plotly.graph_objects
.Figure¶
|
|
|
Show a figure using either the default renderer(s) or the renderer(s) specified by the renderer argument |
|
Add traces to the figure |
|
Perform a property update operation on all traces that satisfy the specified selection criteria |
|
Update the properties of the figure’s layout with a dict and/or with keyword arguments. |
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.
Figure
(data=None, layout=None, frames=None, skip_invalid=False, **kwargs)¶ -
__init__
(data=None, layout=None, frames=None, skip_invalid=False, **kwargs)¶ Create a new :class:Figure instance
- Parameters
data –
The ‘data’ property is a tuple of trace instances that may be specified as:
A list or tuple of trace instances (e.g. [Scatter(…), Bar(…)])
A single trace instance (e.g. Scatter(…), Bar(…), etc.)
A list or tuple of dicts of string/value properties where: - The ‘type’ property specifies the trace type
- One of: [‘bar’, ‘barpolar’, ‘box’, ‘candlestick’,
’carpet’, ‘choropleth’, ‘choroplethmap’, ‘choroplethmapbox’, ‘cone’, ‘contour’, ‘contourcarpet’, ‘densitymap’, ‘densitymapbox’, ‘funnel’, ‘funnelarea’, ‘heatmap’, ‘heatmapgl’, ‘histogram’, ‘histogram2d’, ‘histogram2dcontour’, ‘icicle’, ‘image’, ‘indicator’, ‘isosurface’, ‘mesh3d’, ‘ohlc’, ‘parcats’, ‘parcoords’, ‘pie’, ‘pointcloud’, ‘sankey’, ‘scatter’, ‘scatter3d’, ‘scattercarpet’, ‘scattergeo’, ‘scattergl’, ‘scattermap’, ‘scattermapbox’, ‘scatterpolar’, ‘scatterpolargl’, ‘scattersmith’, ‘scatterternary’, ‘splom’, ‘streamtube’, ‘sunburst’, ‘surface’, ‘table’, ‘treemap’, ‘violin’, ‘volume’, ‘waterfall’]
All remaining properties are passed to the constructor of the specified trace type
(e.g. [{‘type’: ‘scatter’, …}, {‘type’: ‘bar, …}])
layout –
The ‘layout’ property is an instance of Layout that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.Layout
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Layout constructor
Supported dict properties:
- activeselection
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Activeselec tion
instance or dict with compatible properties- activeshape
:class:`plotly.graph_objects.layout.Activeshape ` instance or dict with compatible properties
- annotations
A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Annotation
instances or dicts with compatible properties- annotationdefaults
When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.annotationdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.annotations
- autosize
Determines whether or not a layout width or height that has been left undefined by the user is initialized on each relayout. Note that, regardless of this attribute, an undefined layout width or height is always initialized on the first call to plot.
- autotypenumbers
Using “strict” a numeric string in trace data is not converted to a number. Using convert types a numeric string in trace data may be treated as a number during automatic axis
type
detection. This is the default value; however it could be overridden for individual axes.- barcornerradius
Sets the rounding of bar corners. May be an integer number of pixels, or a percentage of bar width (as a string ending in %).
- bargap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between bars of adjacent location coordinates.
- bargroupgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between bars of the same location coordinate.
- barmode
Determines how bars at the same location coordinate are displayed on the graph. With “stack”, the bars are stacked on top of one another With “relative”, the bars are stacked on top of one another, with negative values below the axis, positive values above With “group”, the bars are plotted next to one another centered around the shared location. With “overlay”, the bars are plotted over one another, you might need to reduce “opacity” to see multiple bars.
- barnorm
Sets the normalization for bar traces on the graph. With “fraction”, the value of each bar is divided by the sum of all values at that location coordinate. “percent” is the same but multiplied by 100 to show percentages.
- boxgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between boxes of adjacent location coordinates. Has no effect on traces that have “width” set.
- boxgroupgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between boxes of the same location coordinate. Has no effect on traces that have “width” set.
- boxmode
Determines how boxes at the same location coordinate are displayed on the graph. If “group”, the boxes are plotted next to one another centered around the shared location. If “overlay”, the boxes are plotted over one another, you might need to set “opacity” to see them multiple boxes. Has no effect on traces that have “width” set.
- calendar
Sets the default calendar system to use for interpreting and displaying dates throughout the plot.
- clickmode
Determines the mode of single click interactions. “event” is the default value and emits the
plotly_click
event. In addition this mode emits theplotly_selected
event in drag modes “lasso” and “select”, but with no event data attached (kept for compatibility reasons). The “select” flag enables selecting single data points via click. This mode also supports persistent selections, meaning that pressing Shift while clicking, adds to / subtracts from an existing selection. “select” withhovermode
: “x” can be confusing, consider explicitly settinghovermode
: “closest” when using this feature. Selection events are sent accordingly as long as “event” flag is set as well. When the “event” flag is missing,plotly_click
andplotly_selected
events are not fired.- coloraxis
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Coloraxis
instance or dict with compatible properties- colorscale
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Colorscale
instance or dict with compatible properties- colorway
Sets the default trace colors.
- computed
Placeholder for exporting automargin-impacting values namely
margin.t
,margin.b
,margin.l
andmargin.r
in “full-json” mode.- datarevision
If provided, a changed value tells
Plotly.react
that one or more data arrays has changed. This way you can modify arrays in- place rather than making a complete new copy for an incremental change. If NOT provided,Plotly.react
assumes that data arrays are being treated as immutable, thus any data array with a different identity from its predecessor contains new data.- dragmode
Determines the mode of drag interactions. “select” and “lasso” apply only to scatter traces with markers or text. “orbit” and “turntable” apply only to 3D scenes.
- editrevision
Controls persistence of user-driven changes in
editable: true
configuration, other than trace names and axis titles. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
.- extendfunnelareacolors
If
true
, the funnelarea slice colors (whether given byfunnelareacolorway
or inherited fromcolorway
) will be extended to three times its original length by first repeating every color 20% lighter then each color 20% darker. This is intended to reduce the likelihood of reusing the same color when you have many slices, but you can setfalse
to disable. Colors provided in the trace, usingmarker.colors
, are never extended.- extendiciclecolors
If
true
, the icicle slice colors (whether given byiciclecolorway
or inherited fromcolorway
) will be extended to three times its original length by first repeating every color 20% lighter then each color 20% darker. This is intended to reduce the likelihood of reusing the same color when you have many slices, but you can setfalse
to disable. Colors provided in the trace, usingmarker.colors
, are never extended.- extendpiecolors
If
true
, the pie slice colors (whether given bypiecolorway
or inherited fromcolorway
) will be extended to three times its original length by first repeating every color 20% lighter then each color 20% darker. This is intended to reduce the likelihood of reusing the same color when you have many slices, but you can setfalse
to disable. Colors provided in the trace, usingmarker.colors
, are never extended.- extendsunburstcolors
If
true
, the sunburst slice colors (whether given bysunburstcolorway
or inherited fromcolorway
) will be extended to three times its original length by first repeating every color 20% lighter then each color 20% darker. This is intended to reduce the likelihood of reusing the same color when you have many slices, but you can setfalse
to disable. Colors provided in the trace, usingmarker.colors
, are never extended.- extendtreemapcolors
If
true
, the treemap slice colors (whether given bytreemapcolorway
or inherited fromcolorway
) will be extended to three times its original length by first repeating every color 20% lighter then each color 20% darker. This is intended to reduce the likelihood of reusing the same color when you have many slices, but you can setfalse
to disable. Colors provided in the trace, usingmarker.colors
, are never extended.- font
Sets the global font. Note that fonts used in traces and other layout components inherit from the global font.
- funnelareacolorway
Sets the default funnelarea slice colors. Defaults to the main
colorway
used for trace colors. If you specify a new list here it can still be extended with lighter and darker colors, seeextendfunnelareacolors
.- funnelgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between bars of adjacent location coordinates.
- funnelgroupgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between bars of the same location coordinate.
- funnelmode
Determines how bars at the same location coordinate are displayed on the graph. With “stack”, the bars are stacked on top of one another With “group”, the bars are plotted next to one another centered around the shared location. With “overlay”, the bars are plotted over one another, you might need to reduce “opacity” to see multiple bars.
- geo
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Geo
instance or dict with compatible properties- grid
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Grid
instance or dict with compatible properties- height
Sets the plot’s height (in px).
- hiddenlabels
hiddenlabels is the funnelarea & pie chart analog of visible:’legendonly’ but it can contain many labels, and can simultaneously hide slices from several pies/funnelarea charts
- hiddenlabelssrc
Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hiddenlabels
.- hidesources
Determines whether or not a text link citing the data source is placed at the bottom-right cored of the figure. Has only an effect only on graphs that have been generated via forked graphs from the Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise).
- hoverdistance
Sets the default distance (in pixels) to look for data to add hover labels (-1 means no cutoff, 0 means no looking for data). This is only a real distance for hovering on point-like objects, like scatter points. For area-like objects (bars, scatter fills, etc) hovering is on inside the area and off outside, but these objects will not supersede hover on point-like objects in case of conflict.
- hoverlabel
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible properties- hovermode
Determines the mode of hover interactions. If “closest”, a single hoverlabel will appear for the “closest” point within the
hoverdistance
. If “x” (or “y”), multiple hoverlabels will appear for multiple points at the “closest” x- (or y-) coordinate within thehoverdistance
, with the caveat that no more than one hoverlabel will appear per trace. If x unified (or y unified), a single hoverlabel will appear multiple points at the closest x- (or y-) coordinate within thehoverdistance
with the caveat that no more than one hoverlabel will appear per trace. In this mode, spikelines are enabled by default perpendicular to the specified axis. If false, hover interactions are disabled.- hoversubplots
Determines expansion of hover effects to other subplots If “single” just the axis pair of the primary point is included without overlaying subplots. If “overlaying” all subplots using the main axis and occupying the same space are included. If “axis”, also include stacked subplots using the same axis when
hovermode
is set to “x”, x unified, “y” or y unified.- iciclecolorway
Sets the default icicle slice colors. Defaults to the main
colorway
used for trace colors. If you specify a new list here it can still be extended with lighter and darker colors, seeextendiciclecolors
.- images
A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Image
instances or dicts with compatible properties- imagedefaults
When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.imagedefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.images
- legend
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Legend
instance or dict with compatible properties- map
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Map
instance or dict with compatible properties- mapbox
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Mapbox
instance or dict with compatible properties- margin
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Margin
instance or dict with compatible properties- meta
Assigns extra meta information that can be used in various
text
attributes. Attributes such as the graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
trace.name
in legend items,rangeselector
,updatemenus
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. One can accessmeta
fields using template strings:%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index of themeta
item in question.meta
can also be an object for example{key: value}
which can be accessed %{meta[key]}.- metasrc
Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.- minreducedheight
Minimum height of the plot with margin.automargin applied (in px)
- minreducedwidth
Minimum width of the plot with margin.automargin applied (in px)
- modebar
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Modebar
instance or dict with compatible properties- newselection
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Newselectio n
instance or dict with compatible properties- newshape
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Newshape
instance or dict with compatible properties- paper_bgcolor
Sets the background color of the paper where the graph is drawn.
- piecolorway
Sets the default pie slice colors. Defaults to the main
colorway
used for trace colors. If you specify a new list here it can still be extended with lighter and darker colors, seeextendpiecolors
.- plot_bgcolor
Sets the background color of the plotting area in-between x and y axes.
- polar
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Polar
instance or dict with compatible properties- scattergap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between scatter points of adjacent location coordinates. Defaults to
bargap
.- scattermode
Determines how scatter points at the same location coordinate are displayed on the graph. With “group”, the scatter points are plotted next to one another centered around the shared location. With “overlay”, the scatter points are plotted over one another, you might need to reduce “opacity” to see multiple scatter points.
- scene
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Scene
instance or dict with compatible properties- selectdirection
When
dragmode
is set to “select”, this limits the selection of the drag to horizontal, vertical or diagonal. “h” only allows horizontal selection, “v” only vertical, “d” only diagonal and “any” sets no limit.- selectionrevision
Controls persistence of user-driven changes in selected points from all traces.
- selections
A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Selection
instances or dicts with compatible properties- selectiondefaults
When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.selectiondefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.selections
- separators
Sets the decimal and thousand separators. For example, *. * puts a ‘.’ before decimals and a space between thousands. In English locales, dflt is “.,” but other locales may alter this default.
- shapes
A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Shape
instances or dicts with compatible properties- shapedefaults
When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.shapedefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.shapes
- showlegend
Determines whether or not a legend is drawn. Default is
true
if there is a trace to show and any of these: a) Two or more traces would by default be shown in the legend. b) One pie trace is shown in the legend. c) One trace is explicitly given withshowlegend: true
.- sliders
A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Slider
instances or dicts with compatible properties- sliderdefaults
When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.sliderdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.sliders
- smith
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Smith
instance or dict with compatible properties- spikedistance
Sets the default distance (in pixels) to look for data to draw spikelines to (-1 means no cutoff, 0 means no looking for data). As with hoverdistance, distance does not apply to area- like objects. In addition, some objects can be hovered on but will not generate spikelines, such as scatter fills.
- sunburstcolorway
Sets the default sunburst slice colors. Defaults to the main
colorway
used for trace colors. If you specify a new list here it can still be extended with lighter and darker colors, seeextendsunburstcolors
.- template
Default attributes to be applied to the plot. This should be a dict with format:
{'layout': layoutTemplate, 'data': {trace_type: [traceTemplate, ...], ...}}
wherelayoutTemplate
is a dict matching the structure offigure.layout
andtraceTemplate
is a dict matching the structure of the trace with typetrace_type
(e.g. ‘scatter’). Alternatively, this may be specified as an instance of plotly.graph_objects.layout.Template. Trace templates are applied cyclically to traces of each type. Container arrays (egannotations
) have special handling: An object ending indefaults
(egannotationdefaults
) is applied to each array item. But if an item has atemplateitemname
key we look in the template array for an item with matchingname
and apply that instead. If no matchingname
is found we mark the item invisible. Any named template item not referenced is appended to the end of the array, so this can be used to add a watermark annotation or a logo image, for example. To omit one of these items on the plot, make an item with matchingtemplateitemname
andvisible: false
.- ternary
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Ternary
instance or dict with compatible properties- title
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Title
instance or dict with compatible properties- titlefont
Deprecated: Please use layout.title.font instead. Sets the title font. Note that the title’s font used to be customized by the now deprecated
titlefont
attribute.- transition
Sets transition options used during Plotly.react updates.
- treemapcolorway
Sets the default treemap slice colors. Defaults to the main
colorway
used for trace colors. If you specify a new list here it can still be extended with lighter and darker colors, seeextendtreemapcolors
.- uirevision
Used to allow user interactions with the plot to persist after
Plotly.react
calls that are unaware of these interactions. Ifuirevision
is omitted, or if it is given and it changed from the previousPlotly.react
call, the exact new figure is used. Ifuirevision
is truthy and did NOT change, any attribute that has been affected by user interactions and did not receive a different value in the new figure will keep the interaction value.layout.uirevision
attribute serves as the default foruirevision
attributes in various sub-containers. For finer control you can set these sub-attributes directly. For example, if your app separately controls the data on the x and y axes you might setxaxis.uirevision=*time*
andyaxis.uirevision=*cost*
. Then if only the y data is changed, you can updateyaxis.uirevision=*quantity*
and the y axis range will reset but the x axis range will retain any user-driven zoom.- uniformtext
:class:`plotly.graph_objects.layout.Uniformtext ` instance or dict with compatible properties
- updatemenus
A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Updatemenu
instances or dicts with compatible properties- updatemenudefaults
When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.updatemenudefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.updatemenus
- violingap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between violins of adjacent location coordinates. Has no effect on traces that have “width” set.
- violingroupgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between violins of the same location coordinate. Has no effect on traces that have “width” set.
- violinmode
Determines how violins at the same location coordinate are displayed on the graph. If “group”, the violins are plotted next to one another centered around the shared location. If “overlay”, the violins are plotted over one another, you might need to set “opacity” to see them multiple violins. Has no effect on traces that have “width” set.
- waterfallgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between bars of adjacent location coordinates.
- waterfallgroupgap
Sets the gap (in plot fraction) between bars of the same location coordinate.
- waterfallmode
Determines how bars at the same location coordinate are displayed on the graph. With “group”, the bars are plotted next to one another centered around the shared location. With “overlay”, the bars are plotted over one another, you might need to reduce “opacity” to see multiple bars.
- width
Sets the plot’s width (in px).
- xaxis
plotly.graph_objects.layout.XAxis
instance or dict with compatible properties- yaxis
plotly.graph_objects.layout.YAxis
instance or dict with compatible properties
frames –
The ‘frames’ property is a tuple of instances of Frame that may be specified as:
A list or tuple of instances of plotly.graph_objects.Frame
A list or tuple of dicts of string/value properties that will be passed to the Frame constructor
Supported dict properties:
- baseframe
The name of the frame into which this frame’s properties are merged before applying. This is used to unify properties and avoid needing to specify the same values for the same properties in multiple frames.
- data
A list of traces this frame modifies. The format is identical to the normal trace definition.
- group
An identifier that specifies the group to which the frame belongs, used by animate to select a subset of frames.
- layout
Layout properties which this frame modifies. The format is identical to the normal layout definition.
- name
A label by which to identify the frame
- traces
A list of trace indices that identify the respective traces in the data attribute
skip_invalid (bool) – If True, invalid properties in the figure specification will be skipped silently. If False (default) invalid properties in the figure specification will result in a ValueError
- Raises
ValueError – if a property in the specification of data, layout, or frames is invalid AND skip_invalid is False
-
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.
Figure
(data=None, layout=None, frames=None, skip_invalid=False, **kwargs)¶ -
add_annotation
(arg=None, align=None, arrowcolor=None, arrowhead=None, arrowside=None, arrowsize=None, arrowwidth=None, ax=None, axref=None, ay=None, ayref=None, bgcolor=None, bordercolor=None, borderpad=None, borderwidth=None, captureevents=None, clicktoshow=None, font=None, height=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertext=None, name=None, opacity=None, showarrow=None, standoff=None, startarrowhead=None, startarrowsize=None, startstandoff=None, templateitemname=None, text=None, textangle=None, valign=None, visible=None, width=None, x=None, xanchor=None, xclick=None, xref=None, xshift=None, y=None, yanchor=None, yclick=None, yref=None, yshift=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, exclude_empty_subplots=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Create and add a new annotation to the figure’s layout
- Parameters
arg – instance of Annotation or dict with compatible properties
align – Sets the horizontal alignment of the
text
within the box. Has an effect only iftext
spans two or more lines (i.e.text
contains one or more <br> HTML tags) or if an explicit width is set to override the text width.arrowcolor – Sets the color of the annotation arrow.
arrowhead – Sets the end annotation arrow head style.
arrowside – Sets the annotation arrow head position.
arrowsize – Sets the size of the end annotation arrow head, relative to
arrowwidth
. A value of 1 (default) gives a head about 3x as wide as the line.arrowwidth – Sets the width (in px) of annotation arrow line.
ax – Sets the x component of the arrow tail about the arrow head. If
axref
ispixel
, a positive (negative) component corresponds to an arrow pointing from right to left (left to right). Ifaxref
is notpixel
and is exactly the same asxref
, this is an absolute value on that axis, likex
, specified in the same coordinates asxref
.axref – Indicates in what coordinates the tail of the annotation (ax,ay) is specified. If set to a x axis id (e.g. “x” or “x2”), the
x
position refers to a x coordinate. If set to “paper”, thex
position refers to the distance from the left of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the left (right). If set to a x axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the left of the domain of that axis: e.g., x2 domain refers to the domain of the second x axis and a x position of 0.5 refers to the point between the left and the right of the domain of the second x axis. In order for absolute positioning of the arrow to work, “axref” must be exactly the same as “xref”, otherwise “axref” will revert to “pixel” (explained next). For relative positioning, “axref” can be set to “pixel”, in which case the “ax” value is specified in pixels relative to “x”. Absolute positioning is useful for trendline annotations which should continue to indicate the correct trend when zoomed. Relative positioning is useful for specifying the text offset for an annotated point.ay – Sets the y component of the arrow tail about the arrow head. If
ayref
ispixel
, a positive (negative) component corresponds to an arrow pointing from bottom to top (top to bottom). Ifayref
is notpixel
and is exactly the same asyref
, this is an absolute value on that axis, likey
, specified in the same coordinates asyref
.ayref – Indicates in what coordinates the tail of the annotation (ax,ay) is specified. If set to a y axis id (e.g. “y” or “y2”), the
y
position refers to a y coordinate. If set to “paper”, they
position refers to the distance from the bottom of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the bottom (top). If set to a y axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the bottom of the domain of that axis: e.g., y2 domain refers to the domain of the second y axis and a y position of 0.5 refers to the point between the bottom and the top of the domain of the second y axis. In order for absolute positioning of the arrow to work, “ayref” must be exactly the same as “yref”, otherwise “ayref” will revert to “pixel” (explained next). For relative positioning, “ayref” can be set to “pixel”, in which case the “ay” value is specified in pixels relative to “y”. Absolute positioning is useful for trendline annotations which should continue to indicate the correct trend when zoomed. Relative positioning is useful for specifying the text offset for an annotated point.bgcolor – Sets the background color of the annotation.
bordercolor – Sets the color of the border enclosing the annotation
text
.borderpad – Sets the padding (in px) between the
text
and the enclosing border.borderwidth – Sets the width (in px) of the border enclosing the annotation
text
.captureevents – Determines whether the annotation text box captures mouse move and click events, or allows those events to pass through to data points in the plot that may be behind the annotation. By default
captureevents
is False unlesshovertext
is provided. If you use the eventplotly_clickannotation
withouthovertext
you must explicitly enablecaptureevents
.clicktoshow – Makes this annotation respond to clicks on the plot. If you click a data point that exactly matches the
x
andy
values of this annotation, and it is hidden (visible: false), it will appear. In “onoff” mode, you must click the same point again to make it disappear, so if you click multiple points, you can show multiple annotations. In “onout” mode, a click anywhere else in the plot (on another data point or not) will hide this annotation. If you need to show/hide this annotation in response to differentx
ory
values, you can setxclick
and/oryclick
. This is useful for example to label the side of a bar. To label markers though,standoff
is preferred overxclick
andyclick
.font – Sets the annotation text font.
height – Sets an explicit height for the text box. null (default) lets the text set the box height. Taller text will be clipped.
hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.layout.annotation.Hoverlab el
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertext – Sets text to appear when hovering over this annotation. If omitted or blank, no hover label will appear.
name – When used in a template, named items are created in the output figure in addition to any items the figure already has in this array. You can modify these items in the output figure by making your own item with
templateitemname
matching thisname
alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.opacity – Sets the opacity of the annotation (text + arrow).
showarrow – Determines whether or not the annotation is drawn with an arrow. If True,
text
is placed near the arrow’s tail. If False,text
lines up with thex
andy
provided.standoff – Sets a distance, in pixels, to move the end arrowhead away from the position it is pointing at, for example to point at the edge of a marker independent of zoom. Note that this shortens the arrow from the
ax
/ay
vector, in contrast toxshift
/yshift
which moves everything by this amount.startarrowhead – Sets the start annotation arrow head style.
startarrowsize – Sets the size of the start annotation arrow head, relative to
arrowwidth
. A value of 1 (default) gives a head about 3x as wide as the line.startstandoff – Sets a distance, in pixels, to move the start arrowhead away from the position it is pointing at, for example to point at the edge of a marker independent of zoom. Note that this shortens the arrow from the
ax
/ay
vector, in contrast toxshift
/yshift
which moves everything by this amount.templateitemname – Used to refer to a named item in this array in the template. Named items from the template will be created even without a matching item in the input figure, but you can modify one by making an item with
templateitemname
matching itsname
, alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it withvisible: true
.text – Sets the text associated with this annotation. Plotly uses a subset of HTML tags to do things like newline (<br>), bold (<b></b>), italics (<i></i>), hyperlinks (<a href=’…’></a>). Tags <em>, <sup>, <sub>, <s>, <u> <span> are also supported.
