Problems and Solutions
There a lot of problems here.
Problem
- When you change the scale of the
Plot
widget, it doesn´t update the data on the PlotCurveItem
. Then you have the same curve but with a wrong axis scale. It works when you use plot()
because it creates a PlotDataItem
instead of a PlotCurveItem
, below I will explain a little more about that.
Solution 1 (not convenient)
- Create a function like the
getData()
inside the PlotDataItem's doc. to get the data, transform it to log/linear mode, and then set the data again into the PlotCurveItem
every time you change the scale. This can be messy.
Solution 2 (More convenient)
- You can use the
PlotDataItem
instead because it generates a PlotCurveItem
as part of it (read this: PlotCurveItem's doc. and PlotDataItem's doc.). This PlotDataItem
updates the data of the plot when you change the scale. Because that is how it works. If you want to know how the changes of scale work I suggest to read the PlotDataItem's source code. Implementing this you can create your plots using:
curve_1 = pg.PlotDataItem(
x, y1, pen=pg.mkPen(pg.mkColor((70,70,30))),
width=4 # , clickable = True <-- This don't work
)
curve_2 = pg.PlotDataItem(
x, y2, pen=pg.mkPen(pg.mkColor((70,70,70))),
width=4 # , clickable = True <-- This don't work
)
Problem of Solution 2 (and its solution)
- Now a new problem arises, this
PlotDataItem
has a little error. It has the signals when it's clicked, but never activates the "clickable" property of the PlotCurveItem
created inside it. This will cause you to never get a response when you click on the plot despite you pass the clickable = True
argument.
- We can do a lot of things to solve this problem, the best and the general solution will implicate a big rework in the
__init__()
builder of PlotDataItem()
. But considering that you want to implement clickable multiple plots with a logarithmic scale, we can just force it to be clickable. To do this we have to set the clickable property of the curve item inside the PlotDataItem with this:
curve_1.curve.setClickable(True)
curve_2.curve.setClickable(True)
- Now you can connect the signal emited (
sigClicked
) by the PlotCurveItem
when it is clicked like this:
curve_1.sigClicked.connect(curve_1_clicked)
curve_2.sigClicked.connect(curve_2_clicked)
def curve_1_clicked(ev):
print('Curve 1 clicked')
## Do more things...
def curve_1_clicked(ev):
print('Curve 2 clicked')
## Do more things...
I tested it with a code different from yours, using the PlotWidget
and using objects to build the GUI, but it must work the same. Here is my code:
import sys
import pyqtgraph as pg
import numpy as np
from PyQt5 import QtWidgets
class MyApp(QtWidgets.QWidget):
def __init__(self):
QtWidgets.QWidget.__init__(self)
lay = QtWidgets.QVBoxLayout()
self.setLayout(lay)
self.glw = pg.PlotWidget(show=True)
lay.addWidget(self.glw)
x = np.arange(100)
y1 = 2*x
y2 = 3*x**3
self.curve_1 = pg.PlotDataItem(
x, y1, pen=pg.mkPen(pg.mkColor((70,70,30))),
width=4 # , clickable = True <-- This don't work
)
self.curve_2 = pg.PlotDataItem(
x, y2, pen=pg.mkPen(pg.mkColor((70,70,70))),
width=4 # , clickable = True <-- This don't work
)
self.curve_1.curve.setClickable(True)
self.curve_2.curve.setClickable(True)
self.glw.addItem(self.curve_1)
self.glw.addItem(self.curve_2)
# self.glw.setLogMode(False,False)
self.glw.setLogMode(True,True)
self.curve_1.sigClicked.connect(self.c1click)
self.curve_2.sigClicked.connect(self.c2click)
def c1click(self, ev):
print('Curve 1 clicked')
def c2click(self, ev):
print('Curve 2 clicked')
if __name__ == "__main__":
app = QtWidgets.QApplication(sys.argv)
window = MyApp()
window.show()
sys.exit(app.exec_())