result. Suppose your unique t (min) values are 1, 2 and 100. The items with value 2 will receive the middle hue, rather than the low hue.
    – maarten
    Sep 11, 2022 at 22:38
5

No need to worry about the color count if you set your color palette as a color map by setting "as_cmap" argument to True in sns.color_palette:

ax = sns.lineplot(x="Wavelength", 
                      y="Absorption", 
                      hue="t (min)", 
                      lw=1, 
                      data=df1, 
                      palette=sns.color_palette('coolwarm', as_cmap = True), 
                      legend="brief")
4
  • I think most people coming to this question would be helped by this answer. Thank you. Jun 10, 2021 at 16:18
  • if you aren't directly writing to the ax object this approach fails: sns.lineplot(data=out_df, x="lag", y="rse", hue="period", palette=sns.color_palette('coolwarm', as_cmap = True)) generates TypeError: 'LinearSegmentedColormap' object is not iterable - the above approach works fine
    – MStoner
    Aug 23, 2021 at 15:14
  • @MStoner I don't understand your comment. What "above approach" works fine?
    – PJ_
    Aug 23, 2021 at 16:26
  • The approach of setting ncolors as per Hakan Özler's comment. Sorry for the confusion
    – MStoner
    Aug 24, 2021 at 17:11
1
Palette = ["#090364", "#091e75"] #define your preference
sns.set_style("whitegrid")
sns.set_palette(Palette) #use the list defined in the function
plot = sns.countplot(df['Purchased']) #Enjoy ploting
0

You can also do in other way sns.pairplot(data,hue='catagorical_variable',pallete='Set1) Because the seaborn also have it's predefined sets of colors.

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