textangle – Sets the angle at which the
text
is drawn with respect to the horizontal.valign – Sets the vertical alignment of the
text
within the box. Has an effect only if an explicit height is set to override the text height.visible – Determines whether or not this annotation is visible.
width – Sets an explicit width for the text box. null (default) lets the text set the box width. Wider text will be clipped. There is no automatic wrapping; use <br> to start a new line.
x – Sets the annotation’s x position. If the axis
type
is “log”, then you must take the log of your desired range. If the axistype
is “date”, it should be date strings, like date data, though Date objects and unix milliseconds will be accepted and converted to strings. If the axistype
is “category”, it should be numbers, using the scale where each category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it appears.xanchor – Sets the text box’s horizontal position anchor This anchor binds the
x
position to the “left”, “center” or “right” of the annotation. For example, ifx
is set to 1,xref
to “paper” andxanchor
to “right” then the right-most portion of the annotation lines up with the right-most edge of the plotting area. If “auto”, the anchor is equivalent to “center” for data- referenced annotations or if there is an arrow, whereas for paper-referenced with no arrow, the anchor picked corresponds to the closest side.xclick – Toggle this annotation when clicking a data point whose
x
value isxclick
rather than the annotation’sx
value.xref – Sets the annotation’s x coordinate axis. If set to a x axis id (e.g. “x” or “x2”), the
x
position refers to a x coordinate. If set to “paper”, thex
position refers to the distance from the left of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the left (right). If set to a x axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the left of the domain of that axis: e.g., x2 domain refers to the domain of the second x axis and a x position of 0.5 refers to the point between the left and the right of the domain of the second x axis.xshift – Shifts the position of the whole annotation and arrow to the right (positive) or left (negative) by this many pixels.
y – Sets the annotation’s y position. If the axis
type
is “log”, then you must take the log of your desired range. If the axistype
is “date”, it should be date strings, like date data, though Date objects and unix milliseconds will be accepted and converted to strings. If the axistype
is “category”, it should be numbers, using the scale where each category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it appears.yanchor – Sets the text box’s vertical position anchor This anchor binds the
y
position to the “top”, “middle” or “bottom” of the annotation. For example, ify
is set to 1,yref
to “paper” andyanchor
to “top” then the top-most portion of the annotation lines up with the top-most edge of the plotting area. If “auto”, the anchor is equivalent to “middle” for data-referenced annotations or if there is an arrow, whereas for paper- referenced with no arrow, the anchor picked corresponds to the closest side.yclick – Toggle this annotation when clicking a data point whose
y
value isyclick
rather than the annotation’sy
value.yref – Sets the annotation’s y coordinate axis. If set to a y axis id (e.g. “y” or “y2”), the
y
position refers to a y coordinate. If set to “paper”, they
position refers to the distance from the bottom of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the bottom (top). If set to a y axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the bottom of the domain of that axis: e.g., y2 domain refers to the domain of the second y axis and a y position of 0.5 refers to the point between the bottom and the top of the domain of the second y axis.yshift – Shifts the position of the whole annotation and arrow up (positive) or down (negative) by this many pixels.
row – Subplot row for annotation. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).
col – Subplot column for annotation. If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
secondary_y – Whether to add annotation to secondary y-axis
exclude_empty_subplots – If True, annotation will not be added to subplots without traces.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_bar
(alignmentgroup=None, base=None, basesrc=None, cliponaxis=None, constraintext=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, error_x=None, error_y=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextanchor=None, insidetextfont=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, offset=None, offsetgroup=None, offsetsrc=None, opacity=None, orientation=None, outsidetextfont=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textangle=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, width=None, widthsrc=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Bar trace
The data visualized by the span of the bars is set in
y
iforientation
is set to “v” (the default) and the labels are set inx
. By settingorientation
to “h”, the roles are interchanged.- Parameters
alignmentgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same alignmentgroup. This controls whether bars compute their positional range dependently or independently.
base – Sets where the bar base is drawn (in position axis units). In “stack” or “relative” barmode, traces that set “base” will be excluded and drawn in “overlay” mode instead.
basesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
base
.cliponaxis – Determines whether the text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show the text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.constraintext – Constrain the size of text inside or outside a bar to be no larger than the bar itself.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.error_x –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.ErrorX
instance or dict with compatible propertieserror_y –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.ErrorY
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesvalue
andlabel
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextanchor – Determines if texts are kept at center or start/end points in
textposition
“inside” mode.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying inside the bar.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
offset – Shifts the position where the bar is drawn (in position axis units). In “group” barmode, traces that set “offset” will be excluded and drawn in “overlay” mode instead.
offsetgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same offsetgroup where bars of the same position coordinate will line up.
offsetsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
offset
.opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
orientation – Sets the orientation of the bars. With “v” (“h”), the value of the each bar spans along the vertical (horizontal).
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying outside the bar.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textangle – Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the bar. For example, a
tickangle
of -90 draws the tick labels vertically. With “auto” the texts may automatically be rotated to fit with the maximum size in bars.textfont – Sets the font used for
text
.textposition – Specifies the location of the
text
. “inside” positionstext
inside, next to the bar end (rotated and scaled if needed). “outside” positionstext
outside, next to the bar end (scaled if needed), unless there is another bar stacked on this one, then the text gets pushed inside. “auto” tries to positiontext
inside the bar, but if the bar is too small and no bar is stacked on this one the text is moved outside. If “none”, no text appears.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesvalue
andlabel
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.bar.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
width – Sets the bar width (in position axis units).
widthsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
width
.x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_barpolar
(base=None, basesrc=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dr=None, dtheta=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, offset=None, offsetsrc=None, opacity=None, r=None, r0=None, rsrc=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textsrc=None, theta=None, theta0=None, thetasrc=None, thetaunit=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, width=None, widthsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Barpolar trace
The data visualized by the radial span of the bars is set in
r
- Parameters
base – Sets where the bar base is drawn (in radial axis units). In “stack” barmode, traces that set “base” will be excluded and drawn in “overlay” mode instead.
basesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
base
.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dr – Sets the r coordinate step.
dtheta – Sets the theta coordinate step. By default, the
dtheta
step equals the subplot’s period divided by the length of ther
coordinates.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.barpolar.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.barpolar.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.barpolar.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
offset – Shifts the angular position where the bar is drawn (in “thetatunit” units).
offsetsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
offset
.opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
r – Sets the radial coordinates
r0 – Alternate to
r
. Builds a linear space of r coordinates. Use withdr
wherer0
is the starting coordinate anddr
the step.rsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
r
.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.barpolar.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.barpolar.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a polar subplot. If “polar” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.polar
. If “polar2”, the data refer tolayout.polar2
, and so on.text – Sets hover text elements associated with each bar. If a single string, the same string appears over all bars. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s coordinates.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.theta – Sets the angular coordinates
theta0 – Alternate to
theta
. Builds a linear space of theta coordinates. Use withdtheta
wheretheta0
is the starting coordinate anddtheta
the step.thetasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
theta
.thetaunit – Sets the unit of input “theta” values. Has an effect only when on “linear” angular axes.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.barpolar.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
width – Sets the bar angular width (in “thetaunit” units).
widthsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
width
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_box
(alignmentgroup=None, boxmean=None, boxpoints=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, jitter=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, lowerfence=None, lowerfencesrc=None, marker=None, mean=None, meansrc=None, median=None, mediansrc=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, notched=None, notchspan=None, notchspansrc=None, notchwidth=None, offsetgroup=None, opacity=None, orientation=None, pointpos=None, q1=None, q1src=None, q3=None, q3src=None, quartilemethod=None, sd=None, sdmultiple=None, sdsrc=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, showwhiskers=None, sizemode=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, upperfence=None, upperfencesrc=None, visible=None, whiskerwidth=None, width=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Box trace
Each box spans from quartile 1 (Q1) to quartile 3 (Q3). The second quartile (Q2, i.e. the median) is marked by a line inside the box. The fences grow outward from the boxes’ edges, by default they span +/- 1.5 times the interquartile range (IQR: Q3-Q1), The sample mean and standard deviation as well as notches and the sample, outlier and suspected outliers points can be optionally added to the box plot. The values and positions corresponding to each boxes can be input using two signatures. The first signature expects users to supply the sample values in the
y
data array for vertical boxes (x
for horizontal boxes). By supplying anx
(y
) array, one box per distinctx
(y
) value is drawn If nox
(y
) list is provided, a single box is drawn. In this case, the box is positioned with the tracename
or withx0
(y0
) if provided. The second signature expects users to supply the boxes corresponding Q1, median and Q3 statistics in theq1
,median
andq3
data arrays respectively. Other box features relying on statistics namelylowerfence
,upperfence
,notchspan
can be set directly by the users. To have plotly compute them or to show sample points besides the boxes, users can set they
data array for vertical boxes (x
for horizontal boxes) to a 2D array with the outer length corresponding to the number of boxes in the traces and the inner length corresponding the sample size.- Parameters
alignmentgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same alignmentgroup. This controls whether bars compute their positional range dependently or independently.
boxmean – If True, the mean of the box(es)’ underlying distribution is drawn as a dashed line inside the box(es). If “sd” the standard deviation is also drawn. Defaults to True when
mean
is set. Defaults to “sd” whensd
is set Otherwise defaults to False.boxpoints – If “outliers”, only the sample points lying outside the whiskers are shown If “suspectedoutliers”, the outlier points are shown and points either less than 4*Q1-3*Q3 or greater than 4*Q3-3*Q1 are highlighted (see
outliercolor
) If “all”, all sample points are shown If False, only the box(es) are shown with no sample points Defaults to “suspectedoutliers” whenmarker.outliercolor
ormarker.line.outliercolor
is set. Defaults to “all” under the q1/median/q3 signature. Otherwise defaults to “outliers”.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step for multi-box traces set using q1/median/q3.
dy – Sets the y coordinate step for multi-box traces set using q1/median/q3.
fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.box.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoveron – Do the hover effects highlight individual boxes or sample points or both?
hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.jitter – Sets the amount of jitter in the sample points drawn. If 0, the sample points align along the distribution axis. If 1, the sample points are drawn in a random jitter of width equal to the width of the box(es).
legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.box.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.box.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertieslowerfence – Sets the lower fence values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired. This attribute has effect only under the q1/median/q3 signature. If
lowerfence
is not provided but a sample (iny
orx
) is set, we compute the lower as the last sample point below 1.5 times the IQR.lowerfencesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lowerfence
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.box.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmean – Sets the mean values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired. This attribute has effect only under the q1/median/q3 signature. If
mean
is not provided but a sample (iny
orx
) is set, we compute the mean for each box using the sample values.meansrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
mean
.median – Sets the median values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired.
mediansrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
median
.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover. For box traces, the name will also be used for the position coordinate, if
x
andx0
(y
andy0
if horizontal) are missing and the position axis is categoricalnotched – Determines whether or not notches are drawn. Notches displays a confidence interval around the median. We compute the confidence interval as median +/- 1.57 * IQR / sqrt(N), where IQR is the interquartile range and N is the sample size. If two boxes’ notches do not overlap there is 95% confidence their medians differ. See https://sites.google.com/site/davidsstatistics/home /notched-box-plots for more info. Defaults to False unless
notchwidth
ornotchspan
is set.notchspan – Sets the notch span from the boxes’
median
values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired. This attribute has effect only under the q1/median/q3 signature. Ifnotchspan
is not provided but a sample (iny
orx
) is set, we compute it as 1.57 * IQR / sqrt(N), where N is the sample size.notchspansrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
notchspan
.notchwidth – Sets the width of the notches relative to the box’ width. For example, with 0, the notches are as wide as the box(es).
offsetgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same offsetgroup where bars of the same position coordinate will line up.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
orientation – Sets the orientation of the box(es). If “v” (“h”), the distribution is visualized along the vertical (horizontal).
pointpos – Sets the position of the sample points in relation to the box(es). If 0, the sample points are places over the center of the box(es). Positive (negative) values correspond to positions to the right (left) for vertical boxes and above (below) for horizontal boxes
q1 – Sets the Quartile 1 values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired.
q1src – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
q1
.q3 – Sets the Quartile 3 values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired.
q3src – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
q3
.quartilemethod – Sets the method used to compute the sample’s Q1 and Q3 quartiles. The “linear” method uses the 25th percentile for Q1 and 75th percentile for Q3 as computed using method #10 (listed on http://jse.amstat.org/v14n3/langford.html). The “exclusive” method uses the median to divide the ordered dataset into two halves if the sample is odd, it does not include the median in either half - Q1 is then the median of the lower half and Q3 the median of the upper half. The “inclusive” method also uses the median to divide the ordered dataset into two halves but if the sample is odd, it includes the median in both halves - Q1 is then the median of the lower half and Q3 the median of the upper half.
sd – Sets the standard deviation values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired. This attribute has effect only under the q1/median/q3 signature. If
sd
is not provided but a sample (iny
orx
) is set, we compute the standard deviation for each box using the sample values.sdmultiple – Scales the box size when sizemode=sd Allowing boxes to be drawn across any stddev range For example 1-stddev, 3-stddev, 5-stddev
sdsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
sd
.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.box.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showwhiskers – Determines whether or not whiskers are visible. Defaults to true for
sizemode
“quartiles”, false for “sd”.sizemode – Sets the upper and lower bound for the boxes quartiles means box is drawn between Q1 and Q3 SD means the box is drawn between Mean +- Standard Deviation Argument sdmultiple (default 1) to scale the box size So it could be drawn 1-stddev, 3-stddev etc
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.box.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each sample value. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.box.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesupperfence – Sets the upper fence values. There should be as many items as the number of boxes desired. This attribute has effect only under the q1/median/q3 signature. If
upperfence
is not provided but a sample (iny
orx
) is set, we compute the upper as the last sample point above 1.5 times the IQR.upperfencesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
upperfence
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
whiskerwidth – Sets the width of the whiskers relative to the box’ width. For example, with 1, the whiskers are as wide as the box(es).
width – Sets the width of the box in data coordinate If 0 (default value) the width is automatically selected based on the positions of other box traces in the same subplot.
x – Sets the x sample data or coordinates. See overview for more info.
x0 – Sets the x coordinate for single-box traces or the starting coordinate for multi-box traces set using q1/median/q3. See overview for more info.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y sample data or coordinates. See overview for more info.
y0 – Sets the y coordinate for single-box traces or the starting coordinate for multi-box traces set using q1/median/q3. See overview for more info.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_candlestick
(close=None, closesrc=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, decreasing=None, high=None, highsrc=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, increasing=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, low=None, lowsrc=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, open=None, opensrc=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, whiskerwidth=None, x=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, yaxis=None, yhoverformat=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Candlestick trace
The candlestick is a style of financial chart describing open, high, low and close for a given
x
coordinate (most likely time). The boxes represent the spread between theopen
andclose
values and the lines represent the spread between thelow
andhigh
values Sample points where the close value is higher (lower) then the open value are called increasing (decreasing). By default, increasing candles are drawn in green whereas decreasing are drawn in red.- Parameters
close – Sets the close values.
closesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
close
.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.decreasing –
plotly.graph_objects.candlestick.Decreasing
instance or dict with compatible propertieshigh – Sets the high values.
highsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
high
.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.candlestick.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.increasing –
plotly.graph_objects.candlestick.Increasing
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.candlestick.Legendgrouptit le
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.candlestick.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertieslow – Sets the low values.
lowsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
low
.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
open – Sets the open values.
opensrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
open
.selectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.candlestick.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets hover text elements associated with each sample point. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to this trace’s sample points.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
whiskerwidth – Sets the width of the whiskers relative to the box’ width. For example, with 1, the whiskers are as wide as the box(es).
x – Sets the x coordinates. If absent, linear coordinate will be generated.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_carpet
(a=None, a0=None, aaxis=None, asrc=None, b=None, b0=None, baxis=None, bsrc=None, carpet=None, cheaterslope=None, color=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, da=None, db=None, font=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, stream=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, xaxis=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yaxis=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Carpet trace
The data describing carpet axis layout is set in
y
and (optionally) alsox
. If onlyy
is present,x
the plot is interpreted as a cheater plot and is filled in using they
values.x
andy
may either be 2D arrays matching with each dimension matching that ofa
andb
, or they may be 1D arrays with total length equal to that ofa
andb
.- Parameters
a – An array containing values of the first parameter value
a0 – Alternate to
a
. Builds a linear space of a coordinates. Use withda
wherea0
is the starting coordinate andda
the step.aaxis –
plotly.graph_objects.carpet.Aaxis
instance or dict with compatible propertiesasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
a
.b – A two dimensional array of y coordinates at each carpet point.
b0 – Alternate to
b
. Builds a linear space of a coordinates. Use withdb
whereb0
is the starting coordinate anddb
the step.baxis –
plotly.graph_objects.carpet.Baxis
instance or dict with compatible propertiesbsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
b
.carpet – An identifier for this carpet, so that
scattercarpet
andcontourcarpet
traces can specify a carpet plot on which they liecheaterslope – The shift applied to each successive row of data in creating a cheater plot. Only used if
x
is been omitted.color – Sets default for all colors associated with this axis all at once: line, font, tick, and grid colors. Grid color is lightened by blending this with the plot background Individual pieces can override this.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.da – Sets the a coordinate step. See
a0
for more info.db – Sets the b coordinate step. See
b0
for more info.font – The default font used for axis & tick labels on this carpet
ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.carpet.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.carpet.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiesuid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – A two dimensional array of x coordinates at each carpet point. If omitted, the plot is a cheater plot and the xaxis is hidden by default.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – A two dimensional array of y coordinates at each carpet point.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_choropleth
(autocolorscale=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, featureidkey=None, geo=None, geojson=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, locationmode=None, locations=None, locationssrc=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, reversescale=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, z=None, zauto=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Choropleth trace
The data that describes the choropleth value-to-color mapping is set in
z
. The geographic locations corresponding to each value inz
are set inlocations
.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.choropleth.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.featureidkey – Sets the key in GeoJSON features which is used as id to match the items included in the
locations
array. Only has an effect whengeojson
is set. Support nested property, for example “properties.name”.geo – Sets a reference between this trace’s geospatial coordinates and a geographic map. If “geo” (the default value), the geospatial coordinates refer to
layout.geo
. If “geo2”, the geospatial coordinates refer tolayout.geo2
, and so on.geojson – Sets optional GeoJSON data associated with this trace. If not given, the features on the base map are used. It can be set as a valid GeoJSON object or as a URL string. Note that we only accept GeoJSONs of type “FeatureCollection” or “Feature” with geometries of type “Polygon” or “MultiPolygon”.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.choropleth.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.choropleth.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
locationmode – Determines the set of locations used to match entries in
locations
to regions on the map. Values “ISO-3”, “USA-states”, country names correspond to features on the base map and value “geojson-id” corresponds to features from a custom GeoJSON linked to thegeojson
attribute.locations – Sets the coordinates via location IDs or names. See
locationmode
for more info.locationssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
locations
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.choropleth.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.choropleth.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.choropleth.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each location.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.choropleth.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
z – Sets the color values.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_choroplethmap
(autocolorscale=None, below=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, featureidkey=None, geojson=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, locations=None, locationssrc=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, reversescale=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, z=None, zauto=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Choroplethmap trace
GeoJSON features to be filled are set in
geojson
The data that describes the choropleth value-to-color mapping is set inlocations
andz
.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.below – Determines if the choropleth polygons will be inserted before the layer with the specified ID. By default, choroplethmap traces are placed above the water layers. If set to ‘’, the layer will be inserted above every existing layer.
coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmap.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.featureidkey – Sets the key in GeoJSON features which is used as id to match the items included in the
locations
array. Support nested property, for example “properties.name”.geojson – Sets the GeoJSON data associated with this trace. It can be set as a valid GeoJSON object or as a URL string. Note that we only accept GeoJSONs of type “FeatureCollection” or “Feature” with geometries of type “Polygon” or “MultiPolygon”.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmap.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableproperties
Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmap.Legendgroupt itle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
locations – Sets which features found in “geojson” to plot using their feature
id
field.locationssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
locations
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmap.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmap.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmap.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a map subplot. If “map” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.map
. If “map2”, the data refer tolayout.map2
, and so on.text – Sets the text elements associated with each location.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmap.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
z – Sets the color values.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_choroplethmapbox
(autocolorscale=None, below=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, featureidkey=None, geojson=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, locations=None, locationssrc=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, reversescale=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, z=None, zauto=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Choroplethmapbox trace
“choroplethmapbox” trace is deprecated! Please consider switching to the “choroplethmap” trace type and
map
subplots. Learn more at: https://plotly.com/javascript/maplibre- migration/ GeoJSON features to be filled are set ingeojson
The data that describes the choropleth value-to-color mapping is set inlocations
andz
.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.below – Determines if the choropleth polygons will be inserted before the layer with the specified ID. By default, choroplethmapbox traces are placed above the water layers. If set to ‘’, the layer will be inserted above every existing layer.
coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmapbox.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.featureidkey – Sets the key in GeoJSON features which is used as id to match the items included in the
locations
array. Support nested property, for example “properties.name”.geojson – Sets the GeoJSON data associated with this trace. It can be set as a valid GeoJSON object or as a URL string. Note that we only accept GeoJSONs of type “FeatureCollection” or “Feature” with geometries of type “Polygon” or “MultiPolygon”.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmapbox.Hoverlabe l
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableproperties
Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmapbox.Legendgro uptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
locations – Sets which features found in “geojson” to plot using their feature
id
field.locationssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
locations
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmapbox.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmapbox.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmapbox.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – mapbox subplots and traces are deprecated! Please consider switching to
map
subplots and traces. Learn more at: https://plotly.com/javascript/maplibre- migration/ Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a mapbox subplot. If “mapbox” (the default value), the data refer tolayout.mapbox
. If “mapbox2”, the data refer tolayout.mapbox2
, and so on.text – Sets the text elements associated with each location.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.choroplethmapbox.Unselecte d
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
z – Sets the color values.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_cone
(anchor=None, autocolorscale=None, cauto=None, cmax=None, cmid=None, cmin=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lighting=None, lightposition=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, scene=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, sizemode=None, sizeref=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, u=None, uhoverformat=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, usrc=None, v=None, vhoverformat=None, visible=None, vsrc=None, w=None, whoverformat=None, wsrc=None, x=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zhoverformat=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Cone trace
Use cone traces to visualize vector fields. Specify a vector field using 6 1D arrays, 3 position arrays
x
,y
andz
and 3 vector component arraysu
,v
,w
. The cones are drawn exactly at the positions given byx
,y
andz
.- Parameters
anchor – Sets the cones’ anchor with respect to their x/y/z positions. Note that “cm” denote the cone’s center of mass which corresponds to 1/4 from the tail to tip.
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.cauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here u/v/w norm) or the bounds set in
cmin
andcmax
Defaults tofalse
whencmin
andcmax
are set by the user.cmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as u/v/w norm and if set,
cmin
must be set as well.cmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
cmin
and/orcmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as u/v/w norm. Has no effect whencauto
isfalse
.cmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as u/v/w norm and if set,
cmax
must be set as well.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.cone.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usecmin
andcmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.cone.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablenorm
Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.cone.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lighting –
plotly.graph_objects.cone.Lighting
instance or dict with compatible propertieslightposition –
plotly.graph_objects.cone.Lightposition
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the surface. Please note that in the case of using high
opacity
values for example a value greater than or equal to 0.5 on two surfaces (and 0.25 with four surfaces), an overlay of multiple transparent surfaces may not perfectly be sorted in depth by the webgl API. This behavior may be improved in the near future and is subject to change.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
cmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andcmax
will correspond to the first color.scene – Sets a reference between this trace’s 3D coordinate system and a 3D scene. If “scene” (the default value), the (x,y,z) coordinates refer to
layout.scene
. If “scene2”, the (x,y,z) coordinates refer tolayout.scene2
, and so on.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
sizemode – Determines whether
sizeref
is set as a “scaled” (i.e unitless) scalar (normalized by the max u/v/w norm in the vector field) or as “absolute” value (in the same units as the vector field). To display sizes in actual vector length use “raw”.sizeref – Adjusts the cone size scaling. The size of the cones is determined by their u/v/w norm multiplied a factor and
sizeref
. This factor (computed internally) corresponds to the minimum “time” to travel across two successive x/y/z positions at the average velocity of those two successive positions. All cones in a given trace use the same factor. Withsizemode
set to “raw”, its default value is 1. Withsizemode
set to “scaled”,sizeref
is unitless, its default value is 0.5. Withsizemode
set to “absolute”,sizeref
has the same units as the u/v/w vector field, its the default value is half the sample’s maximum vector norm.stream –
plotly.graph_objects.cone.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with the cones. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.u – Sets the x components of the vector field.
uhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
u
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.usrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
u
.v – Sets the y components of the vector field.
vhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
v
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
vsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
v
.w – Sets the z components of the vector field.
whoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
w
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.wsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
w
.x – Sets the x coordinates of the vector field and of the displayed cones.
xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates of the vector field and of the displayed cones.
yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the z coordinates of the vector field and of the displayed cones.
zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingzaxis.hoverformat
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_contour
(autocolorscale=None, autocontour=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, connectgaps=None, contours=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoverongaps=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, ncontours=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, transpose=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, xtype=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, ytype=None, z=None, zauto=None, zhoverformat=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zorder=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Contour trace
The data from which contour lines are computed is set in
z
. Data inz
must be a 2D list of numbers. Say thatz
has N rows and M columns, then by default, these N rows correspond to N y coordinates (set iny
or auto-generated) and the M columns correspond to M x coordinates (set inx
or auto- generated). By settingtranspose
to True, the above behavior is flipped.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.autocontour – Determines whether or not the contour level attributes are picked by an algorithm. If True, the number of contour levels can be set in
ncontours
. If False, set the contour level attributes incontours
.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.contour.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the
z
data are filled in. It is defaulted to true ifz
is a one dimensional array otherwise it is defaulted to false.contours –
plotly.graph_objects.contour.Contours
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.fillcolor – Sets the fill color if
contours.type
is “constraint”. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.contour.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverongaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the
z
data have hover labels associated with them.hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.contour.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.contour.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
ncontours – Sets the maximum number of contour levels. The actual number of contours will be chosen automatically to be less than or equal to the value of
ncontours
. Has an effect only ifautocontour
is True or ifcontours.size
is missing.opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.contour.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each z value.
textfont – For this trace it only has an effect if
coloring
is set to “heatmap”. Sets the text font.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – For this trace it only has an effect if
coloring
is set to “heatmap”. Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will overridetextinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesx
,y
,z
andtext
.transpose – Transposes the z data.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.xtype – If “array”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x” (the default behavior when
x
is provided). If “scaled”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x0” and “dx” (the default behavior whenx
is not provided).y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.ytype – If “array”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y” (the default behavior when
y
is provided) If “scaled”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y0” and “dy” (the default behavior wheny
is not provided)z – Sets the z data.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_contourcarpet
(a=None, a0=None, asrc=None, atype=None, autocolorscale=None, autocontour=None, b=None, b0=None, bsrc=None, btype=None, carpet=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, contours=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, da=None, db=None, fillcolor=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, ncontours=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, transpose=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, xaxis=None, yaxis=None, z=None, zauto=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zorder=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Contourcarpet trace
Plots contours on either the first carpet axis or the carpet axis with a matching
carpet
attribute. Dataz
is interpreted as matching that of the corresponding carpet axis.- Parameters
a – Sets the x coordinates.
a0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.asrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
a
.atype – If “array”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x” (the default behavior when
x
is provided). If “scaled”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x0” and “dx” (the default behavior whenx
is not provided).autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.autocontour – Determines whether or not the contour level attributes are picked by an algorithm. If True, the number of contour levels can be set in
ncontours
. If False, set the contour level attributes incontours
.b – Sets the y coordinates.
b0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.bsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
b
.btype – If “array”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y” (the default behavior when
y
is provided) If “scaled”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y0” and “dy” (the default behavior wheny
is not provided)carpet – The
carpet
of the carpet axes on which this contour trace liescoloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.contourcarpet.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.contours –
plotly.graph_objects.contourcarpet.Contours
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.da – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.db – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.fillcolor – Sets the fill color if
contours.type
is “constraint”. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.contourcarpet.Legendgroupt itle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.contourcarpet.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
ncontours – Sets the maximum number of contour levels. The actual number of contours will be chosen automatically to be less than or equal to the value of
ncontours
. Has an effect only ifautocontour
is True or ifcontours.size
is missing.opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.contourcarpet.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each z value.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.transpose – Transposes the z data.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.z – Sets the z data.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_densitymap
(autocolorscale=None, below=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, lat=None, latsrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lon=None, lonsrc=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, radius=None, radiussrc=None, reversescale=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, z=None, zauto=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Densitymap trace
Draws a bivariate kernel density estimation with a Gaussian kernel from
lon
andlat
coordinates and optionalz
values using a colorscale.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.below – Determines if the densitymap trace will be inserted before the layer with the specified ID. By default, densitymap traces are placed below the first layer of type symbol If set to ‘’, the layer will be inserted above every existing layer.
coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymap.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymap.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.lat – Sets the latitude coordinates (in degrees North).
latsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lat
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymap.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lon – Sets the longitude coordinates (in degrees East).
lonsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lon
.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
radius – Sets the radius of influence of one
lon
/lat
point in pixels. Increasing the value makes the densitymap trace smoother, but less detailed.radiussrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
radius
.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymap.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a map subplot. If “map” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.map
. If “map2”, the data refer tolayout.map2
, and so on.text – Sets text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
z – Sets the points’ weight. For example, a value of 10 would be equivalent to having 10 points of weight 1 in the same spot
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_densitymapbox
(autocolorscale=None, below=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, lat=None, latsrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lon=None, lonsrc=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, radius=None, radiussrc=None, reversescale=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, z=None, zauto=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Densitymapbox trace
“densitymapbox” trace is deprecated! Please consider switching to the “densitymap” trace type and
map
subplots. Learn more at: https://plotly.com/javascript/maplibre-migration/ Draws a bivariate kernel density estimation with a Gaussian kernel fromlon
andlat
coordinates and optionalz
values using a colorscale.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.below – Determines if the densitymapbox trace will be inserted before the layer with the specified ID. By default, densitymapbox traces are placed below the first layer of type symbol If set to ‘’, the layer will be inserted above every existing layer.
coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymapbox.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymapbox.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.lat – Sets the latitude coordinates (in degrees North).
latsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lat
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymapbox.Legendgroupt itle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lon – Sets the longitude coordinates (in degrees East).
lonsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lon
.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
radius – Sets the radius of influence of one
lon
/lat
point in pixels. Increasing the value makes the densitymapbox trace smoother, but less detailed.radiussrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
radius
.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.densitymapbox.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – mapbox subplots and traces are deprecated! Please consider switching to
map
subplots and traces. Learn more at: https://plotly.com/javascript/maplibre- migration/ Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a mapbox subplot. If “mapbox” (the default value), the data refer tolayout.mapbox
. If “mapbox2”, the data refer tolayout.mapbox2
, and so on.text – Sets text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
z – Sets the points’ weight. For example, a value of 10 would be equivalent to having 10 points of weight 1 in the same spot
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_funnel
(alignmentgroup=None, cliponaxis=None, connector=None, constraintext=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextanchor=None, insidetextfont=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, offset=None, offsetgroup=None, opacity=None, orientation=None, outsidetextfont=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textangle=None, textfont=None, textinfo=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, width=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Funnel trace
Visualize stages in a process using length-encoded bars. This trace can be used to show data in either a part-to-whole representation wherein each item appears in a single stage, or in a “drop-off” representation wherein each item appears in each stage it traversed. See also the “funnelarea” trace type for a different approach to visualizing funnel data.
- Parameters
alignmentgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same alignmentgroup. This controls whether bars compute their positional range dependently or independently.
cliponaxis – Determines whether the text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show the text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.connector –
plotly.graph_objects.funnel.Connector
instance or dict with compatible propertiesconstraintext – Constrain the size of text inside or outside a bar to be no larger than the bar itself.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.funnel.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablespercentInitial
,percentPrevious
andpercentTotal
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextanchor – Determines if texts are kept at center or start/end points in
textposition
“inside” mode.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying inside the bar.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.funnel.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.funnel.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
offset – Shifts the position where the bar is drawn (in position axis units). In “group” barmode, traces that set “offset” will be excluded and drawn in “overlay” mode instead.
offsetgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same offsetgroup where bars of the same position coordinate will line up.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
orientation – Sets the orientation of the funnels. With “v” (“h”), the value of the each bar spans along the vertical (horizontal). By default funnels are tend to be oriented horizontally; unless only “y” array is presented or orientation is set to “v”. Also regarding graphs including only ‘horizontal’ funnels, “autorange” on the “y-axis” are set to “reversed”.
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying outside the bar.selectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.funnel.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textangle – Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the bar. For example, a
tickangle
of -90 draws the tick labels vertically. With “auto” the texts may automatically be rotated to fit with the maximum size in bars.textfont – Sets the font used for
text
.textinfo – Determines which trace information appear on the graph. In the case of having multiple funnels, percentages & totals are computed separately (per trace).
textposition – Specifies the location of the
text
. “inside” positionstext
inside, next to the bar end (rotated and scaled if needed). “outside” positionstext
outside, next to the bar end (scaled if needed), unless there is another bar stacked on this one, then the text gets pushed inside. “auto” tries to positiontext
inside the bar, but if the bar is too small and no bar is stacked on this one the text is moved outside. If “none”, no text appears.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablespercentInitial
,percentPrevious
,percentTotal
,label
andvalue
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
width – Sets the bar width (in position axis units).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_funnelarea
(aspectratio=None, baseratio=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dlabel=None, domain=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextfont=None, label0=None, labels=None, labelssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, scalegroup=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textinfo=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, title=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, values=None, valuessrc=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Funnelarea trace
Visualize stages in a process using area-encoded trapezoids. This trace can be used to show data in a part-to-whole representation similar to a “pie” trace, wherein each item appears in a single stage. See also the “funnel” trace type for a different approach to visualizing funnel data.
- Parameters
aspectratio – Sets the ratio between height and width
baseratio – Sets the ratio between bottom length and maximum top length.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dlabel – Sets the label step. See
label0
for more info.domain –
plotly.graph_objects.funnelarea.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.funnelarea.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslabel
,color
,value
,text
andpercent
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each sector. If a single string, the same string appears for all data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order of this trace’s sectors. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying inside the sector.label0 – Alternate to
labels
. Builds a numeric set of labels. Use withdlabel
wherelabel0
is the starting label anddlabel
the step.labels – Sets the sector labels. If
labels
entries are duplicated, we sum associatedvalues
or simply count occurrences ifvalues
is not provided. For other array attributes (including color) we use the first non-empty entry among all occurrences of the label.labelssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
labels
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.funnelarea.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.funnelarea.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
scalegroup – If there are multiple funnelareas that should be sized according to their totals, link them by providing a non-empty group id here shared by every trace in the same group.
showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.funnelarea.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each sector. If trace
textinfo
contains a “text” flag, these elements will be seen on the chart. If tracehoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
.textinfo – Determines which trace information appear on the graph.
textposition – Specifies the location of the
textinfo
.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslabel
,color
,value
,text
andpercent
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.title –
plotly.graph_objects.funnelarea.Title
instance or dict with compatible propertiesuid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.values – Sets the values of the sectors. If omitted, we count occurrences of each label.
valuessrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
values
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_heatmap
(autocolorscale=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoverongaps=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, transpose=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xgap=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, xtype=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, ycalendar=None, ygap=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, ytype=None, z=None, zauto=None, zhoverformat=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zorder=None, zsmooth=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Heatmap trace
The data that describes the heatmap value-to-color mapping is set in
z
. Data inz
can either be a 2D list of values (ragged or not) or a 1D array of values. In the case wherez
is a 2D list, say thatz
has N rows and M columns. Then, by default, the resulting heatmap will have N partitions along the y axis and M partitions along the x axis. In other words, the i-th row/ j-th column cell inz
is mapped to the i-th partition of the y axis (starting from the bottom of the plot) and the j-th partition of the x-axis (starting from the left of the plot). This behavior can be flipped by usingtranspose
. Moreover,x
(y
) can be provided with M or M+1 (N or N+1) elements. If M (N), then the coordinates correspond to the center of the heatmap cells and the cells have equal width. If M+1 (N+1), then the coordinates correspond to the edges of the heatmap cells. In the case wherez
is a 1D list, the x and y coordinates must be provided inx
andy
respectively to form data triplets.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.heatmap.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the
z
data are filled in. It is defaulted to true ifz
is a one dimensional array andzsmooth
is not false; otherwise it is defaulted to false.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.heatmap.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverongaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the
z
data have hover labels associated with them.hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.heatmap.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.heatmap.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each z value.
textfont – Sets the text font.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesx
,y
,z
andtext
.transpose – Transposes the z data.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xgap – Sets the horizontal gap (in pixels) between bricks.
xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.xtype – If “array”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x” (the default behavior when
x
is provided). If “scaled”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x0” and “dx” (the default behavior whenx
is not provided).y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.ygap – Sets the vertical gap (in pixels) between bricks.
yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.ytype – If “array”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y” (the default behavior when
y
is provided) If “scaled”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y0” and “dy” (the default behavior wheny
is not provided)z – Sets the z data.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.zsmooth – Picks a smoothing algorithm use to smooth
z
data.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_heatmapgl
(autocolorscale=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, showscale=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, transpose=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xsrc=None, xtype=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, ysrc=None, ytype=None, z=None, zauto=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsmooth=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Heatmapgl trace
“heatmapgl” trace is deprecated! Please consider switching to the “heatmap” or “image” trace types. Alternatively you could contribute/sponsor rewriting this trace type based on cartesian features and using regl framework. WebGL version of the heatmap trace type.
- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.heatmapgl.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.heatmapgl.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertiesids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle – :class:`plotly.graph_objects.heatmapgl.Legendgrouptitle ` instance or dict with compatible properties
legendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.heatmapgl.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each z value.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.transpose – Transposes the z data.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.xtype – If “array”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x” (the default behavior when
x
is provided). If “scaled”, the heatmap’s x coordinates are given by “x0” and “dx” (the default behavior whenx
is not provided).y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.ytype – If “array”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y” (the default behavior when
y
is provided) If “scaled”, the heatmap’s y coordinates are given by “y0” and “dy” (the default behavior wheny
is not provided)z – Sets the z data.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsmooth – Picks a smoothing algorithm use to smooth
z
data.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_histogram
(alignmentgroup=None, autobinx=None, autobiny=None, bingroup=None, cliponaxis=None, constraintext=None, cumulative=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, error_x=None, error_y=None, histfunc=None, histnorm=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextanchor=None, insidetextfont=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, nbinsx=None, nbinsy=None, offsetgroup=None, opacity=None, orientation=None, outsidetextfont=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textangle=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, x=None, xaxis=None, xbins=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yaxis=None, ybins=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Histogram trace
The sample data from which statistics are computed is set in
x
for vertically spanning histograms and iny
for horizontally spanning histograms. Binning options are setxbins
andybins
respectively if no aggregation data is provided.- Parameters
alignmentgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same alignmentgroup. This controls whether bars compute their positional range dependently or independently.
autobinx – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and
autobinx
is not needed. However, we acceptautobinx: true
orfalse
and will updatexbins
accordingly before deletingautobinx
from the trace.autobiny – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and
autobiny
is not needed. However, we acceptautobiny: true
orfalse
and will updateybins
accordingly before deletingautobiny
from the trace.bingroup – Set a group of histogram traces which will have compatible bin settings. Note that traces on the same subplot and with the same “orientation” under
barmode
“stack”, “relative” and “group” are forced into the same bingroup, Usingbingroup
, traces underbarmode
“overlay” and on different axes (of the same axis type) can have compatible bin settings. Note that histogram and histogram2d* trace can share the samebingroup
cliponaxis – Determines whether the text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show the text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.constraintext – Constrain the size of text inside or outside a bar to be no larger than the bar itself.
cumulative –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.Cumulative
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.error_x –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.ErrorX
instance or dict with compatible propertieserror_y –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.ErrorY
instance or dict with compatible propertieshistfunc – Specifies the binning function used for this histogram trace. If “count”, the histogram values are computed by counting the number of values lying inside each bin. If “sum”, “avg”, “min”, “max”, the histogram values are computed using the sum, the average, the minimum or the maximum of the values lying inside each bin respectively.
histnorm – Specifies the type of normalization used for this histogram trace. If “”, the span of each bar corresponds to the number of occurrences (i.e. the number of data points lying inside the bins). If “percent” / “probability”, the span of each bar corresponds to the percentage / fraction of occurrences with respect to the total number of sample points (here, the sum of all bin HEIGHTS equals 100% / 1). If “density”, the span of each bar corresponds to the number of occurrences in a bin divided by the size of the bin interval (here, the sum of all bin AREAS equals the total number of sample points). If probability density, the area of each bar corresponds to the probability that an event will fall into the corresponding bin (here, the sum of all bin AREAS equals 1).
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablebinNumber
Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextanchor – Determines if texts are kept at center or start/end points in
textposition
“inside” mode.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying inside the bar.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle – :class:`plotly.graph_objects.histogram.Legendgrouptitle ` instance or dict with compatible properties
legendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
nbinsx – Specifies the maximum number of desired bins. This value will be used in an algorithm that will decide the optimal bin size such that the histogram best visualizes the distribution of the data. Ignored if
xbins.size
is provided.nbinsy – Specifies the maximum number of desired bins. This value will be used in an algorithm that will decide the optimal bin size such that the histogram best visualizes the distribution of the data. Ignored if
ybins.size
is provided.offsetgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same offsetgroup where bars of the same position coordinate will line up.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
orientation – Sets the orientation of the bars. With “v” (“h”), the value of the each bar spans along the vertical (horizontal).
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying outside the bar.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets hover text elements associated with each bar. If a single string, the same string appears over all bars. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s coordinates.
textangle – Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the bar. For example, a
tickangle
of -90 draws the tick labels vertically. With “auto” the texts may automatically be rotated to fit with the maximum size in bars.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Specifies the location of the
text
. “inside” positionstext
inside, next to the bar end (rotated and scaled if needed). “outside” positionstext
outside, next to the bar end (scaled if needed), unless there is another bar stacked on this one, then the text gets pushed inside. “auto” tries to positiontext
inside the bar, but if the bar is too small and no bar is stacked on this one the text is moved outside. If “none”, no text appears.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslabel
andvalue
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the sample data to be binned on the x axis.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xbins –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.XBins
instance or dict with compatible propertiesxcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the sample data to be binned on the y axis.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ybins –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram.YBins
instance or dict with compatible propertiesycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_histogram2d
(autobinx=None, autobiny=None, autocolorscale=None, bingroup=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, histfunc=None, histnorm=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, nbinsx=None, nbinsy=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, textfont=None, texttemplate=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, xaxis=None, xbingroup=None, xbins=None, xcalendar=None, xgap=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yaxis=None, ybingroup=None, ybins=None, ycalendar=None, ygap=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zauto=None, zhoverformat=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsmooth=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Histogram2d trace
The sample data from which statistics are computed is set in
x
andy
(wherex
andy
represent marginal distributions, binning is set inxbins
andybins
in this case) orz
(wherez
represent the 2D distribution and binning set, binning is set byx
andy
in this case). The resulting distribution is visualized as a heatmap.- Parameters
autobinx – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and
autobinx
is not needed. However, we acceptautobinx: true
orfalse
and will updatexbins
accordingly before deletingautobinx
from the trace.autobiny – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and
autobiny
is not needed. However, we acceptautobiny: true
orfalse
and will updateybins
accordingly before deletingautobiny
from the trace.autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.bingroup – Set the
xbingroup
andybingroup
default prefix For example, setting abingroup
of 1 on two histogram2d traces will make them their x-bins and y-bins match separately.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2d.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.histfunc – Specifies the binning function used for this histogram trace. If “count”, the histogram values are computed by counting the number of values lying inside each bin. If “sum”, “avg”, “min”, “max”, the histogram values are computed using the sum, the average, the minimum or the maximum of the values lying inside each bin respectively.
histnorm – Specifies the type of normalization used for this histogram trace. If “”, the span of each bar corresponds to the number of occurrences (i.e. the number of data points lying inside the bins). If “percent” / “probability”, the span of each bar corresponds to the percentage / fraction of occurrences with respect to the total number of sample points (here, the sum of all bin HEIGHTS equals 100% / 1). If “density”, the span of each bar corresponds to the number of occurrences in a bin divided by the size of the bin interval (here, the sum of all bin AREAS equals the total number of sample points). If probability density, the area of each bar corresponds to the probability that an event will fall into the corresponding bin (here, the sum of all bin AREAS equals 1).
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2d.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablez
Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2d.Legendgrouptit le
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2d.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
nbinsx – Specifies the maximum number of desired bins. This value will be used in an algorithm that will decide the optimal bin size such that the histogram best visualizes the distribution of the data. Ignored if
xbins.size
is provided.nbinsy – Specifies the maximum number of desired bins. This value will be used in an algorithm that will decide the optimal bin size such that the histogram best visualizes the distribution of the data. Ignored if
ybins.size
is provided.opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2d.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestextfont – Sets the text font.
texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablez
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the sample data to be binned on the x axis.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xbingroup – Set a group of histogram traces which will have compatible x-bin settings. Using
xbingroup
, histogram2d and histogram2dcontour traces (on axes of the same axis type) can have compatible x-bin settings. Note that the samexbingroup
value can be used to set (1D) histogrambingroup
xbins –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2d.XBins
instance or dict with compatible propertiesxcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xgap – Sets the horizontal gap (in pixels) between bricks.
xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the sample data to be binned on the y axis.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ybingroup – Set a group of histogram traces which will have compatible y-bin settings. Using
ybingroup
, histogram2d and histogram2dcontour traces (on axes of the same axis type) can have compatible y-bin settings. Note that the sameybingroup
value can be used to set (1D) histogrambingroup
ybins –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2d.YBins
instance or dict with compatible propertiesycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.ygap – Sets the vertical gap (in pixels) between bricks.
yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the aggregation data.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsmooth – Picks a smoothing algorithm use to smooth
z
data.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_histogram2dcontour
(autobinx=None, autobiny=None, autocolorscale=None, autocontour=None, bingroup=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, contours=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, histfunc=None, histnorm=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, nbinsx=None, nbinsy=None, ncontours=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, textfont=None, texttemplate=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, xaxis=None, xbingroup=None, xbins=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yaxis=None, ybingroup=None, ybins=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zauto=None, zhoverformat=None, zmax=None, zmid=None, zmin=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Histogram2dContour trace
The sample data from which statistics are computed is set in
x
andy
(wherex
andy
represent marginal distributions, binning is set inxbins
andybins
in this case) orz
(wherez
represent the 2D distribution and binning set, binning is set byx
andy
in this case). The resulting distribution is visualized as a contour plot.- Parameters
autobinx – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and
autobinx
is not needed. However, we acceptautobinx: true
orfalse
and will updatexbins
accordingly before deletingautobinx
from the trace.autobiny – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and
autobiny
is not needed. However, we acceptautobiny: true
orfalse
and will updateybins
accordingly before deletingautobiny
from the trace.autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.autocontour – Determines whether or not the contour level attributes are picked by an algorithm. If True, the number of contour levels can be set in
ncontours
. If False, set the contour level attributes incontours
.bingroup – Set the
xbingroup
andybingroup
default prefix For example, setting abingroup
of 1 on two histogram2d traces will make them their x-bins and y-bins match separately.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.ColorBa r
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usezmin
andzmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.contours –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Contour s
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.histfunc – Specifies the binning function used for this histogram trace. If “count”, the histogram values are computed by counting the number of values lying inside each bin. If “sum”, “avg”, “min”, “max”, the histogram values are computed using the sum, the average, the minimum or the maximum of the values lying inside each bin respectively.
histnorm – Specifies the type of normalization used for this histogram trace. If “”, the span of each bar corresponds to the number of occurrences (i.e. the number of data points lying inside the bins). If “percent” / “probability”, the span of each bar corresponds to the percentage / fraction of occurrences with respect to the total number of sample points (here, the sum of all bin HEIGHTS equals 100% / 1). If “density”, the span of each bar corresponds to the number of occurrences in a bin divided by the size of the bin interval (here, the sum of all bin AREAS equals the total number of sample points). If probability density, the area of each bar corresponds to the probability that an event will fall into the corresponding bin (here, the sum of all bin AREAS equals 1).
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Hoverla bel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablez
Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Legendg rouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
nbinsx – Specifies the maximum number of desired bins. This value will be used in an algorithm that will decide the optimal bin size such that the histogram best visualizes the distribution of the data. Ignored if
xbins.size
is provided.nbinsy – Specifies the maximum number of desired bins. This value will be used in an algorithm that will decide the optimal bin size such that the histogram best visualizes the distribution of the data. Ignored if
ybins.size
is provided.ncontours – Sets the maximum number of contour levels. The actual number of contours will be chosen automatically to be less than or equal to the value of
ncontours
. Has an effect only ifautocontour
is True or ifcontours.size
is missing.opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
zmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andzmax
will correspond to the first color.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestextfont – For this trace it only has an effect if
coloring
is set to “heatmap”. Sets the text font.texttemplate – For this trace it only has an effect if
coloring
is set to “heatmap”. Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will overridetextinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesx
,y
,z
andtext
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the sample data to be binned on the x axis.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xbingroup – Set a group of histogram traces which will have compatible x-bin settings. Using
xbingroup
, histogram2d and histogram2dcontour traces (on axes of the same axis type) can have compatible x-bin settings. Note that the samexbingroup
value can be used to set (1D) histogrambingroup
xbins –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.XBins
instance or dict with compatible propertiesxcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the sample data to be binned on the y axis.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ybingroup – Set a group of histogram traces which will have compatible y-bin settings. Using
ybingroup
, histogram2d and histogram2dcontour traces (on axes of the same axis type) can have compatible y-bin settings. Note that the sameybingroup
value can be used to set (1D) histogrambingroup
ybins –
plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.YBins
instance or dict with compatible propertiesycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the aggregation data.
zauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
z
) or the bounds set inzmin
andzmax
Defaults tofalse
whenzmin
andzmax
are set by the user.zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.zmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmin
must be set as well.zmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
zmin
and/orzmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as inz
. Has no effect whenzauto
isfalse
.zmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as in
z
and if set,zmax
must be set as well.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_hline
(y, row='all', col='all', exclude_empty_subplots=True, annotation=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a horizontal line to a plot or subplot that extends infinitely in the x-dimension.
- Parameters
y (float or int) – A number representing the y coordinate of the horizontal line.
exclude_empty_subplots (Boolean) – If True (default) do not place the shape on subplots that have no data plotted on them.
row (None, int or 'all') – Subplot row for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
col (None, int or 'all') – Subplot column for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
annotation (dict or plotly.graph_objects.layout.Annotation. If dict(),) – it is interpreted as describing an annotation. The annotation is placed relative to the shape based on annotation_position (see below) unless its x or y value has been specified for the annotation passed here. xref and yref are always the same as for the added shape and cannot be overridden.
annotation_position (a string containing optionally ["top", "bottom"]) – and [“left”, “right”] specifying where the text should be anchored to on the line. Example positions are “bottom left”, “right top”, “right”, “bottom”. If an annotation is added but annotation_position is not specified, this defaults to “top right”.
annotation_* (any parameters to go.layout.Annotation can be passed as) – keywords by prefixing them with “annotation_”. For example, to specify the annotation text “example” you can pass annotation_text=”example” as a keyword argument.
**kwargs – Any named function parameters that can be passed to ‘add_shape’, except for x0, x1, y0, y1 or type.
-
add_hrect
(y0, y1, row='all', col='all', exclude_empty_subplots=True, annotation=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a rectangle to a plot or subplot that extends infinitely in the x-dimension.
- Parameters
y0 (float or int) – A number representing the y coordinate of one side of the rectangle.
y1 (float or int) – A number representing the y coordinate of the other side of the rectangle.
exclude_empty_subplots (Boolean) – If True (default) do not place the shape on subplots that have no data plotted on them.
row (None, int or 'all') – Subplot row for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
col (None, int or 'all') – Subplot column for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
annotation (dict or plotly.graph_objects.layout.Annotation. If dict(),) – it is interpreted as describing an annotation. The annotation is placed relative to the shape based on annotation_position (see below) unless its x or y value has been specified for the annotation passed here. xref and yref are always the same as for the added shape and cannot be overridden.
annotation_position (a string containing optionally ["inside", "outside"], ["top", "bottom"]) – and [“left”, “right”] specifying where the text should be anchored to on the rectangle. Example positions are “outside top left”, “inside bottom”, “right”, “inside left”, “inside” (“outside” is not supported). If an annotation is added but annotation_position is not specified this defaults to “inside top right”.
annotation_* (any parameters to go.layout.Annotation can be passed as) – keywords by prefixing them with “annotation_”. For example, to specify the annotation text “example” you can pass annotation_text=”example” as a keyword argument.
**kwargs – Any named function parameters that can be passed to ‘add_shape’, except for x0, x1, y0, y1 or type.
-
add_icicle
(branchvalues=None, count=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, domain=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextfont=None, labels=None, labelssrc=None, leaf=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, level=None, marker=None, maxdepth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, outsidetextfont=None, parents=None, parentssrc=None, pathbar=None, root=None, sort=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textinfo=None, textposition=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, tiling=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, values=None, valuessrc=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Icicle trace
Visualize hierarchal data from leaves (and/or outer branches) towards root with rectangles. The icicle sectors are determined by the entries in “labels” or “ids” and in “parents”.
- Parameters
branchvalues – Determines how the items in
values
are summed. When set to “total”, items invalues
are taken to be value of all its descendants. When set to “remainder”, items invalues
corresponding to the root and the branches sectors are taken to be the extra part not part of the sum of the values at their leaves.count – Determines default for
values
when it is not provided, by inferring a 1 for each of the “leaves” and/or “branches”, otherwise 0.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.domain –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablescurrentPath
,root
,entry
,percentRoot
,percentEntry
andpercentParent
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each sector. If a single string, the same string appears for all data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order of this trace’s sectors. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying inside the sector.labels – Sets the labels of each of the sectors.
labelssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
labels
.leaf –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Leaf
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
level – Sets the level from which this trace hierarchy is rendered. Set
level
to''
to start from the root node in the hierarchy. Must be an “id” ifids
is filled in, otherwise plotly attempts to find a matching item inlabels
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmaxdepth – Sets the number of rendered sectors from any given
level
. Setmaxdepth
to “-1” to render all the levels in the hierarchy.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying outside the sector. This option refers to the root of the hierarchy presented on top left corner of a treemap graph. Please note that if a hierarchy has multiple root nodes, this option won’t have any effect andinsidetextfont
would be used.parents – Sets the parent sectors for each of the sectors. Empty string items ‘’ are understood to reference the root node in the hierarchy. If
ids
is filled,parents
items are understood to be “ids” themselves. Whenids
is not set, plotly attempts to find matching items inlabels
, but beware they must be unique.parentssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
parents
.pathbar –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Pathbar
instance or dict with compatible propertiesroot –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Root
instance or dict with compatible propertiessort – Determines whether or not the sectors are reordered from largest to smallest.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each sector. If trace
textinfo
contains a “text” flag, these elements will be seen on the chart. If tracehoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
.textinfo – Determines which trace information appear on the graph.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablescurrentPath
,root
,entry
,percentRoot
,percentEntry
,percentParent
,label
andvalue
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.tiling –
plotly.graph_objects.icicle.Tiling
instance or dict with compatible propertiesuid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.values – Sets the values associated with each of the sectors. Use with
branchvalues
to determine how the values are summed.valuessrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
values
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_image
(colormodel=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, source=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, z=None, zmax=None, zmin=None, zorder=None, zsmooth=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Image trace
Display an image, i.e. data on a 2D regular raster. By default, when an image is displayed in a subplot, its y axis will be reversed (ie.
autorange: 'reversed'
), constrained to the domain (ie.constrain: 'domain'
) and it will have the same scale as its x axis (ie.scaleanchor: 'x,
) in order for pixels to be rendered as squares.- Parameters
colormodel – Color model used to map the numerical color components described in
z
into colors. Ifsource
is specified, this attribute will be set torgba256
otherwise it defaults torgb
.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Set the pixel’s horizontal size.
dy – Set the pixel’s vertical size
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.image.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesz
,color
andcolormodel
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.image.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
source – Specifies the data URI of the image to be visualized. The URI consists of “data:image/[<media subtype>][;base64],<data>”
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.image.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each z value.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x0 – Set the image’s x position. The left edge of the image (or the right edge if the x axis is reversed or dx is negative) will be found at xmin=x0-dx/2
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.y0 – Set the image’s y position. The top edge of the image (or the bottom edge if the y axis is NOT reversed or if dy is negative) will be found at ymin=y0-dy/2. By default when an image trace is included, the y axis will be reversed so that the image is right-side-up, but you can disable this by setting yaxis.autorange=true or by providing an explicit y axis range.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.z – A 2-dimensional array in which each element is an array of 3 or 4 numbers representing a color.
zmax – Array defining the higher bound for each color component. Note that the default value will depend on the colormodel. For the
rgb
colormodel, it is [255, 255, 255]. For thergba
colormodel, it is [255, 255, 255, 1]. For thergba256
colormodel, it is [255, 255, 255, 255]. For thehsl
colormodel, it is [360, 100, 100]. For thehsla
colormodel, it is [360, 100, 100, 1].zmin – Array defining the lower bound for each color component. Note that the default value will depend on the colormodel. For the
rgb
colormodel, it is [0, 0, 0]. For thergba
colormodel, it is [0, 0, 0, 0]. For thergba256
colormodel, it is [0, 0, 0, 0]. For thehsl
colormodel, it is [0, 0, 0]. For thehsla
colormodel, it is [0, 0, 0, 0].zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.zsmooth – Picks a smoothing algorithm used to smooth
z
data. This only applies for image traces that use thesource
attribute.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_indicator
(align=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, delta=None, domain=None, gauge=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, number=None, stream=None, title=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, value=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Indicator trace
An indicator is used to visualize a single
value
along with some contextual information such assteps
or athreshold
, using a combination of three visual elements: a number, a delta, and/or a gauge. Deltas are taken with respect to areference
. Gauges can be either angular or bullet (aka linear) gauges.- Parameters
align – Sets the horizontal alignment of the
text
within the box. Note that this attribute has no effect if an angular gauge is displayed: in this case, it is always centeredcustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.delta –
plotly.graph_objects.indicator.Delta
instance or dict with compatible propertiesdomain –
plotly.graph_objects.indicator.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertiesgauge – The gauge of the Indicator plot.
ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle – :class:`plotly.graph_objects.indicator.Legendgrouptitle ` instance or dict with compatible properties
legendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines how the value is displayed on the graph.
number
displays the value numerically in text.delta
displays the difference to a reference value in text. Finally,gauge
displays the value graphically on an axis.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
number –
plotly.graph_objects.indicator.Number
instance or dict with compatible propertiesstream –
plotly.graph_objects.indicator.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestitle –
plotly.graph_objects.indicator.Title
instance or dict with compatible propertiesuid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.value – Sets the number to be displayed.
visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_isosurface
(autocolorscale=None, caps=None, cauto=None, cmax=None, cmid=None, cmin=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, contour=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, flatshading=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, isomax=None, isomin=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lighting=None, lightposition=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, scene=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, slices=None, spaceframe=None, stream=None, surface=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, value=None, valuehoverformat=None, valuesrc=None, visible=None, x=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zhoverformat=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Isosurface trace
Draws isosurfaces between iso-min and iso-max values with coordinates given by four 1-dimensional arrays containing the
value
,x
,y
andz
of every vertex of a uniform or non- uniform 3-D grid. Horizontal or vertical slices, caps as well as spaceframe between iso-min and iso-max values could also be drawn using this trace.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.caps –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Caps
instance or dict with compatible propertiescauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here
value
) or the bounds set incmin
andcmax
Defaults tofalse
whencmin
andcmax
are set by the user.cmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as
value
and if set,cmin
must be set as well.cmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
cmin
and/orcmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units asvalue
. Has no effect whencauto
isfalse
.cmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as
value
and if set,cmax
must be set as well.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usecmin
andcmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.contour –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Contour
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.flatshading – Determines whether or not normal smoothing is applied to the meshes, creating meshes with an angular, low- poly look via flat reflections.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.isomax – Sets the maximum boundary for iso-surface plot.
isomin – Sets the minimum boundary for iso-surface plot.
legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lighting –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Lighting
instance or dict with compatible propertieslightposition –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Lightposition
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the surface. Please note that in the case of using high
opacity
values for example a value greater than or equal to 0.5 on two surfaces (and 0.25 with four surfaces), an overlay of multiple transparent surfaces may not perfectly be sorted in depth by the webgl API. This behavior may be improved in the near future and is subject to change.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
cmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andcmax
will correspond to the first color.scene – Sets a reference between this trace’s 3D coordinate system and a 3D scene. If “scene” (the default value), the (x,y,z) coordinates refer to
layout.scene
. If “scene2”, the (x,y,z) coordinates refer tolayout.scene2
, and so on.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
slices –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Slices
instance or dict with compatible propertiesspaceframe –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Spaceframe
instance or dict with compatible propertiesstream –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessurface –
plotly.graph_objects.isosurface.Surface
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with the vertices. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.value – Sets the 4th dimension (value) of the vertices.
valuehoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
value
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.valuesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
value
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the X coordinates of the vertices on X axis.
xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the Y coordinates of the vertices on Y axis.
yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the Z coordinates of the vertices on Z axis.
zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingzaxis.hoverformat
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_layout_image
(arg=None, layer=None, name=None, opacity=None, sizex=None, sizey=None, sizing=None, source=None, templateitemname=None, visible=None, x=None, xanchor=None, xref=None, y=None, yanchor=None, yref=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, exclude_empty_subplots=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Create and add a new image to the figure’s layout
- Parameters
arg – instance of Image or dict with compatible properties
layer – Specifies whether images are drawn below or above traces. When
xref
andyref
are both set topaper
, image is drawn below the entire plot area.name – When used in a template, named items are created in the output figure in addition to any items the figure already has in this array. You can modify these items in the output figure by making your own item with
templateitemname
matching thisname
alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.opacity – Sets the opacity of the image.
sizex – Sets the image container size horizontally. The image will be sized based on the
position
value. Whenxref
is set topaper
, units are sized relative to the plot width. Whenxref
ends with ` domain`, units are sized relative to the axis width.sizey – Sets the image container size vertically. The image will be sized based on the
position
value. Whenyref
is set topaper
, units are sized relative to the plot height. Whenyref
ends with ` domain`, units are sized relative to the axis height.sizing – Specifies which dimension of the image to constrain.
source – Specifies the URL of the image to be used. The URL must be accessible from the domain where the plot code is run, and can be either relative or absolute.
templateitemname – Used to refer to a named item in this array in the template. Named items from the template will be created even without a matching item in the input figure, but you can modify one by making an item with
templateitemname
matching itsname
, alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it withvisible: true
.visible – Determines whether or not this image is visible.
x – Sets the image’s x position. When
xref
is set topaper
, units are sized relative to the plot height. Seexref
for more infoxanchor – Sets the anchor for the x position
xref – Sets the images’s x coordinate axis. If set to a x axis id (e.g. “x” or “x2”), the
x
position refers to a x coordinate. If set to “paper”, thex
position refers to the distance from the left of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the left (right). If set to a x axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the left of the domain of that axis: e.g., x2 domain refers to the domain of the second x axis and a x position of 0.5 refers to the point between the left and the right of the domain of the second x axis.y – Sets the image’s y position. When
yref
is set topaper
, units are sized relative to the plot height. Seeyref
for more infoyanchor – Sets the anchor for the y position.
yref – Sets the images’s y coordinate axis. If set to a y axis id (e.g. “y” or “y2”), the
y
position refers to a y coordinate. If set to “paper”, they
position refers to the distance from the bottom of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the bottom (top). If set to a y axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the bottom of the domain of that axis: e.g., y2 domain refers to the domain of the second y axis and a y position of 0.5 refers to the point between the bottom and the top of the domain of the second y axis.row – Subplot row for image. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).
col – Subplot column for image. If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
secondary_y – Whether to add image to secondary y-axis
exclude_empty_subplots – If True, image will not be added to subplots without traces.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_mesh3d
(alphahull=None, autocolorscale=None, cauto=None, cmax=None, cmid=None, cmin=None, color=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, contour=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, delaunayaxis=None, facecolor=None, facecolorsrc=None, flatshading=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, i=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, intensity=None, intensitymode=None, intensitysrc=None, isrc=None, j=None, jsrc=None, k=None, ksrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lighting=None, lightposition=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, scene=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, vertexcolor=None, vertexcolorsrc=None, visible=None, x=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zcalendar=None, zhoverformat=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Mesh3d trace
Draws sets of triangles with coordinates given by three 1-dimensional arrays in
x
,y
,z
and (1) a sets ofi
,j
,k
indices (2) Delaunay triangulation or (3) the Alpha- shape algorithm or (4) the Convex-hull algorithm- Parameters
alphahull – Determines how the mesh surface triangles are derived from the set of vertices (points) represented by the
x
,y
andz
arrays, if thei
,j
,k
arrays are not supplied. For general use ofmesh3d
it is preferred thati
,j
,k
are supplied. If “-1”, Delaunay triangulation is used, which is mainly suitable if the mesh is a single, more or less layer surface that is perpendicular todelaunayaxis
. In case thedelaunayaxis
intersects the mesh surface at more than one point it will result triangles that are very long in the dimension ofdelaunayaxis
. If “>0”, the alpha-shape algorithm is used. In this case, the positivealphahull
value signals the use of the alpha-shape algorithm, _and_ its value acts as the parameter for the mesh fitting. If 0, the convex-hull algorithm is used. It is suitable for convex bodies or if the intention is to enclose thex
,y
andz
point set into a convex hull.autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.cauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here
intensity
) or the bounds set incmin
andcmax
Defaults tofalse
whencmin
andcmax
are set by the user.cmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as
intensity
and if set,cmin
must be set as well.cmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
cmin
and/orcmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units asintensity
. Has no effect whencauto
isfalse
.cmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as
intensity
and if set,cmax
must be set as well.color – Sets the color of the whole mesh
coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.mesh3d.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usecmin
andcmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.contour –
plotly.graph_objects.mesh3d.Contour
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.delaunayaxis – Sets the Delaunay axis, which is the axis that is perpendicular to the surface of the Delaunay triangulation. It has an effect if
i
,j
,k
are not provided andalphahull
is set to indicate Delaunay triangulation.facecolor – Sets the color of each face Overrides “color” and “vertexcolor”.
facecolorsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
facecolor
.flatshading – Determines whether or not normal smoothing is applied to the meshes, creating meshes with an angular, low- poly look via flat reflections.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.mesh3d.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.i – A vector of vertex indices, i.e. integer values between 0 and the length of the vertex vectors, representing the “first” vertex of a triangle. For example,
{i[m], j[m], k[m]}
together represent face m (triangle m) in the mesh, wherei[m] = n
points to the triplet{x[n], y[n], z[n]}
in the vertex arrays. Therefore, each element ini
represents a point in space, which is the first vertex of a triangle.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.intensity – Sets the intensity values for vertices or cells as defined by
intensitymode
. It can be used for plotting fields on meshes.intensitymode – Determines the source of
intensity
values.intensitysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
intensity
.isrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
i
.j – A vector of vertex indices, i.e. integer values between 0 and the length of the vertex vectors, representing the “second” vertex of a triangle. For example,
{i[m], j[m], k[m]}
together represent face m (triangle m) in the mesh, wherej[m] = n
points to the triplet{x[n], y[n], z[n]}
in the vertex arrays. Therefore, each element inj
represents a point in space, which is the second vertex of a triangle.jsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
j
.k – A vector of vertex indices, i.e. integer values between 0 and the length of the vertex vectors, representing the “third” vertex of a triangle. For example,
{i[m], j[m], k[m]}
together represent face m (triangle m) in the mesh, wherek[m] = n
points to the triplet{x[n], y[n], z[n]}
in the vertex arrays. Therefore, each element ink
represents a point in space, which is the third vertex of a triangle.ksrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
k
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.mesh3d.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lighting –
plotly.graph_objects.mesh3d.Lighting
instance or dict with compatible propertieslightposition –
plotly.graph_objects.mesh3d.Lightposition
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the surface. Please note that in the case of using high
opacity
values for example a value greater than or equal to 0.5 on two surfaces (and 0.25 with four surfaces), an overlay of multiple transparent surfaces may not perfectly be sorted in depth by the webgl API. This behavior may be improved in the near future and is subject to change.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
cmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andcmax
will correspond to the first color.scene – Sets a reference between this trace’s 3D coordinate system and a 3D scene. If “scene” (the default value), the (x,y,z) coordinates refer to
layout.scene
. If “scene2”, the (x,y,z) coordinates refer tolayout.scene2
, and so on.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.mesh3d.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with the vertices. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.vertexcolor – Sets the color of each vertex Overrides “color”. While Red, green and blue colors are in the range of 0 and 255; in the case of having vertex color data in RGBA format, the alpha color should be normalized to be between 0 and 1.
vertexcolorsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
vertexcolor
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the X coordinates of the vertices. The nth element of vectors
x
,y
andz
jointly represent the X, Y and Z coordinates of the nth vertex.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the Y coordinates of the vertices. The nth element of vectors
x
,y
andz
jointly represent the X, Y and Z coordinates of the nth vertex.ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the Z coordinates of the vertices. The nth element of vectors
x
,y
andz
jointly represent the X, Y and Z coordinates of the nth vertex.zcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
z
date data.zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingzaxis.hoverformat
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_ohlc
(close=None, closesrc=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, decreasing=None, high=None, highsrc=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, increasing=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, low=None, lowsrc=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, open=None, opensrc=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, tickwidth=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, yaxis=None, yhoverformat=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Ohlc trace
The ohlc (short for Open-High-Low-Close) is a style of financial chart describing open, high, low and close for a given
x
coordinate (most likely time). The tip of the lines represent thelow
andhigh
values and the horizontal segments represent theopen
andclose
values. Sample points where the close value is higher (lower) then the open value are called increasing (decreasing). By default, increasing items are drawn in green whereas decreasing are drawn in red.- Parameters
close – Sets the close values.
closesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
close
.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.decreasing –
plotly.graph_objects.ohlc.Decreasing
instance or dict with compatible propertieshigh – Sets the high values.
highsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
high
.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.ohlc.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.increasing –
plotly.graph_objects.ohlc.Increasing
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.ohlc.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.ohlc.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertieslow – Sets the low values.
lowsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
low
.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
open – Sets the open values.
opensrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
open
.selectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.ohlc.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets hover text elements associated with each sample point. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to this trace’s sample points.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.tickwidth – Sets the width of the open/close tick marks relative to the “x” minimal interval.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates. If absent, linear coordinate will be generated.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_parcats
(arrangement=None, bundlecolors=None, counts=None, countssrc=None, dimensions=None, dimensiondefaults=None, domain=None, hoverinfo=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, labelfont=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, sortpaths=None, stream=None, tickfont=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Parcats trace
Parallel categories diagram for multidimensional categorical data.
- Parameters
arrangement – Sets the drag interaction mode for categories and dimensions. If
perpendicular
, the categories can only move along a line perpendicular to the paths. Iffreeform
, the categories can freely move on the plane. Iffixed
, the categories and dimensions are stationary.bundlecolors – Sort paths so that like colors are bundled together within each category.
counts – The number of observations represented by each state. Defaults to 1 so that each state represents one observation
countssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
counts
.dimensions – The dimensions (variables) of the parallel categories diagram.
dimensiondefaults – When used in a template (as layout.template.data.parcats.dimensiondefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of parcats.dimensions
domain –
plotly.graph_objects.parcats.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoveron – Sets the hover interaction mode for the parcats diagram. If
category
, hover interaction take place per category. Ifcolor
, hover interactions take place per color per category. Ifdimension
, hover interactions take place across all categories per dimension.hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. This value here applies when hovering over dimensions. Note that*categorycount
, “colorcount” and “bandcolorcount” are only available whenhoveron
contains the “color” flagFinally, the template string has access to variablescount
,probability
,category
,categorycount
,colorcount
andbandcolorcount
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.labelfont – Sets the font for the
dimension
labels.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.parcats.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.parcats.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
sortpaths – Sets the path sorting algorithm. If
forward
, sort paths based on dimension categories from left to right. Ifbackward
, sort paths based on dimensions categories from right to left.stream –
plotly.graph_objects.parcats.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestickfont – Sets the font for the
category
labels.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_parcoords
(customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dimensions=None, dimensiondefaults=None, domain=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, labelangle=None, labelfont=None, labelside=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, rangefont=None, stream=None, tickfont=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Parcoords trace
Parallel coordinates for multidimensional exploratory data analysis. The samples are specified in
dimensions
. The colors are set inline.color
.- Parameters
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dimensions – The dimensions (variables) of the parallel coordinates chart. 2..60 dimensions are supported.
dimensiondefaults – When used in a template (as layout.template.data.parcoords.dimensiondefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of parcoords.dimensions
domain –
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertiesids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.labelangle – Sets the angle of the labels with respect to the horizontal. For example, a
tickangle
of -90 draws the labels vertically. Tilted labels with “labelangle” may be positioned better inside margins whenlabelposition
is set to “bottom”.labelfont – Sets the font for the
dimension
labels.labelside – Specifies the location of the
label
. “top” positions labels above, next to the title “bottom” positions labels below the graph Tilted labels with “labelangle” may be positioned better inside margins whenlabelposition
is set to “bottom”.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle – :class:`plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.Legendgrouptitle ` instance or dict with compatible properties
legendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
rangefont – Sets the font for the
dimension
range values.stream –
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestickfont – Sets the font for the
dimension
tick values.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_pie
(automargin=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, direction=None, dlabel=None, domain=None, hole=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextfont=None, insidetextorientation=None, label0=None, labels=None, labelssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, outsidetextfont=None, pull=None, pullsrc=None, rotation=None, scalegroup=None, showlegend=None, sort=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textinfo=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, title=None, titlefont=None, titleposition=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, values=None, valuessrc=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Pie trace
A data visualized by the sectors of the pie is set in
values
. The sector labels are set inlabels
. The sector colors are set inmarker.colors
- Parameters
automargin – Determines whether outside text labels can push the margins.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.direction – Specifies the direction at which succeeding sectors follow one another.
dlabel – Sets the label step. See
label0
for more info.domain –
plotly.graph_objects.pie.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertieshole – Sets the fraction of the radius to cut out of the pie. Use this to make a donut chart.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.pie.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslabel
,color
,value
,percent
andtext
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each sector. If a single string, the same string appears for all data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order of this trace’s sectors. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying inside the sector.insidetextorientation – Controls the orientation of the text inside chart sectors. When set to “auto”, text may be oriented in any direction in order to be as big as possible in the middle of a sector. The “horizontal” option orients text to be parallel with the bottom of the chart, and may make text smaller in order to achieve that goal. The “radial” option orients text along the radius of the sector. The “tangential” option orients text perpendicular to the radius of the sector.
label0 – Alternate to
labels
. Builds a numeric set of labels. Use withdlabel
wherelabel0
is the starting label anddlabel
the step.labels – Sets the sector labels. If
labels
entries are duplicated, we sum associatedvalues
or simply count occurrences ifvalues
is not provided. For other array attributes (including color) we use the first non-empty entry among all occurrences of the label.labelssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
labels
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.pie.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.pie.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying outside the sector.pull – Sets the fraction of larger radius to pull the sectors out from the center. This can be a constant to pull all slices apart from each other equally or an array to highlight one or more slices.
pullsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
pull
.rotation – Instead of the first slice starting at 12 o’clock, rotate to some other angle.
scalegroup – If there are multiple pie charts that should be sized according to their totals, link them by providing a non-empty group id here shared by every trace in the same group.
showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
sort – Determines whether or not the sectors are reordered from largest to smallest.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.pie.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each sector. If trace
textinfo
contains a “text” flag, these elements will be seen on the chart. If tracehoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
.textinfo – Determines which trace information appear on the graph.
textposition – Specifies the location of the
textinfo
.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslabel
,color
,value
,percent
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.title –
plotly.graph_objects.pie.Title
instance or dict with compatible propertiestitlefont – Deprecated: Please use pie.title.font instead. Sets the font used for
title
. Note that the title’s font used to be set by the now deprecatedtitlefont
attribute.titleposition – Deprecated: Please use pie.title.position instead. Specifies the location of the
title
. Note that the title’s position used to be set by the now deprecatedtitleposition
attribute.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.values – Sets the values of the sectors. If omitted, we count occurrences of each label.
valuessrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
values
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_pointcloud
(customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, indices=None, indicessrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, xaxis=None, xbounds=None, xboundssrc=None, xsrc=None, xy=None, xysrc=None, y=None, yaxis=None, ybounds=None, yboundssrc=None, ysrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Pointcloud trace
“pointcloud” trace is deprecated! Please consider switching to the “scattergl” trace type. The data visualized as a point cloud set in
x
andy
using the WebGl plotting engine.- Parameters
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.pointcloud.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertiesids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.indices – A sequential value, 0..n, supply it to avoid creating this array inside plotting. If specified, it must be a typed
Int32Array
array. Its length must be equal to or greater than the number of points. For the best performance and memory use, create one largeindices
typed array that is guaranteed to be at least as long as the largest number of points during use, and reuse it on eachPlotly.restyle()
call.indicessrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
indices
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.pointcloud.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.pointcloud.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.pointcloud.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xbounds – Specify
xbounds
in the shape of[xMin, xMax] to avoid looping through the `xy
typed array. Use it in conjunction withxy
andybounds
for the performance benefits.xboundssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
xbounds
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.xy – Faster alternative to specifying
x
andy
separately. If supplied, it must be a typedFloat32Array
array that represents points such thatxy[i * 2] = x[i]
andxy[i * 2 + 1] = y[i]
xysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
xy
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ybounds – Specify
ybounds
in the shape of[yMin, yMax] to avoid looping through the `xy
typed array. Use it in conjunction withxy
andxbounds
for the performance benefits.yboundssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ybounds
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_sankey
(arrangement=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, domain=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverlabel=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, link=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, node=None, orientation=None, selectedpoints=None, stream=None, textfont=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, valueformat=None, valuesuffix=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Sankey trace
Sankey plots for network flow data analysis. The nodes are specified in
nodes
and the links between sources and targets inlinks
. The colors are set innodes[i].color
andlinks[i].color
, otherwise defaults are used.- Parameters
arrangement – If value is
snap
(the default), the node arrangement is assisted by automatic snapping of elements to preserve space between nodes specified vianodepad
. If value isperpendicular
, the nodes can only move along a line perpendicular to the flow. If value isfreeform
, the nodes can freely move on the plane. If value isfixed
, the nodes are stationary.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.domain –
plotly.graph_objects.sankey.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired. Note that this attribute is superseded bynode.hoverinfo
andnode.hoverinfo
for nodes and links respectively.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.sankey.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertiesids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.sankey.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
link – The links of the Sankey plot.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
node – The nodes of the Sankey plot.
orientation – Sets the orientation of the Sankey diagram.
selectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.stream –
plotly.graph_objects.sankey.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestextfont – Sets the font for node labels
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.valueformat – Sets the value formatting rule using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.
valuesuffix – Adds a unit to follow the value in the hover tooltip. Add a space if a separation is necessary from the value.
visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scatter
(alignmentgroup=None, cliponaxis=None, connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, error_x=None, error_y=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, fillgradient=None, fillpattern=None, groupnorm=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, offsetgroup=None, opacity=None, orientation=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stackgaps=None, stackgroup=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scatter trace
The scatter trace type encompasses line charts, scatter charts, text charts, and bubble charts. The data visualized as scatter point or lines is set in
x
andy
. Text (appearing either on the chart or on hover only) is viatext
. Bubble charts are achieved by settingmarker.size
and/ormarker.color
to numerical arrays.- Parameters
alignmentgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same alignmentgroup. This controls whether bars compute their positional range dependently or independently.
cliponaxis – Determines whether or not markers and text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show markers and text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.error_x –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.ErrorX
instance or dict with compatible propertieserror_y –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.ErrorY
instance or dict with compatible propertiesfill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Defaults to “none” unless this trace is stacked, then it gets “tonexty” (“tonextx”) if
orientation
is “v” (“h”) Use withfillcolor
if not “none”. “tozerox” and “tozeroy” fill to x=0 and y=0 respectively. “tonextx” and “tonexty” fill between the endpoints of this trace and the endpoints of the trace before it, connecting those endpoints with straight lines (to make a stacked area graph); if there is no trace before it, they behave like “tozerox” and “tozeroy”. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape. “tonext” fills the space between two traces if one completely encloses the other (eg consecutive contour lines), and behaves like “toself” if there is no trace before it. “tonext” should not be used if one trace does not enclose the other. Traces in astackgroup
will only fill to (or be filled to) other traces in the same group. With multiple `stackgroup`s or some traces stacked and some not, if fill-linked traces are not already consecutive, the later ones will be pushed down in the drawing order.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available. If fillgradient is specified, fillcolor is ignored except for setting the background color of the hover label, if any.
fillgradient – Sets a fill gradient. If not specified, the fillcolor is used instead.
fillpattern – Sets the pattern within the marker.
groupnorm – Only relevant when
stackgroup
is used, and only the firstgroupnorm
found in thestackgroup
will be used - including ifvisible
is “legendonly” but not if it isfalse
. Sets the normalization for the sum of thisstackgroup
. With “fraction”, the value of each trace at each location is divided by the sum of all trace values at that location. “percent” is the same but multiplied by 100 to show percentages. If there are multiple subplots, or multiple `stackgroup`s on one subplot, each will be normalized within its own set.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoveron – Do the hover effects highlight individual points (markers or line points) or do they highlight filled regions? If the fill is “toself” or “tonext” and there are no markers or text, then the default is “fills”, otherwise it is “points”.
hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
offsetgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same offsetgroup where bars of the same position coordinate will line up.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
orientation – Only relevant in the following cases: 1. when
scattermode
is set to “group”. 2. whenstackgroup
is used, and only the firstorientation
found in thestackgroup
will be used - including ifvisible
is “legendonly” but not if it isfalse
. Sets the stacking direction. With “v” (“h”), the y (x) values of subsequent traces are added. Also affects the default value offill
.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stackgaps – Only relevant when
stackgroup
is used, and only the firststackgaps
found in thestackgroup
will be used - including ifvisible
is “legendonly” but not if it isfalse
. Determines how we handle locations at which other traces in this group have data but this one does not. With infer zero we insert a zero at these locations. With “interpolate” we linearly interpolate between existing values, and extrapolate a constant beyond the existing values.stackgroup – Set several scatter traces (on the same subplot) to the same stackgroup in order to add their y values (or their x values if
orientation
is “h”). If blank or omitted this trace will not be stacked. Stacking also turnsfill
on by default, using “tonexty” (“tonextx”) iforientation
is “h” (“v”) and sets the defaultmode
to “lines” irrespective of point count. You can only stack on a numeric (linear or log) axis. Traces in astackgroup
will only fill to (or be filled to) other traces in the same group. With multiple `stackgroup`s or some traces stacked and some not, if fill-linked traces are not already consecutive, the later ones will be pushed down in the drawing order.stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scatter3d
(connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, error_x=None, error_y=None, error_z=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, projection=None, scene=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, surfaceaxis=None, surfacecolor=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zcalendar=None, zhoverformat=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scatter3d trace
The data visualized as scatter point or lines in 3D dimension is set in
x
,y
,z
. Text (appearing either on the chart or on hover only) is viatext
. Bubble charts are achieved by settingmarker.size
and/ormarker.color
Projections are achieved viaprojection
. Surface fills are achieved viasurfaceaxis
.- Parameters
connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.error_x –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.ErrorX
instance or dict with compatible propertieserror_y –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.ErrorY
instance or dict with compatible propertieserror_z –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.ErrorZ
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y,z) triplet. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y,z) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle – :class:`plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.Legendgrouptitle ` instance or dict with compatible properties
legendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
projection –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.Projection
instance or dict with compatible propertiesscene – Sets a reference between this trace’s 3D coordinate system and a 3D scene. If “scene” (the default value), the (x,y,z) coordinates refer to
layout.scene
. If “scene2”, the (x,y,z) coordinates refer tolayout.scene2
, and so on.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scatter3d.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessurfaceaxis – If “-1”, the scatter points are not fill with a surface If 0, 1, 2, the scatter points are filled with a Delaunay surface about the x, y, z respectively.
surfacecolor – Sets the surface fill color.
text – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y,z) triplet. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y,z) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the z coordinates.
zcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
z
date data.zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingzaxis.hoverformat
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scattercarpet
(a=None, asrc=None, b=None, bsrc=None, carpet=None, connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, xaxis=None, yaxis=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scattercarpet trace
Plots a scatter trace on either the first carpet axis or the carpet axis with a matching
carpet
attribute.- Parameters
a – Sets the a-axis coordinates.
asrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
a
.b – Sets the b-axis coordinates.
bsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
b
.carpet – An identifier for this carpet, so that
scattercarpet
andcontourcarpet
traces can specify a carpet plot on which they lieconnectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Use with
fillcolor
if not “none”. scatterternary has a subset of the options available to scatter. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape. “tonext” fills the space between two traces if one completely encloses the other (eg consecutive contour lines), and behaves like “toself” if there is no trace before it. “tonext” should not be used if one trace does not enclose the other.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scattercarpet.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoveron – Do the hover effects highlight individual points (markers or line points) or do they highlight filled regions? If the fill is “toself” or “tonext” and there are no markers or text, then the default is “fills”, otherwise it is “points”.
hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (a,b) point. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of strings, the items are mapped in order to the the data points in (a,b). To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scattercarpet.Legendgroupt itle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scattercarpet.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scattercarpet.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattercarpet.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scattercarpet.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (a,b) point. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of strings, the items are mapped in order to the the data points in (a,b). If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesa
,b
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattercarpet.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scattergeo
(connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, featureidkey=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, geo=None, geojson=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, lat=None, latsrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, locationmode=None, locations=None, locationssrc=None, lon=None, lonsrc=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scattergeo trace
The data visualized as scatter point or lines on a geographic map is provided either by longitude/latitude pairs in
lon
andlat
respectively or by geographic location IDs or names inlocations
.- Parameters
connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.featureidkey – Sets the key in GeoJSON features which is used as id to match the items included in the
locations
array. Only has an effect whengeojson
is set. Support nested property, for example “properties.name”.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Use with
fillcolor
if not “none”. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
geo – Sets a reference between this trace’s geospatial coordinates and a geographic map. If “geo” (the default value), the geospatial coordinates refer to
layout.geo
. If “geo2”, the geospatial coordinates refer tolayout.geo2
, and so on.geojson – Sets optional GeoJSON data associated with this trace. If not given, the features on the base map are used when
locations
is set. It can be set as a valid GeoJSON object or as a URL string. Note that we only accept GeoJSONs of type “FeatureCollection” or “Feature” with geometries of type “Polygon” or “MultiPolygon”.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergeo.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair or item in
locations
. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) orlocations
coordinates. To be seen, tracehoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.lat – Sets the latitude coordinates (in degrees North).
latsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lat
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergeo.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergeo.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertieslocationmode – Determines the set of locations used to match entries in
locations
to regions on the map. Values “ISO-3”, “USA-states”, country names correspond to features on the base map and value “geojson-id” corresponds to features from a custom GeoJSON linked to thegeojson
attribute.locations – Sets the coordinates via location IDs or names. Coordinates correspond to the centroid of each location given. See
locationmode
for more info.locationssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
locations
.lon – Sets the longitude coordinates (in degrees East).
lonsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lon
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergeo.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergeo.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergeo.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair or item in
locations
. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) orlocations
coordinates. If tracehoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslat
,lon
,location
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergeo.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scattergl
(connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dx=None, dy=None, error_x=None, error_y=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scattergl trace
The data visualized as scatter point or lines is set in
x
andy
using the WebGL plotting engine. Bubble charts are achieved by settingmarker.size
and/ormarker.color
to a numerical arrays.- Parameters
connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.error_x –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.ErrorX
instance or dict with compatible propertieserror_y –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.ErrorY
instance or dict with compatible propertiesfill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Defaults to “none” unless this trace is stacked, then it gets “tonexty” (“tonextx”) if
orientation
is “v” (“h”) Use withfillcolor
if not “none”. “tozerox” and “tozeroy” fill to x=0 and y=0 respectively. “tonextx” and “tonexty” fill between the endpoints of this trace and the endpoints of the trace before it, connecting those endpoints with straight lines (to make a stacked area graph); if there is no trace before it, they behave like “tozerox” and “tozeroy”. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape. “tonext” fills the space between two traces if one completely encloses the other (eg consecutive contour lines), and behaves like “toself” if there is no trace before it. “tonext” should not be used if one trace does not enclose the other. Traces in astackgroup
will only fill to (or be filled to) other traces in the same group. With multiple `stackgroup`s or some traces stacked and some not, if fill-linked traces are not already consecutive, the later ones will be pushed down in the drawing order.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle – :class:`plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.Legendgrouptitle ` instance or dict with compatible properties
legendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace.
name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattergl.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scattermap
(below=None, cluster=None, connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, lat=None, latsrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, lon=None, lonsrc=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scattermap trace
The data visualized as scatter point, lines or marker symbols on a MapLibre GL geographic map is provided by longitude/latitude pairs in
lon
andlat
.- Parameters
below – Determines if this scattermap trace’s layers are to be inserted before the layer with the specified ID. By default, scattermap layers are inserted above all the base layers. To place the scattermap layers above every other layer, set
below
to “’’”.cluster –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Cluster
instance or dict with compatible propertiesconnectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Use with
fillcolor
if not “none”. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.lat – Sets the latitude coordinates (in degrees North).
latsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lat
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertieslon – Sets the longitude coordinates (in degrees East).
lonsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lon
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a map subplot. If “map” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.map
. If “map2”, the data refer tolayout.map2
, and so on.text – Sets text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the icon text font (color=map.layer.paint.text- color, size=map.layer.layout.text-size). Has an effect only when
type
is set to “symbol”.textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslat
,lon
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermap.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scattermapbox
(below=None, cluster=None, connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, lat=None, latsrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, lon=None, lonsrc=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scattermapbox trace
“scattermapbox” trace is deprecated! Please consider switching to the “scattermap” trace type and
map
subplots. Learn more at: https://plotly.com/javascript/maplibre-migration/ The data visualized as scatter point, lines or marker symbols on a Mapbox GL geographic map is provided by longitude/latitude pairs inlon
andlat
.- Parameters
below – Determines if this scattermapbox trace’s layers are to be inserted before the layer with the specified ID. By default, scattermapbox layers are inserted above all the base layers. To place the scattermapbox layers above every other layer, set
below
to “’’”.cluster –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Cluster
instance or dict with compatible propertiesconnectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Use with
fillcolor
if not “none”. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.lat – Sets the latitude coordinates (in degrees North).
latsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lat
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Legendgroupt itle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertieslon – Sets the longitude coordinates (in degrees East).
lonsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
lon
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – mapbox subplots and traces are deprecated! Please consider switching to
map
subplots and traces. Learn more at: https://plotly.com/javascript/maplibre- migration/ Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a mapbox subplot. If “mapbox” (the default value), the data refer tolayout.mapbox
. If “mapbox2”, the data refer tolayout.mapbox2
, and so on.text – Sets text elements associated with each (lon,lat) pair If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (lon,lat) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the icon text font (color=mapbox.layer.paint.text- color, size=mapbox.layer.layout.text-size). Has an effect only when
type
is set to “symbol”.textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variableslat
,lon
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattermapbox.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scatterpolar
(cliponaxis=None, connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dr=None, dtheta=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, r=None, r0=None, rsrc=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, theta=None, theta0=None, thetasrc=None, thetaunit=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scatterpolar trace
The scatterpolar trace type encompasses line charts, scatter charts, text charts, and bubble charts in polar coordinates. The data visualized as scatter point or lines is set in
r
(radial) andtheta
(angular) coordinates Text (appearing either on the chart or on hover only) is viatext
. Bubble charts are achieved by settingmarker.size
and/ormarker.color
to numerical arrays.- Parameters
cliponaxis – Determines whether or not markers and text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show markers and text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dr – Sets the r coordinate step.
dtheta – Sets the theta coordinate step. By default, the
dtheta
step equals the subplot’s period divided by the length of ther
coordinates.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Use with
fillcolor
if not “none”. scatterpolar has a subset of the options available to scatter. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape. “tonext” fills the space between two traces if one completely encloses the other (eg consecutive contour lines), and behaves like “toself” if there is no trace before it. “tonext” should not be used if one trace does not enclose the other.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolar.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoveron – Do the hover effects highlight individual points (markers or line points) or do they highlight filled regions? If the fill is “toself” or “tonext” and there are no markers or text, then the default is “fills”, otherwise it is “points”.
hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolar.Legendgroupti tle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolar.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolar.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
r – Sets the radial coordinates
r0 – Alternate to
r
. Builds a linear space of r coordinates. Use withdr
wherer0
is the starting coordinate anddr
the step.rsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
r
.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolar.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolar.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a polar subplot. If “polar” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.polar
. If “polar2”, the data refer tolayout.polar2
, and so on.text – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesr
,theta
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.theta – Sets the angular coordinates
theta0 – Alternate to
theta
. Builds a linear space of theta coordinates. Use withdtheta
wheretheta0
is the starting coordinate anddtheta
the step.thetasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
theta
.thetaunit – Sets the unit of input “theta” values. Has an effect only when on “linear” angular axes.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolar.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scatterpolargl
(connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, dr=None, dtheta=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, r=None, r0=None, rsrc=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, theta=None, theta0=None, thetasrc=None, thetaunit=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scatterpolargl trace
The scatterpolargl trace type encompasses line charts, scatter charts, and bubble charts in polar coordinates using the WebGL plotting engine. The data visualized as scatter point or lines is set in
r
(radial) andtheta
(angular) coordinates Bubble charts are achieved by settingmarker.size
and/ormarker.color
to numerical arrays.- Parameters
connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.dr – Sets the r coordinate step.
dtheta – Sets the theta coordinate step. By default, the
dtheta
step equals the subplot’s period divided by the length of ther
coordinates.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Defaults to “none” unless this trace is stacked, then it gets “tonexty” (“tonextx”) if
orientation
is “v” (“h”) Use withfillcolor
if not “none”. “tozerox” and “tozeroy” fill to x=0 and y=0 respectively. “tonextx” and “tonexty” fill between the endpoints of this trace and the endpoints of the trace before it, connecting those endpoints with straight lines (to make a stacked area graph); if there is no trace before it, they behave like “tozerox” and “tozeroy”. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape. “tonext” fills the space between two traces if one completely encloses the other (eg consecutive contour lines), and behaves like “toself” if there is no trace before it. “tonext” should not be used if one trace does not enclose the other. Traces in astackgroup
will only fill to (or be filled to) other traces in the same group. With multiple `stackgroup`s or some traces stacked and some not, if fill-linked traces are not already consecutive, the later ones will be pushed down in the drawing order.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolargl.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolargl.Legendgroup title
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolargl.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolargl.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
r – Sets the radial coordinates
r0 – Alternate to
r
. Builds a linear space of r coordinates. Use withdr
wherer0
is the starting coordinate anddr
the step.rsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
r
.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolargl.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolargl.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a polar subplot. If “polar” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.polar
. If “polar2”, the data refer tolayout.polar2
, and so on.text – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesr
,theta
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.theta – Sets the angular coordinates
theta0 – Alternate to
theta
. Builds a linear space of theta coordinates. Use withdtheta
wheretheta0
is the starting coordinate anddtheta
the step.thetasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
theta
.thetaunit – Sets the unit of input “theta” values. Has an effect only when on “linear” angular axes.
uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterpolargl.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scattersmith
(cliponaxis=None, connectgaps=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, imag=None, imagsrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, real=None, realsrc=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, subplot=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scattersmith trace
The scattersmith trace type encompasses line charts, scatter charts, text charts, and bubble charts in smith coordinates. The data visualized as scatter point or lines is set in
real
andimag
(imaginary) coordinates Text (appearing either on the chart or on hover only) is viatext
. Bubble charts are achieved by settingmarker.size
and/ormarker.color
to numerical arrays.- Parameters
cliponaxis – Determines whether or not markers and text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show markers and text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Use with
fillcolor
if not “none”. scattersmith has a subset of the options available to scatter. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape. “tonext” fills the space between two traces if one completely encloses the other (eg consecutive contour lines), and behaves like “toself” if there is no trace before it. “tonext” should not be used if one trace does not enclose the other.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scattersmith.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoveron – Do the hover effects highlight individual points (markers or line points) or do they highlight filled regions? If the fill is “toself” or “tonext” and there are no markers or text, then the default is “fills”, otherwise it is “points”.
hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.imag – Sets the imaginary component of the data, in units of normalized impedance such that real=1, imag=0 is the center of the chart.
imagsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
imag
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scattersmith.Legendgroupti tle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scattersmith.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scattersmith.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
real – Sets the real component of the data, in units of normalized impedance such that real=1, imag=0 is the center of the chart.
realsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
real
.selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattersmith.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scattersmith.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a smith subplot. If “smith” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.smith
. If “smith2”, the data refer tolayout.smith2
, and so on.text – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesreal
,imag
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scattersmith.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_scatterternary
(a=None, asrc=None, b=None, bsrc=None, c=None, cliponaxis=None, connectgaps=None, csrc=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, fill=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, mode=None, name=None, opacity=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, subplot=None, sum=None, text=None, textfont=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Scatterternary trace
Provides similar functionality to the “scatter” type but on a ternary phase diagram. The data is provided by at least two arrays out of
a
,b
,c
triplets.- Parameters
a – Sets the quantity of component
a
in each data point. Ifa
,b
, andc
are all provided, they need not be normalized, only the relative values matter. If only two arrays are provided they must be normalized to matchternary<i>.sum
.asrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
a
.b – Sets the quantity of component
a
in each data point. Ifa
,b
, andc
are all provided, they need not be normalized, only the relative values matter. If only two arrays are provided they must be normalized to matchternary<i>.sum
.bsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
b
.c – Sets the quantity of component
a
in each data point. Ifa
,b
, andc
are all provided, they need not be normalized, only the relative values matter. If only two arrays are provided they must be normalized to matchternary<i>.sum
.cliponaxis – Determines whether or not markers and text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show markers and text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the provided data arrays are connected.
csrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
c
.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.fill – Sets the area to fill with a solid color. Use with
fillcolor
if not “none”. scatterternary has a subset of the options available to scatter. “toself” connects the endpoints of the trace (or each segment of the trace if it has gaps) into a closed shape. “tonext” fills the space between two traces if one completely encloses the other (eg consecutive contour lines), and behaves like “toself” if there is no trace before it. “tonext” should not be used if one trace does not enclose the other.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterternary.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoveron – Do the hover effects highlight individual points (markers or line points) or do they highlight filled regions? If the fill is “toself” or “tonext” and there are no markers or text, then the default is “fills”, otherwise it is “points”.
hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (a,b,c) point. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of strings, the items are mapped in order to the the data points in (a,b,c). To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterternary.Legendgroup title
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterternary.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterternary.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.mode – Determines the drawing mode for this scatter trace. If the provided
mode
includes “text” then thetext
elements appear at the coordinates. Otherwise, thetext
elements appear on hover. If there are less than 20 points and the trace is not stacked then the default is “lines+markers”. Otherwise, “lines”.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterternary.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterternary.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessubplot – Sets a reference between this trace’s data coordinates and a ternary subplot. If “ternary” (the default value), the data refer to
layout.ternary
. If “ternary2”, the data refer tolayout.ternary2
, and so on.sum – The number each triplet should sum to, if only two of
a
,b
, andc
are provided. This overridesternary<i>.sum
to normalize this specific trace, but does not affect the values displayed on the axes. 0 (or missing) means to use ternary<i>.sumtext – Sets text elements associated with each (a,b,c) point. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of strings, the items are mapped in order to the the data points in (a,b,c). If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the text font.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements with respects to the (x,y) coordinates.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesa
,b
,c
andtext
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.scatterternary.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_selection
(arg=None, line=None, name=None, opacity=None, path=None, templateitemname=None, type=None, x0=None, x1=None, xref=None, y0=None, y1=None, yref=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, exclude_empty_subplots=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Create and add a new selection to the figure’s layout
- Parameters
arg – instance of Selection or dict with compatible properties
line –
plotly.graph_objects.layout.selection.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesname – When used in a template, named items are created in the output figure in addition to any items the figure already has in this array. You can modify these items in the output figure by making your own item with
templateitemname
matching thisname
alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.opacity – Sets the opacity of the selection.
path – For
type
“path” - a valid SVG path similar toshapes.path
in data coordinates. Allowed segments are: M, L and Z.templateitemname – Used to refer to a named item in this array in the template. Named items from the template will be created even without a matching item in the input figure, but you can modify one by making an item with
templateitemname
matching itsname
, alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it withvisible: true
.type – Specifies the selection type to be drawn. If “rect”, a rectangle is drawn linking (
x0
,`y0`), (x1
,`y0`), (x1
,`y1`) and (x0
,`y1`). If “path”, draw a custom SVG path usingpath
.x0 – Sets the selection’s starting x position.
x1 – Sets the selection’s end x position.
xref – Sets the selection’s x coordinate axis. If set to a x axis id (e.g. “x” or “x2”), the
x
position refers to a x coordinate. If set to “paper”, thex
position refers to the distance from the left of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the left (right). If set to a x axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the left of the domain of that axis: e.g., x2 domain refers to the domain of the second x axis and a x position of 0.5 refers to the point between the left and the right of the domain of the second x axis.y0 – Sets the selection’s starting y position.
y1 – Sets the selection’s end y position.
yref – Sets the selection’s x coordinate axis. If set to a y axis id (e.g. “y” or “y2”), the
y
position refers to a y coordinate. If set to “paper”, they
position refers to the distance from the bottom of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the bottom (top). If set to a y axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the bottom of the domain of that axis: e.g., y2 domain refers to the domain of the second y axis and a y position of 0.5 refers to the point between the bottom and the top of the domain of the second y axis.row – Subplot row for selection. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).
col – Subplot column for selection. If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
secondary_y – Whether to add selection to secondary y-axis
exclude_empty_subplots – If True, selection will not be added to subplots without traces.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_shape
(arg=None, editable=None, fillcolor=None, fillrule=None, label=None, layer=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, name=None, opacity=None, path=None, showlegend=None, templateitemname=None, type=None, visible=None, x0=None, x0shift=None, x1=None, x1shift=None, xanchor=None, xref=None, xsizemode=None, y0=None, y0shift=None, y1=None, y1shift=None, yanchor=None, yref=None, ysizemode=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, exclude_empty_subplots=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Create and add a new shape to the figure’s layout
- Parameters
arg – instance of Shape or dict with compatible properties
editable – Determines whether the shape could be activated for edit or not. Has no effect when the older editable shapes mode is enabled via
config.editable
orconfig.edits.shapePosition
.fillcolor – Sets the color filling the shape’s interior. Only applies to closed shapes.
fillrule – Determines which regions of complex paths constitute the interior. For more info please visit https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/SVG/Attribute/fill-rule
label –
plotly.graph_objects.layout.shape.Label
instance or dict with compatible propertieslayer – Specifies whether shapes are drawn below gridlines (“below”), between gridlines and traces (“between”) or above traces (“above”).
legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this shape in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this shape. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.layout.shape.Legendgroupti tle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this shape. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this shape.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.layout.shape.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesname – When used in a template, named items are created in the output figure in addition to any items the figure already has in this array. You can modify these items in the output figure by making your own item with
templateitemname
matching thisname
alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.opacity – Sets the opacity of the shape.
path – For
type
“path” - a valid SVG path with the pixel values replaced by data values inxsizemode
/ysizemode
being “scaled” and taken unmodified as pixels relative toxanchor
andyanchor
in case of “pixel” size mode. There are a few restrictions / quirks only absolute instructions, not relative. So the allowed segments are: M, L, H, V, Q, C, T, S, and Z arcs (A) are not allowed because radius rx and ry are relative. In the future we could consider supporting relative commands, but we would have to decide on how to handle date and log axes. Note that even as is, Q and C Bezier paths that are smooth on linear axes may not be smooth on log, and vice versa. no chained “polybezier” commands - specify the segment type for each one. On category axes, values are numbers scaled to the serial numbers of categories because using the categories themselves there would be no way to describe fractional positions On data axes: because space and T are both normal components of path strings, we can’t use either to separate date from time parts. Therefore we’ll use underscore for this purpose: 2015-02-21_13:45:56.789showlegend – Determines whether or not this shape is shown in the legend.
templateitemname – Used to refer to a named item in this array in the template. Named items from the template will be created even without a matching item in the input figure, but you can modify one by making an item with
templateitemname
matching itsname
, alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it withvisible: true
.type – Specifies the shape type to be drawn. If “line”, a line is drawn from (
x0
,`y0`) to (x1
,`y1`) with respect to the axes’ sizing mode. If “circle”, a circle is drawn from ((x0`+`x1
)/2, (y0`+`y1
)/2)) with radius (|(`x0`+`x1`)/2 - `x0`|, |(`y0`+`y1`)/2 -`y0`)|) with respect to the axes’ sizing mode. If “rect”, a rectangle is drawn linking (x0
,`y0`), (x1
,`y0`), (x1
,`y1`), (x0
,`y1`), (x0
,`y0`) with respect to the axes’ sizing mode. If “path”, draw a custom SVG path usingpath
. with respect to the axes’ sizing mode.visible – Determines whether or not this shape is visible. If “legendonly”, the shape is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x0 – Sets the shape’s starting x position. See
type
andxsizemode
for more info.x0shift – Shifts
x0
away from the center of the category whenxref
is a “category” or “multicategory” axis. -0.5 corresponds to the start of the category and 0.5 corresponds to the end of the category.x1 – Sets the shape’s end x position. See
type
andxsizemode
for more info.x1shift – Shifts
x1
away from the center of the category whenxref
is a “category” or “multicategory” axis. -0.5 corresponds to the start of the category and 0.5 corresponds to the end of the category.xanchor – Only relevant in conjunction with
xsizemode
set to “pixel”. Specifies the anchor point on the x axis to whichx0
,x1
and x coordinates withinpath
are relative to. E.g. useful to attach a pixel sized shape to a certain data value. No effect whenxsizemode
not set to “pixel”.xref – Sets the shape’s x coordinate axis. If set to a x axis id (e.g. “x” or “x2”), the
x
position refers to a x coordinate. If set to “paper”, thex
position refers to the distance from the left of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the left (right). If set to a x axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the left of the domain of that axis: e.g., x2 domain refers to the domain of the second x axis and a x position of 0.5 refers to the point between the left and the right of the domain of the second x axis.xsizemode – Sets the shapes’s sizing mode along the x axis. If set to “scaled”,
x0
,x1
and x coordinates withinpath
refer to data values on the x axis or a fraction of the plot area’s width (xref
set to “paper”). If set to “pixel”,xanchor
specifies the x position in terms of data or plot fraction butx0
,x1
and x coordinates withinpath
are pixels relative toxanchor
. This way, the shape can have a fixed width while maintaining a position relative to data or plot fraction.y0 – Sets the shape’s starting y position. See
type
andysizemode
for more info.y0shift – Shifts
y0
away from the center of the category whenyref
is a “category” or “multicategory” axis. -0.5 corresponds to the start of the category and 0.5 corresponds to the end of the category.y1 – Sets the shape’s end y position. See
type
andysizemode
for more info.y1shift – Shifts
y1
away from the center of the category whenyref
is a “category” or “multicategory” axis. -0.5 corresponds to the start of the category and 0.5 corresponds to the end of the category.yanchor – Only relevant in conjunction with
ysizemode
set to “pixel”. Specifies the anchor point on the y axis to whichy0
,y1
and y coordinates withinpath
are relative to. E.g. useful to attach a pixel sized shape to a certain data value. No effect whenysizemode
not set to “pixel”.yref – Sets the shape’s y coordinate axis. If set to a y axis id (e.g. “y” or “y2”), the
y
position refers to a y coordinate. If set to “paper”, they
position refers to the distance from the bottom of the plotting area in normalized coordinates where 0 (1) corresponds to the bottom (top). If set to a y axis ID followed by “domain” (separated by a space), the position behaves like for “paper”, but refers to the distance in fractions of the domain length from the bottom of the domain of that axis: e.g., y2 domain refers to the domain of the second y axis and a y position of 0.5 refers to the point between the bottom and the top of the domain of the second y axis.ysizemode – Sets the shapes’s sizing mode along the y axis. If set to “scaled”,
y0
,y1
and y coordinates withinpath
refer to data values on the y axis or a fraction of the plot area’s height (yref
set to “paper”). If set to “pixel”,yanchor
specifies the y position in terms of data or plot fraction buty0
,y1
and y coordinates withinpath
are pixels relative toyanchor
. This way, the shape can have a fixed height while maintaining a position relative to data or plot fraction.row – Subplot row for shape. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).
col – Subplot column for shape. If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
secondary_y – Whether to add shape to secondary y-axis
exclude_empty_subplots – If True, shape will not be added to subplots without traces.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_splom
(customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, diagonal=None, dimensions=None, dimensiondefaults=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, marker=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, showlowerhalf=None, showupperhalf=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, xaxes=None, xhoverformat=None, yaxes=None, yhoverformat=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Splom trace
Splom traces generate scatter plot matrix visualizations. Each splom
dimensions
items correspond to a generated axis. Values for each of those dimensions are set indimensions[i].values
. Splom traces support allscattergl
marker style attributes. Specifylayout.grid
attributes and/or layout x-axis and y-axis attributes for more control over the axis positioning and style.- Parameters
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.diagonal –
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Diagonal
instance or dict with compatible propertiesdimensions – A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Dimension
instances or dicts with compatible propertiesdimensiondefaults – When used in a template (as layout.template.data.splom.dimensiondefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of splom.dimensions
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
marker –
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showlowerhalf – Determines whether or not subplots on the lower half from the diagonal are displayed.
showupperhalf – Determines whether or not subplots on the upper half from the diagonal are displayed.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair to appear on hover. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.splom.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
xaxes – Sets the list of x axes corresponding to dimensions of this splom trace. By default, a splom will match the first N xaxes where N is the number of input dimensions. Note that, in case where
diagonal.visible
is false andshowupperhalf
orshowlowerhalf
is false, this splom trace will generate one less x-axis and one less y-axis.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.yaxes – Sets the list of y axes corresponding to dimensions of this splom trace. By default, a splom will match the first N yaxes where N is the number of input dimensions. Note that, in case where
diagonal.visible
is false andshowupperhalf
orshowlowerhalf
is false, this splom trace will generate one less x-axis and one less y-axis.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_streamtube
(autocolorscale=None, cauto=None, cmax=None, cmid=None, cmin=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lighting=None, lightposition=None, maxdisplayed=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, reversescale=None, scene=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, sizeref=None, starts=None, stream=None, text=None, u=None, uhoverformat=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, usrc=None, v=None, vhoverformat=None, visible=None, vsrc=None, w=None, whoverformat=None, wsrc=None, x=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zhoverformat=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Streamtube trace
Use a streamtube trace to visualize flow in a vector field. Specify a vector field using 6 1D arrays of equal length, 3 position arrays
x
,y
andz
and 3 vector component arraysu
,v
, andw
. By default, the tubes’ starting positions will be cut from the vector field’s x-z plane at its minimum y value. To specify your own starting position, use attributesstarts.x
,starts.y
andstarts.z
. The color is encoded by the norm of (u, v, w), and the local radius by the divergence of (u, v, w).- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.cauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here u/v/w norm) or the bounds set in
cmin
andcmax
Defaults tofalse
whencmin
andcmax
are set by the user.cmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as u/v/w norm and if set,
cmin
must be set as well.cmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
cmin
and/orcmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as u/v/w norm. Has no effect whencauto
isfalse
.cmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as u/v/w norm and if set,
cmax
must be set as well.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.streamtube.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usecmin
andcmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.streamtube.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablestubex
,tubey
,tubez
,tubeu
,tubev
,tubew
,norm
anddivergence
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.streamtube.Legendgrouptitl e
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lighting –
plotly.graph_objects.streamtube.Lighting
instance or dict with compatible propertieslightposition –
plotly.graph_objects.streamtube.Lightposition
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmaxdisplayed – The maximum number of displayed segments in a streamtube.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the surface. Please note that in the case of using high
opacity
values for example a value greater than or equal to 0.5 on two surfaces (and 0.25 with four surfaces), an overlay of multiple transparent surfaces may not perfectly be sorted in depth by the webgl API. This behavior may be improved in the near future and is subject to change.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
cmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andcmax
will correspond to the first color.scene – Sets a reference between this trace’s 3D coordinate system and a 3D scene. If “scene” (the default value), the (x,y,z) coordinates refer to
layout.scene
. If “scene2”, the (x,y,z) coordinates refer tolayout.scene2
, and so on.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
sizeref – The scaling factor for the streamtubes. The default is 1, which avoids two max divergence tubes from touching at adjacent starting positions.
starts –
plotly.graph_objects.streamtube.Starts
instance or dict with compatible propertiesstream –
plotly.graph_objects.streamtube.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets a text element associated with this trace. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag, this text element will be seen in all hover labels. Note that streamtube traces do not support arraytext
values.u – Sets the x components of the vector field.
uhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
u
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.usrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
u
.v – Sets the y components of the vector field.
vhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
v
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
vsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
v
.w – Sets the z components of the vector field.
whoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
w
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.wsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
w
.x – Sets the x coordinates of the vector field.
xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates of the vector field.
yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the z coordinates of the vector field.
zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingzaxis.hoverformat
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_sunburst
(branchvalues=None, count=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, domain=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextfont=None, insidetextorientation=None, labels=None, labelssrc=None, leaf=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, level=None, marker=None, maxdepth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, outsidetextfont=None, parents=None, parentssrc=None, root=None, rotation=None, sort=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textinfo=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, values=None, valuessrc=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Sunburst trace
Visualize hierarchal data spanning outward radially from root to leaves. The sunburst sectors are determined by the entries in “labels” or “ids” and in “parents”.
- Parameters
branchvalues – Determines how the items in
values
are summed. When set to “total”, items invalues
are taken to be value of all its descendants. When set to “remainder”, items invalues
corresponding to the root and the branches sectors are taken to be the extra part not part of the sum of the values at their leaves.count – Determines default for
values
when it is not provided, by inferring a 1 for each of the “leaves” and/or “branches”, otherwise 0.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.domain –
plotly.graph_objects.sunburst.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.sunburst.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablescurrentPath
,root
,entry
,percentRoot
,percentEntry
andpercentParent
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each sector. If a single string, the same string appears for all data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order of this trace’s sectors. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying inside the sector.insidetextorientation – Controls the orientation of the text inside chart sectors. When set to “auto”, text may be oriented in any direction in order to be as big as possible in the middle of a sector. The “horizontal” option orients text to be parallel with the bottom of the chart, and may make text smaller in order to achieve that goal. The “radial” option orients text along the radius of the sector. The “tangential” option orients text perpendicular to the radius of the sector.
labels – Sets the labels of each of the sectors.
labelssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
labels
.leaf –
plotly.graph_objects.sunburst.Leaf
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.sunburst.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
level – Sets the level from which this trace hierarchy is rendered. Set
level
to''
to start from the root node in the hierarchy. Must be an “id” ifids
is filled in, otherwise plotly attempts to find a matching item inlabels
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.sunburst.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmaxdepth – Sets the number of rendered sectors from any given
level
. Setmaxdepth
to “-1” to render all the levels in the hierarchy.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying outside the sector. This option refers to the root of the hierarchy presented at the center of a sunburst graph. Please note that if a hierarchy has multiple root nodes, this option won’t have any effect andinsidetextfont
would be used.parents – Sets the parent sectors for each of the sectors. Empty string items ‘’ are understood to reference the root node in the hierarchy. If
ids
is filled,parents
items are understood to be “ids” themselves. Whenids
is not set, plotly attempts to find matching items inlabels
, but beware they must be unique.parentssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
parents
.root –
plotly.graph_objects.sunburst.Root
instance or dict with compatible propertiesrotation – Rotates the whole diagram counterclockwise by some angle. By default the first slice starts at 3 o’clock.
sort – Determines whether or not the sectors are reordered from largest to smallest.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.sunburst.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each sector. If trace
textinfo
contains a “text” flag, these elements will be seen on the chart. If tracehoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
.textinfo – Determines which trace information appear on the graph.
textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablescurrentPath
,root
,entry
,percentRoot
,percentEntry
,percentParent
,label
andvalue
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.values – Sets the values associated with each of the sectors. Use with
branchvalues
to determine how the values are summed.valuessrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
values
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_surface
(autocolorscale=None, cauto=None, cmax=None, cmid=None, cmin=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, connectgaps=None, contours=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, hidesurface=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lighting=None, lightposition=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, opacityscale=None, reversescale=None, scene=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, stream=None, surfacecolor=None, surfacecolorsrc=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, x=None, xcalendar=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, ycalendar=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zcalendar=None, zhoverformat=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Surface trace
The data the describes the coordinates of the surface is set in
z
. Data inz
should be a 2D list. Coordinates inx
andy
can either be 1D lists or 2D lists (e.g. to graph parametric surfaces). If not provided inx
andy
, the x and y coordinates are assumed to be linear starting at 0 with a unit step. The color scale corresponds to thez
values by default. For custom color scales, usesurfacecolor
which should be a 2D list, where its bounds can be controlled usingcmin
andcmax
.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.cauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here z or surfacecolor) or the bounds set in
cmin
andcmax
Defaults tofalse
whencmin
andcmax
are set by the user.cmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as z or surfacecolor and if set,
cmin
must be set as well.cmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
cmin
and/orcmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as z or surfacecolor. Has no effect whencauto
isfalse
.cmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as z or surfacecolor and if set,
cmax
must be set as well.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.surface.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usecmin
andcmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.connectgaps – Determines whether or not gaps (i.e. {nan} or missing values) in the
z
data are filled in.contours –
plotly.graph_objects.surface.Contours
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.hidesurface – Determines whether or not a surface is drawn. For example, set
hidesurface
to Falsecontours.x.show
to True andcontours.y.show
to True to draw a wire frame plot.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.surface.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.surface.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lighting –
plotly.graph_objects.surface.Lighting
instance or dict with compatible propertieslightposition –
plotly.graph_objects.surface.Lightposition
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the surface. Please note that in the case of using high
opacity
values for example a value greater than or equal to 0.5 on two surfaces (and 0.25 with four surfaces), an overlay of multiple transparent surfaces may not perfectly be sorted in depth by the webgl API. This behavior may be improved in the near future and is subject to change.opacityscale – Sets the opacityscale. The opacityscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an opacity value. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 1], [0.5, 0.2], [1, 1]]
means that higher/lower values would have higher opacity values and those in the middle would be more transparent Alternatively,opacityscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: ‘min’, ‘max’, ‘extremes’ and ‘uniform’. The default is ‘uniform’.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
cmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andcmax
will correspond to the first color.scene – Sets a reference between this trace’s 3D coordinate system and a 3D scene. If “scene” (the default value), the (x,y,z) coordinates refer to
layout.scene
. If “scene2”, the (x,y,z) coordinates refer tolayout.scene2
, and so on.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.surface.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessurfacecolor – Sets the surface color values, used for setting a color scale independent of
z
.surfacecolorsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
surfacecolor
.text – Sets the text elements associated with each z value. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the x coordinates.
xcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
x
date data.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
ycalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
y
date data.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the z coordinates.
zcalendar – Sets the calendar system to use with
z
date data.zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingzaxis.hoverformat
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_table
(cells=None, columnorder=None, columnordersrc=None, columnwidth=None, columnwidthsrc=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, domain=None, header=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, stream=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Table trace
Table view for detailed data viewing. The data are arranged in a grid of rows and columns. Most styling can be specified for columns, rows or individual cells. Table is using a column- major order, ie. the grid is represented as a vector of column vectors.
- Parameters
cells –
plotly.graph_objects.table.Cells
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolumnorder – Specifies the rendered order of the data columns; for example, a value
2
at position0
means that column index0
in the data will be rendered as the third column, as columns have an index base of zero.columnordersrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
columnorder
.columnwidth – The width of columns expressed as a ratio. Columns fill the available width in proportion of their specified column widths.
columnwidthsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
columnwidth
.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.domain –
plotly.graph_objects.table.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertiesheader –
plotly.graph_objects.table.Header
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.table.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertiesids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.table.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.table.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiesuid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_trace
(trace, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, exclude_empty_subplots=False) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a trace to the figure
- Parameters
trace (BaseTraceType or dict) –
- Either:
An instances of a trace classe from the plotly.graph_objects package (e.g plotly.graph_objects.Scatter, plotly.graph_objects.Bar)
or a dicts where:
The ‘type’ property specifies the trace type (e.g. ‘scatter’, ‘bar’, ‘area’, etc.). If the dict has no ‘type’ property then ‘scatter’ is assumed.
All remaining properties are passed to the constructor of the specified trace type.
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
. If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
The trace argument is a 2D cartesian trace (scatter, bar, etc.)
exclude_empty_subplots (boolean) – If True, the trace will not be added to subplots that don’t already have traces.
- Returns
The Figure that add_trace was called on
- Return type
Examples
>>> from plotly import subplots >>> import plotly.graph_objects as go
Add two Scatter traces to a figure
>>> fig = go.Figure() >>> fig.add_trace(go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2])) Figure(...) >>> fig.add_trace(go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2])) Figure(...)
Add two Scatter traces to vertically stacked subplots
>>> fig = subplots.make_subplots(rows=2) >>> fig.add_trace(go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2]), row=1, col=1) Figure(...) >>> fig.add_trace(go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2]), row=2, col=1) Figure(...)
-
add_traces
(data, rows=None, cols=None, secondary_ys=None, exclude_empty_subplots=False) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add traces to the figure
- Parameters
data (list[BaseTraceType or dict]) –
A list of trace specifications to be added. Trace specifications may be either:
Instances of trace classes from the plotly.graph_objects package (e.g plotly.graph_objects.Scatter, plotly.graph_objects.Bar)
Dicts where:
The ‘type’ property specifies the trace type (e.g. ‘scatter’, ‘bar’, ‘area’, etc.). If the dict has no ‘type’ property then ‘scatter’ is assumed.
All remaining properties are passed to the constructor of the specified trace type.
rows (None, list[int], or int (default None)) – List of subplot row indexes (starting from 1) for the traces to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
If a single integer is passed, all traces will be added to row numbercols (None or list[int] (default None)) – List of subplot column indexes (starting from 1) for the traces to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
If a single integer is passed, all traces will be added to column number
- secondary_ys: None or list[boolean] (default None)
List of secondary_y booleans for traces to be added. See the docstring for
add_trace
for more info.- exclude_empty_subplots: boolean
If True, the trace will not be added to subplots that don’t already have traces.
- Returns
The Figure that add_traces was called on
- Return type
Examples
>>> from plotly import subplots >>> import plotly.graph_objects as go
Add two Scatter traces to a figure
>>> fig = go.Figure() >>> fig.add_traces([go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2]), ... go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2])]) Figure(...)
Add two Scatter traces to vertically stacked subplots
>>> fig = subplots.make_subplots(rows=2) >>> fig.add_traces([go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2]), ... go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2])], ... rows=[1, 2], cols=[1, 1]) Figure(...)
-
add_treemap
(branchvalues=None, count=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, domain=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, insidetextfont=None, labels=None, labelssrc=None, legend=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, level=None, marker=None, maxdepth=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, outsidetextfont=None, parents=None, parentssrc=None, pathbar=None, root=None, sort=None, stream=None, text=None, textfont=None, textinfo=None, textposition=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, tiling=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, values=None, valuessrc=None, visible=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Treemap trace
Visualize hierarchal data from leaves (and/or outer branches) towards root with rectangles. The treemap sectors are determined by the entries in “labels” or “ids” and in “parents”.
- Parameters
branchvalues – Determines how the items in
values
are summed. When set to “total”, items invalues
are taken to be value of all its descendants. When set to “remainder”, items invalues
corresponding to the root and the branches sectors are taken to be the extra part not part of the sum of the values at their leaves.count – Determines default for
values
when it is not provided, by inferring a 1 for each of the “leaves” and/or “branches”, otherwise 0.customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.domain –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Domain
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablescurrentPath
,root
,entry
,percentRoot
,percentEntry
andpercentParent
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each sector. If a single string, the same string appears for all data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order of this trace’s sectors. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying inside the sector.labels – Sets the labels of each of the sectors.
labelssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
labels
.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
level – Sets the level from which this trace hierarchy is rendered. Set
level
to''
to start from the root node in the hierarchy. Must be an “id” ifids
is filled in, otherwise plotly attempts to find a matching item inlabels
.marker –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmaxdepth – Sets the number of rendered sectors from any given
level
. Setmaxdepth
to “-1” to render all the levels in the hierarchy.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
lying outside the sector. This option refers to the root of the hierarchy presented on top left corner of a treemap graph. Please note that if a hierarchy has multiple root nodes, this option won’t have any effect andinsidetextfont
would be used.parents – Sets the parent sectors for each of the sectors. Empty string items ‘’ are understood to reference the root node in the hierarchy. If
ids
is filled,parents
items are understood to be “ids” themselves. Whenids
is not set, plotly attempts to find matching items inlabels
, but beware they must be unique.parentssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
parents
.pathbar –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Pathbar
instance or dict with compatible propertiesroot –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Root
instance or dict with compatible propertiessort – Determines whether or not the sectors are reordered from largest to smallest.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each sector. If trace
textinfo
contains a “text” flag, these elements will be seen on the chart. If tracehoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textfont – Sets the font used for
textinfo
.textinfo – Determines which trace information appear on the graph.
textposition – Sets the positions of the
text
elements.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablescurrentPath
,root
,entry
,percentRoot
,percentEntry
,percentParent
,label
andvalue
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.tiling –
plotly.graph_objects.treemap.Tiling
instance or dict with compatible propertiesuid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.values – Sets the values associated with each of the sectors. Use with
branchvalues
to determine how the values are summed.valuessrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
values
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_violin
(alignmentgroup=None, bandwidth=None, box=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, fillcolor=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hoveron=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, jitter=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, line=None, marker=None, meanline=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, offsetgroup=None, opacity=None, orientation=None, pointpos=None, points=None, quartilemethod=None, scalegroup=None, scalemode=None, selected=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, side=None, span=None, spanmode=None, stream=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, unselected=None, visible=None, width=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Violin trace
In vertical (horizontal) violin plots, statistics are computed using
y
(x
) values. By supplying anx
(y
) array, one violin per distinct x (y) value is drawn If nox
(y
) list is provided, a single violin is drawn. That violin position is then positioned with withname
or withx0
(y0
) if provided.- Parameters
alignmentgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same alignmentgroup. This controls whether bars compute their positional range dependently or independently.
bandwidth – Sets the bandwidth used to compute the kernel density estimate. By default, the bandwidth is determined by Silverman’s rule of thumb.
box –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Box
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.fillcolor – Sets the fill color. Defaults to a half-transparent variant of the line color, marker color, or marker line color, whichever is available.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshoveron – Do the hover effects highlight individual violins or sample points or the kernel density estimate or any combination of them?
hovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.jitter – Sets the amount of jitter in the sample points drawn. If 0, the sample points align along the distribution axis. If 1, the sample points are drawn in a random jitter of width equal to the width of the violins.
legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
line –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Line
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmarker –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Marker
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeanline –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Meanline
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover. For violin traces, the name will also be used for the position coordinate, if
x
andx0
(y
andy0
if horizontal) are missing and the position axis is categorical. Note that the trace name is also used as a default value for attributescalegroup
(please see its description for details).offsetgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same offsetgroup where bars of the same position coordinate will line up.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
orientation – Sets the orientation of the violin(s). If “v” (“h”), the distribution is visualized along the vertical (horizontal).
pointpos – Sets the position of the sample points in relation to the violins. If 0, the sample points are places over the center of the violins. Positive (negative) values correspond to positions to the right (left) for vertical violins and above (below) for horizontal violins.
points – If “outliers”, only the sample points lying outside the whiskers are shown If “suspectedoutliers”, the outlier points are shown and points either less than 4*Q1-3*Q3 or greater than 4*Q3-3*Q1 are highlighted (see
outliercolor
) If “all”, all sample points are shown If False, only the violins are shown with no sample points. Defaults to “suspectedoutliers” whenmarker.outliercolor
ormarker.line.outliercolor
is set, otherwise defaults to “outliers”.quartilemethod – Sets the method used to compute the sample’s Q1 and Q3 quartiles. The “linear” method uses the 25th percentile for Q1 and 75th percentile for Q3 as computed using method #10 (listed on http://jse.amstat.org/v14n3/langford.html). The “exclusive” method uses the median to divide the ordered dataset into two halves if the sample is odd, it does not include the median in either half - Q1 is then the median of the lower half and Q3 the median of the upper half. The “inclusive” method also uses the median to divide the ordered dataset into two halves but if the sample is odd, it includes the median in both halves - Q1 is then the median of the lower half and Q3 the median of the upper half.
scalegroup – If there are multiple violins that should be sized according to to some metric (see
scalemode
), link them by providing a non-empty group id here shared by every trace in the same group. If a violin’swidth
is undefined,scalegroup
will default to the trace’s name. In this case, violins with the same names will be linked togetherscalemode – Sets the metric by which the width of each violin is determined. “width” means each violin has the same (max) width “count” means the violins are scaled by the number of sample points making up each violin.
selected –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Selected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesselectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
side – Determines on which side of the position value the density function making up one half of a violin is plotted. Useful when comparing two violin traces under “overlay” mode, where one trace has
side
set to “positive” and the other to “negative”.span – Sets the span in data space for which the density function will be computed. Has an effect only when
spanmode
is set to “manual”.spanmode – Sets the method by which the span in data space where the density function will be computed. “soft” means the span goes from the sample’s minimum value minus two bandwidths to the sample’s maximum value plus two bandwidths. “hard” means the span goes from the sample’s minimum to its maximum value. For custom span settings, use mode “manual” and fill in the
span
attribute.stream –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with each sample value. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.unselected –
plotly.graph_objects.violin.Unselected
instance or dict with compatible propertiesvisible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
width – Sets the width of the violin in data coordinates. If 0 (default value) the width is automatically selected based on the positions of other violin traces in the same subplot.
x – Sets the x sample data or coordinates. See overview for more info.
x0 – Sets the x coordinate for single-box traces or the starting coordinate for multi-box traces set using q1/median/q3. See overview for more info.
xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y sample data or coordinates. See overview for more info.
y0 – Sets the y coordinate for single-box traces or the starting coordinate for multi-box traces set using q1/median/q3. See overview for more info.
yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_vline
(x, row='all', col='all', exclude_empty_subplots=True, annotation=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a vertical line to a plot or subplot that extends infinitely in the y-dimension.
- Parameters
x (float or int) – A number representing the x coordinate of the vertical line.
exclude_empty_subplots (Boolean) – If True (default) do not place the shape on subplots that have no data plotted on them.
row (None, int or 'all') – Subplot row for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
col (None, int or 'all') – Subplot column for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
annotation (dict or plotly.graph_objects.layout.Annotation. If dict(),) – it is interpreted as describing an annotation. The annotation is placed relative to the shape based on annotation_position (see below) unless its x or y value has been specified for the annotation passed here. xref and yref are always the same as for the added shape and cannot be overridden.
annotation_position (a string containing optionally ["top", "bottom"]) – and [“left”, “right”] specifying where the text should be anchored to on the line. Example positions are “bottom left”, “right top”, “right”, “bottom”. If an annotation is added but annotation_position is not specified, this defaults to “top right”.
annotation_* (any parameters to go.layout.Annotation can be passed as) – keywords by prefixing them with “annotation_”. For example, to specify the annotation text “example” you can pass annotation_text=”example” as a keyword argument.
**kwargs – Any named function parameters that can be passed to ‘add_shape’, except for x0, x1, y0, y1 or type.
-
add_volume
(autocolorscale=None, caps=None, cauto=None, cmax=None, cmid=None, cmin=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, contour=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, flatshading=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, isomax=None, isomin=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, lighting=None, lightposition=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, opacity=None, opacityscale=None, reversescale=None, scene=None, showlegend=None, showscale=None, slices=None, spaceframe=None, stream=None, surface=None, text=None, textsrc=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, value=None, valuehoverformat=None, valuesrc=None, visible=None, x=None, xhoverformat=None, xsrc=None, y=None, yhoverformat=None, ysrc=None, z=None, zhoverformat=None, zsrc=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Volume trace
Draws volume trace between iso-min and iso-max values with coordinates given by four 1-dimensional arrays containing the
value
,x
,y
andz
of every vertex of a uniform or non- uniform 3-D grid. Horizontal or vertical slices, caps as well as spaceframe between iso-min and iso-max values could also be drawn using this trace.- Parameters
autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined bycolorscale
. In casecolorscale
is unspecified orautocolorscale
is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in thecolor
array are all positive, all negative or mixed.caps –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Caps
instance or dict with compatible propertiescauto – Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here
value
) or the bounds set incmin
andcmax
Defaults tofalse
whencmin
andcmax
are set by the user.cmax – Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as
value
and if set,cmin
must be set as well.cmid – Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
cmin
and/orcmax
to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units asvalue
. Has no effect whencauto
isfalse
.cmin – Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Value should have the same units as
value
and if set,cmax
must be set as well.coloraxis – Sets a reference to a shared color axis. References to these shared color axes are “coloraxis”, “coloraxis2”, “coloraxis3”, etc. Settings for these shared color axes are set in the layout, under
layout.coloraxis
,layout.coloraxis2
, etc. Note that multiple color scales can be linked to the same color axis.colorbar –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.ColorBar
instance or dict with compatible propertiescolorscale – Sets the colorscale. The colorscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an rgb, rgba, hex, hsl, hsv, or named color string. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 'rgb(0,0,255)'], [1, 'rgb(255,0,0)']]
. To control the bounds of the colorscale in color space, usecmin
andcmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered,Blues,C ividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portl and,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.contour –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Contour
instance or dict with compatible propertiescustomdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.flatshading – Determines whether or not normal smoothing is applied to the meshes, creating meshes with an angular, low- poly look via flat reflections.
hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Same as
text
.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.isomax – Sets the maximum boundary for iso-surface plot.
isomin – Sets the minimum boundary for iso-surface plot.
legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Legendgrouptitle
instance or dict with compatible propertieslegendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
lighting –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Lighting
instance or dict with compatible propertieslightposition –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Lightposition
instance or dict with compatible propertiesmeta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
opacity – Sets the opacity of the surface. Please note that in the case of using high
opacity
values for example a value greater than or equal to 0.5 on two surfaces (and 0.25 with four surfaces), an overlay of multiple transparent surfaces may not perfectly be sorted in depth by the webgl API. This behavior may be improved in the near future and is subject to change.opacityscale – Sets the opacityscale. The opacityscale must be an array containing arrays mapping a normalized value to an opacity value. At minimum, a mapping for the lowest (0) and highest (1) values are required. For example,
[[0, 1], [0.5, 0.2], [1, 1]]
means that higher/lower values would have higher opacity values and those in the middle would be more transparent Alternatively,opacityscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: ‘min’, ‘max’, ‘extremes’ and ‘uniform’. The default is ‘uniform’.reversescale – Reverses the color mapping if true. If true,
cmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andcmax
will correspond to the first color.scene – Sets a reference between this trace’s 3D coordinate system and a 3D scene. If “scene” (the default value), the (x,y,z) coordinates refer to
layout.scene
. If “scene2”, the (x,y,z) coordinates refer tolayout.scene2
, and so on.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
showscale – Determines whether or not a colorbar is displayed for this trace.
slices –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Slices
instance or dict with compatible propertiesspaceframe –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Spaceframe
instance or dict with compatible propertiesstream –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiessurface –
plotly.graph_objects.volume.Surface
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets the text elements associated with the vertices. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.uid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.value – Sets the 4th dimension (value) of the vertices.
valuehoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
value
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d 3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format.By default the values are formatted using generic number format.valuesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
value
.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
x – Sets the X coordinates of the vertices on X axis.
xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the Y coordinates of the vertices on Y axis.
yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.z – Sets the Z coordinates of the vertices on Z axis.
zhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
z
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingzaxis.hoverformat
.zsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
z
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).
- Returns
- Return type
-
add_vrect
(x0, x1, row='all', col='all', exclude_empty_subplots=True, annotation=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a rectangle to a plot or subplot that extends infinitely in the y-dimension.
- Parameters
x0 (float or int) – A number representing the x coordinate of one side of the rectangle.
x1 (float or int) – A number representing the x coordinate of the other side of the rectangle.
exclude_empty_subplots (Boolean) – If True (default) do not place the shape on subplots that have no data plotted on them.
row (None, int or 'all') – Subplot row for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
col (None, int or 'all') – Subplot column for shape indexed starting at 1. If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s). If both row and col are None, addresses the first subplot if subplots exist, or the only plot. By default is “all”.
annotation (dict or plotly.graph_objects.layout.Annotation. If dict(),) – it is interpreted as describing an annotation. The annotation is placed relative to the shape based on annotation_position (see below) unless its x or y value has been specified for the annotation passed here. xref and yref are always the same as for the added shape and cannot be overridden.
annotation_position (a string containing optionally ["inside", "outside"], ["top", "bottom"]) – and [“left”, “right”] specifying where the text should be anchored to on the rectangle. Example positions are “outside top left”, “inside bottom”, “right”, “inside left”, “inside” (“outside” is not supported). If an annotation is added but annotation_position is not specified this defaults to “inside top right”.
annotation_* (any parameters to go.layout.Annotation can be passed as) – keywords by prefixing them with “annotation_”. For example, to specify the annotation text “example” you can pass annotation_text=”example” as a keyword argument.
**kwargs – Any named function parameters that can be passed to ‘add_shape’, except for x0, x1, y0, y1 or type.
-
add_waterfall
(alignmentgroup=None, base=None, cliponaxis=None, connector=None, constraintext=None, customdata=None, customdatasrc=None, decreasing=None, dx=None, dy=None, hoverinfo=None, hoverinfosrc=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertemplate=None, hovertemplatesrc=None, hovertext=None, hovertextsrc=None, ids=None, idssrc=None, increasing=None, insidetextanchor=None, insidetextfont=None, legend=None, legendgroup=None, legendgrouptitle=None, legendrank=None, legendwidth=None, measure=None, measuresrc=None, meta=None, metasrc=None, name=None, offset=None, offsetgroup=None, offsetsrc=None, opacity=None, orientation=None, outsidetextfont=None, selectedpoints=None, showlegend=None, stream=None, text=None, textangle=None, textfont=None, textinfo=None, textposition=None, textpositionsrc=None, textsrc=None, texttemplate=None, texttemplatesrc=None, totals=None, uid=None, uirevision=None, visible=None, width=None, widthsrc=None, x=None, x0=None, xaxis=None, xhoverformat=None, xperiod=None, xperiod0=None, xperiodalignment=None, xsrc=None, y=None, y0=None, yaxis=None, yhoverformat=None, yperiod=None, yperiod0=None, yperiodalignment=None, ysrc=None, zorder=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add a new Waterfall trace
Draws waterfall trace which is useful graph to displays the contribution of various elements (either positive or negative) in a bar chart. The data visualized by the span of the bars is set in
y
iforientation
is set to “v” (the default) and the labels are set inx
. By settingorientation
to “h”, the roles are interchanged.- Parameters
alignmentgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same alignmentgroup. This controls whether bars compute their positional range dependently or independently.
base – Sets where the bar base is drawn (in position axis units).
cliponaxis – Determines whether the text nodes are clipped about the subplot axes. To show the text nodes above axis lines and tick labels, make sure to set
xaxis.layer
andyaxis.layer
to below traces.connector –
plotly.graph_objects.waterfall.Connector
instance or dict with compatible propertiesconstraintext – Constrain the size of text inside or outside a bar to be no larger than the bar itself.
customdata – Assigns extra data each datum. This may be useful when listening to hover, click and selection events. Note that, “scatter” traces also appends customdata items in the markers DOM elements
customdatasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
customdata
.decreasing –
plotly.graph_objects.waterfall.Decreasing
instance or dict with compatible propertiesdx – Sets the x coordinate step. See
x0
for more info.dy – Sets the y coordinate step. See
y0
for more info.hoverinfo – Determines which trace information appear on hover. If
none
orskip
are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, ifnone
is set, click and hover events are still fired.hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hoverinfo
.hoverlabel –
plotly.graph_objects.waterfall.Hoverlabel
instance or dict with compatible propertieshovertemplate – Template string used for rendering the information that appear on hover box. Note that this will override
hoverinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}” as well as %{xother}, {%_xother}, {%_xother_}, {%xother_}. When showing info for several points, “xother” will be added to those with different x positions from the first point. An underscore before or after “(x|y)other” will add a space on that side, only when this field is shown. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. The variables available inhovertemplate
are the ones emitted as event data described at this link https://plotly.com/javascript/plotlyjs-events/#event- data. Additionally, every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesinitial
,delta
andfinal
. Anything contained in tag<extra>
is displayed in the secondary box, for example “<extra>{fullData.name}</extra>”. To hide the secondary box completely, use an empty tag<extra></extra>
.hovertemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertemplate
.hovertext – Sets hover text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. To be seen, trace
hoverinfo
must contain a “text” flag.hovertextsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
hovertext
.ids – Assigns id labels to each datum. These ids for object constancy of data points during animation. Should be an array of strings, not numbers or any other type.
idssrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ids
.increasing –
plotly.graph_objects.waterfall.Increasing
instance or dict with compatible propertiesinsidetextanchor – Determines if texts are kept at center or start/end points in
textposition
“inside” mode.insidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying inside the bar.legend – Sets the reference to a legend to show this trace in. References to these legends are “legend”, “legend2”, “legend3”, etc. Settings for these legends are set in the layout, under
layout.legend
,layout.legend2
, etc.legendgroup – Sets the legend group for this trace. Traces and shapes part of the same legend group hide/show at the same time when toggling legend items.
legendgrouptitle – :class:`plotly.graph_objects.waterfall.Legendgrouptitle ` instance or dict with compatible properties
legendrank – Sets the legend rank for this trace. Items and groups with smaller ranks are presented on top/left side while with “reversed”
legend.traceorder
they are on bottom/right side. The default legendrank is 1000, so that you can use ranks less than 1000 to place certain items before all unranked items, and ranks greater than 1000 to go after all unranked items. When having unranked or equal rank items shapes would be displayed after traces i.e. according to their order in data and layout.legendwidth – Sets the width (in px or fraction) of the legend for this trace.
measure – An array containing types of values. By default the values are considered as ‘relative’. However; it is possible to use ‘total’ to compute the sums. Also ‘absolute’ could be applied to reset the computed total or to declare an initial value where needed.
measuresrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
measure
.meta – Assigns extra meta information associated with this trace that can be used in various text attributes. Attributes such as trace
name
, graph, axis and colorbartitle.text
, annotationtext
rangeselector
,updatemenues
andsliders
label
text all supportmeta
. To access the tracemeta
values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use%{meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
item in question. To access tracemeta
in layout attributes, use%{data[n[.meta[i]}
wherei
is the index or key of themeta
andn
is the trace index.metasrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
meta
.name – Sets the trace name. The trace name appears as the legend item and on hover.
offset – Shifts the position where the bar is drawn (in position axis units). In “group” barmode, traces that set “offset” will be excluded and drawn in “overlay” mode instead.
offsetgroup – Set several traces linked to the same position axis or matching axes to the same offsetgroup where bars of the same position coordinate will line up.
offsetsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
offset
.opacity – Sets the opacity of the trace.
orientation – Sets the orientation of the bars. With “v” (“h”), the value of the each bar spans along the vertical (horizontal).
outsidetextfont – Sets the font used for
text
lying outside the bar.selectedpoints – Array containing integer indices of selected points. Has an effect only for traces that support selections. Note that an empty array means an empty selection where the
unselected
are turned on for all points, whereas, any other non-array values means no selection all where theselected
andunselected
styles have no effect.showlegend – Determines whether or not an item corresponding to this trace is shown in the legend.
stream –
plotly.graph_objects.waterfall.Stream
instance or dict with compatible propertiestext – Sets text elements associated with each (x,y) pair. If a single string, the same string appears over all the data points. If an array of string, the items are mapped in order to the this trace’s (x,y) coordinates. If trace
hoverinfo
contains a “text” flag and “hovertext” is not set, these elements will be seen in the hover labels.textangle – Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the bar. For example, a
tickangle
of -90 draws the tick labels vertically. With “auto” the texts may automatically be rotated to fit with the maximum size in bars.textfont – Sets the font used for
text
.textinfo – Determines which trace information appear on the graph. In the case of having multiple waterfalls, totals are computed separately (per trace).
textposition – Specifies the location of the
text
. “inside” positionstext
inside, next to the bar end (rotated and scaled if needed). “outside” positionstext
outside, next to the bar end (scaled if needed), unless there is another bar stacked on this one, then the text gets pushed inside. “auto” tries to positiontext
inside the bar, but if the bar is too small and no bar is stacked on this one the text is moved outside. If “none”, no text appears.textpositionsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
textposition
.textsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
text
.texttemplate – Template string used for rendering the information text that appear on points. Note that this will override
textinfo
. Variables are inserted using %{variable}, for example “y: %{y}”. Numbers are formatted using d3-format’s syntax %{variable:d3-format}, for example “Price: %{y:$.2f}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format for details on the formatting syntax. Dates are formatted using d3-time-format’s syntax %{variable|d3-time-format}, for example “Day: %{2019-01-01|%A}”. https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format for details on the date formatting syntax. Every attributes that can be specified per-point (the ones that arearrayOk: true
) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variablesinitial
,delta
,final
andlabel
.texttemplatesrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
texttemplate
.totals –
plotly.graph_objects.waterfall.Totals
instance or dict with compatible propertiesuid – Assign an id to this trace, Use this to provide object constancy between traces during animations and transitions.
uirevision – Controls persistence of some user-driven changes to the trace:
constraintrange
inparcoords
traces, as well as someeditable: true
modifications such asname
andcolorbar.title
. Defaults tolayout.uirevision
. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled bylayout
attributes:trace.visible
is controlled bylayout.legend.uirevision
,selectedpoints
is controlled bylayout.selectionrevision
, andcolorbar.(x|y)
(accessible withconfig: {editable: true}
) is controlled bylayout.editrevision
. Trace changes are tracked byuid
, which only falls back on trace index if nouid
is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of thedata
array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace auid
that stays with it as it moves.visible – Determines whether or not this trace is visible. If “legendonly”, the trace is not drawn, but can appear as a legend item (provided that the legend itself is visible).
width – Sets the bar width (in position axis units).
widthsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
width
.x – Sets the x coordinates.
x0 – Alternate to
x
. Builds a linear space of x coordinates. Use withdx
wherex0
is the starting coordinate anddx
the step.xaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s x coordinates and a 2D cartesian x axis. If “x” (the default value), the x coordinates refer to
layout.xaxis
. If “x2”, the x coordinates refer tolayout.xaxis2
, and so on.xhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
x
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingxaxis.hoverformat
.xperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the x axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.xperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the x0 axis. Whenx0period
is round number of weeks, thex0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.xperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the x axis.xsrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
x
.y – Sets the y coordinates.
y0 – Alternate to
y
. Builds a linear space of y coordinates. Use withdy
wherey0
is the starting coordinate anddy
the step.yaxis – Sets a reference between this trace’s y coordinates and a 2D cartesian y axis. If “y” (the default value), the y coordinates refer to
layout.yaxis
. If “y2”, the y coordinates refer tolayout.yaxis2
, and so on.yhoverformat – Sets the hover text formatting rulefor
y
using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display *09~15~23.46*By default the values are formatted usingyaxis.hoverformat
.yperiod – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the period positioning in milliseconds or “M<n>” on the y axis. Special values in the form of “M<n>” could be used to declare the number of months. In this casen
must be a positive integer.yperiod0 – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the base for period positioning in milliseconds or date string on the y0 axis. Wheny0period
is round number of weeks, they0period0
by default would be on a Sunday i.e. 2000-01-02, otherwise it would be at 2000-01-01.yperiodalignment – Only relevant when the axis
type
is “date”. Sets the alignment of data points on the y axis.ysrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
y
.zorder – Sets the layer on which this trace is displayed, relative to other SVG traces on the same subplot. SVG traces with higher
zorder
appear in front of those with lowerzorder
.row ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot row index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all rows in the specified column(s).col ('all', int or None (default)) – Subplot col index (starting from 1) for the trace to be added. Only valid if figure was created using
plotly.tools.make_subplots
.If ‘all’, addresses all columns in the specified row(s).secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, associate this trace with the secondary y-axis of the subplot at the specified row and col. Only valid if all of the following conditions are satisfied:
The figure was created using
plotly.subplots.make_subplots
.The row and col arguments are not None
The subplot at the specified row and col has type xy (which is the default) and secondary_y True. These properties are specified in the specs argument to make_subplots. See the make_subplots docstring for more info.
- Returns
- Return type
-
append_trace
(trace, row, col)¶ Add a trace to the figure bound to axes at the specified row, col index.
A row, col index grid is generated for figures created with plotly.tools.make_subplots, and can be viewed with the
print_grid
method- Parameters
Examples
>>> from plotly import tools >>> import plotly.graph_objects as go >>> # stack two subplots vertically >>> fig = tools.make_subplots(rows=2)
This is the format of your plot grid: [ (1,1) x1,y1 ] [ (2,1) x2,y2 ]
>>> fig.append_trace(go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2]), row=1, col=1) >>> fig.append_trace(go.Scatter(x=[1,2,3], y=[2,1,2]), row=2, col=1)
-
batch_animate
(duration=500, easing='cubic-in-out')¶ Context manager to animate trace / layout updates
- Parameters
duration (number) – The duration of the transition, in milliseconds. If equal to zero, updates are synchronous.
easing (string) –
The easing function used for the transition. One of:
linear
quad
cubic
sin
exp
circle
elastic
back
bounce
linear-in
quad-in
cubic-in
sin-in
exp-in
circle-in
elastic-in
back-in
bounce-in
linear-out
quad-out
cubic-out
sin-out
exp-out
circle-out
elastic-out
back-out
bounce-out
linear-in-out
quad-in-out
cubic-in-out
sin-in-out
exp-in-out
circle-in-out
elastic-in-out
back-in-out
bounce-in-out
Examples
Suppose we have a figure widget,
fig
, with a single trace.>>> import plotly.graph_objects as go >>> fig = go.FigureWidget(data=[{'y': [3, 4, 2]}])
1) Animate a change in the xaxis and yaxis ranges using default duration and easing parameters.
>>> with fig.batch_animate(): ... fig.layout.xaxis.range = [0, 5] ... fig.layout.yaxis.range = [0, 10]
2) Animate a change in the size and color of the trace’s markers over 2 seconds using the elastic-in-out easing method
>>> with fig.batch_animate(duration=2000, easing='elastic-in-out'): ... fig.data[0].marker.color = 'green' ... fig.data[0].marker.size = 20
-
batch_update
()¶ A context manager that batches up trace and layout assignment operations into a singe plotly_update message that is executed when the context exits.
Examples
For example, suppose we have a figure widget,
fig
, with a single trace.>>> import plotly.graph_objects as go >>> fig = go.FigureWidget(data=[{'y': [3, 4, 2]}])
If we want to update the xaxis range, the yaxis range, and the marker color, we could do so using a series of three property assignments as follows:
>>> fig.layout.xaxis.range = [0, 5] >>> fig.layout.yaxis.range = [0, 10] >>> fig.data[0].marker.color = 'green'
This will work, however it will result in three messages being sent to the front end (two relayout messages for the axis range updates followed by one restyle message for the marker color update). This can cause the plot to appear to stutter as the three updates are applied incrementally.
We can avoid this problem by performing these three assignments in a
batch_update
context as follows:>>> with fig.batch_update(): ... fig.layout.xaxis.range = [0, 5] ... fig.layout.yaxis.range = [0, 10] ... fig.data[0].marker.color = 'green'
Now, these three property updates will be sent to the frontend in a single update message, and they will be applied by the front end simultaneously.
-
property
data
¶ The
data
property is a tuple of the figure’s trace objects- Returns
- Return type
-
for_each_annotation
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Apply a function to all annotations that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single annotation object.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all annotations are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each annotation and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth annotation matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of annotations to select. To select annotations by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those annotations that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all annotations are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of annotations to select. To select annotations by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those annotations that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all annotations are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select annotations associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select annotations associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter annotations based on secondary y-axis.
To select annotations by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_coloraxis
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all coloraxis objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single coloraxis object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. coloraxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each coloraxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of coloraxis objects to select. To select coloraxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of coloraxis objects to select. To select coloraxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_geo
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all geo objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single geo object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. geo objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each geo and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of geo objects to select. To select geo objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of geo objects to select. To select geo objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_layout_image
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Apply a function to all images that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single image object.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all images are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each image and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth image matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of images to select. To select images by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those images that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all images are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of images to select. To select images by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those images that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all images are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select images associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select images associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter images based on secondary y-axis.
To select images by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_legend
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all legend objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single legend object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. legend objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each legend and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of legend objects to select. To select legend objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of legend objects to select. To select legend objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_map
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all map objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single map object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. map objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all map objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each map and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of map objects to select. To select map objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all map objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of map objects to select. To select map objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all map objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_mapbox
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all mapbox objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single mapbox object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. mapbox objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each mapbox and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of mapbox objects to select. To select mapbox objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of mapbox objects to select. To select mapbox objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_polar
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all polar objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single polar object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. polar objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each polar and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of polar objects to select. To select polar objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of polar objects to select. To select polar objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_scene
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all scene objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single scene object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. scene objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each scene and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of scene objects to select. To select scene objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of scene objects to select. To select scene objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_selection
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Apply a function to all selections that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single selection object.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all selections are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each selection and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth selection matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of selections to select. To select selections by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those selections that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all selections are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of selections to select. To select selections by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those selections that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all selections are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select selections associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select selections associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter selections based on secondary y-axis.
To select selections by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_shape
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Apply a function to all shapes that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single shape object.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all shapes are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each shape and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth shape matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of shapes to select. To select shapes by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those shapes that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all shapes are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of shapes to select. To select shapes by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those shapes that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all shapes are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select shapes associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select shapes associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter shapes based on secondary y-axis.
To select shapes by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_smith
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all smith objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single smith object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. smith objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each smith and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of smith objects to select. To select smith objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of smith objects to select. To select smith objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_ternary
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all ternary objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single ternary object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. ternary objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each ternary and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of ternary objects to select. To select ternary objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of ternary objects to select. To select ternary objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_trace
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all traces that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single trace object.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all traces are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each trace and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth trace matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of traces to select. To select traces by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all traces are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of traces to select. To select traces by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all traces are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select traces associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select traces associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter traces based on secondary y-axis.
To select traces by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_xaxis
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all xaxis objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single xaxis object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. xaxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each xaxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of xaxis objects to select. To select xaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of xaxis objects to select. To select xaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
for_each_yaxis
(fn, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Apply a function to all yaxis objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
fn – Function that inputs a single yaxis object.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. yaxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each yaxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of yaxis objects to select. To select yaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of yaxis objects to select. To select yaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select yaxis objects associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select yaxis objects associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter yaxis objects based on a secondary y-axis condition.
To select yaxis objects by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
property
frames
¶ The
frames
property is a tuple of the figure’s frame objects- Returns
- Return type
-
full_figure_for_development
(warn=True, as_dict=False)¶ Compute default values for all attributes not specified in the input figure and returns the output as a “full” figure. This function calls Plotly.js via Kaleido to populate unspecified attributes. This function is intended for interactive use during development to learn more about how Plotly.js computes default values and is not generally necessary or recommended for production use.
- Parameters
- Returns
The full figure
- Return type
-
get_subplot
(row, col, secondary_y=False)¶ Return an object representing the subplot at the specified row and column. May only be used on Figures created using plotly.tools.make_subplots
- Parameters
row (int) – 1-based index of subplot row
col (int) – 1-based index of subplot column
secondary_y (bool) – If True, select the subplot that consists of the x-axis and the secondary y-axis at the specified row/col. Only valid if the subplot at row/col is an 2D cartesian subplot that was created with a secondary y-axis. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating a subplot with a secondary y-axis.
- Returns
None: if subplot is empty
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Scene: if subplot type is ‘scene’
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Polar: if subplot type is ‘polar’
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Ternary: if subplot type is ‘ternary’
plotly.graph_objects.layout.Mapbox: if subplot type is ‘ternary’
SubplotDomain namedtuple with
x
andy
fields: if subplot type is ‘domain’.x: length 2 list of the subplot start and stop width
y: length 2 list of the subplot start and stop height
SubplotXY namedtuple with
xaxis
andyaxis
fields: if subplot type is ‘xy’.xaxis: plotly.graph_objects.layout.XAxis instance for subplot
yaxis: plotly.graph_objects.layout.YAxis instance for subplot
- Return type
subplot
-
property
layout
¶ The
layout
property of the figure- Returns
- Return type
-
plotly_relayout
(relayout_data, **kwargs)¶ Perform a Plotly relayout operation on the figure’s layout
- Parameters
relayout_data (dict) –
Dict of layout updates
dict keys are strings that specify the properties to be updated. Nested properties are expressed by joining successive keys on ‘.’ characters (e.g. ‘xaxis.range’)
dict values are the values to use to update the layout.
- Returns
- Return type
-
plotly_restyle
(restyle_data, trace_indexes=None, **kwargs)¶ Perform a Plotly restyle operation on the figure’s traces
- Parameters
restyle_data (dict) –
Dict of trace style updates.
Keys are strings that specify the properties to be updated. Nested properties are expressed by joining successive keys on ‘.’ characters (e.g. ‘marker.color’).
Values may be scalars or lists. When values are scalars, that scalar value is applied to all traces specified by the
trace_indexes
parameter. When values are lists, the restyle operation will cycle through the elements of the list as it cycles through the traces specified by thetrace_indexes
parameter.Caution: To use plotly_restyle to update a list property (e.g. the
x
property of the scatter trace), the property value should be a scalar list containing the list to update with. For example, the following command would be used to update the ‘x’ property of the first trace to the list [1, 2, 3]>>> import plotly.graph_objects as go >>> fig = go.Figure(go.Scatter(x=[2, 4, 6])) >>> fig.plotly_restyle({'x': [[1, 2, 3]]}, 0)
trace_indexes (int or list of int) – Trace index, or list of trace indexes, that the restyle operation applies to. Defaults to all trace indexes.
- Returns
- Return type
-
plotly_update
(restyle_data=None, relayout_data=None, trace_indexes=None, **kwargs)¶ Perform a Plotly update operation on the figure.
Note: This operation both mutates and returns the figure
- Parameters
restyle_data (dict) – Traces update specification. See the docstring for the
plotly_restyle
method for detailsrelayout_data (dict) – Layout update specification. See the docstring for the
plotly_relayout
method for detailstrace_indexes – Trace index, or list of trace indexes, that the update operation applies to. Defaults to all trace indexes.
- Returns
None
- Return type
-
pop
(key, *args)¶ Remove the value associated with the specified key and return it
-
print_grid
()¶ Print a visual layout of the figure’s axes arrangement. This is only valid for figures that are created with plotly.tools.make_subplots.
-
select_annotations
(selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Select annotations from a particular subplot cell and/or annotations that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, int, str, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Annotations will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all annotations are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each annotation and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth annotation matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of annotations to select. To select annotations by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those annotation that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all annotations are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of annotations to select. To select annotations by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those annotation that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all annotations are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select annotations associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select annotations associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter annotations based on secondary y-axis.
To select annotations by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the annotations that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_coloraxes
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select coloraxis subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or coloraxis subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. coloraxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each coloraxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of coloraxis objects to select. To select coloraxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of coloraxis objects to select. To select coloraxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the coloraxis objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_geos
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select geo subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or geo subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. geo objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each geo and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of geo objects to select. To select geo objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of geo objects to select. To select geo objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the geo objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_layout_images
(selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Select images from a particular subplot cell and/or images that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, int, str, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Annotations will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all images are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each image and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth image matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of images to select. To select images by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those image that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all images are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of images to select. To select images by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those image that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all images are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select images associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select images associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter images based on secondary y-axis.
To select images by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the images that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_legends
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select legend subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or legend subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. legend objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each legend and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of legend objects to select. To select legend objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of legend objects to select. To select legend objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the legend objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_mapboxes
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select mapbox subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or mapbox subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. mapbox objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each mapbox and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of mapbox objects to select. To select mapbox objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of mapbox objects to select. To select mapbox objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the mapbox objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_maps
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select map subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or map subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. map objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all map objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each map and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of map objects to select. To select map objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all map objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of map objects to select. To select map objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all map objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the map objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_polars
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select polar subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or polar subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. polar objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each polar and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of polar objects to select. To select polar objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of polar objects to select. To select polar objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the polar objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_scenes
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select scene subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or scene subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. scene objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each scene and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of scene objects to select. To select scene objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of scene objects to select. To select scene objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the scene objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_selections
(selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Select selections from a particular subplot cell and/or selections that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, int, str, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Annotations will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all selections are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each selection and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth selection matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of selections to select. To select selections by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those selection that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all selections are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of selections to select. To select selections by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those selection that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all selections are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select selections associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select selections associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter selections based on secondary y-axis.
To select selections by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the selections that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_shapes
(selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Select shapes from a particular subplot cell and/or shapes that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, int, str, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Annotations will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all shapes are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each shape and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth shape matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of shapes to select. To select shapes by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those shape that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all shapes are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of shapes to select. To select shapes by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those shape that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all shapes are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select shapes associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select shapes associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter shapes based on secondary y-axis.
To select shapes by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the shapes that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_smiths
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select smith subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or smith subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. smith objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each smith and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of smith objects to select. To select smith objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of smith objects to select. To select smith objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the smith objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_ternaries
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select ternary subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or ternary subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. ternary objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each ternary and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of ternary objects to select. To select ternary objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of ternary objects to select. To select ternary objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the ternary objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_traces
(selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Select traces from a particular subplot cell and/or traces that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all traces are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each trace and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth trace matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of traces to select. To select traces by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all traces are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of traces to select. To select traces by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all traces are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select traces associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select traces associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter traces based on secondary y-axis.
To select traces by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the traces that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_xaxes
(selector=None, row=None, col=None)¶ Select xaxis subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or xaxis subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. xaxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each xaxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of xaxis objects to select. To select xaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of xaxis objects to select. To select xaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the xaxis objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
select_yaxes
(selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None)¶ Select yaxis subplot objects from a particular subplot cell and/or yaxis subplot objects that satisfy custom selection criteria.
- Parameters
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. yaxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each yaxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of yaxis objects to select. To select yaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of yaxis objects to select. To select yaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select yaxis objects associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select yaxis objects associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter yaxis objects based on a secondary y-axis condition.
To select yaxis objects by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
- Returns
Generator that iterates through all of the yaxis objects that satisfy all of the specified selection criteria
- Return type
generator
-
set_subplots
(rows=None, cols=None, **make_subplots_args) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Add subplots to this figure. If the figure already contains subplots, then this throws an error. Accepts any keyword arguments that plotly.subplots.make_subplots accepts.
-
show
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Show a figure using either the default renderer(s) or the renderer(s) specified by the renderer argument
- Parameters
renderer (str or None (default None)) – A string containing the names of one or more registered renderers (separated by ‘+’ characters) or None. If None, then the default renderers specified in plotly.io.renderers.default are used.
validate (bool (default True)) – True if the figure should be validated before being shown, False otherwise.
width (int or float) – An integer or float that determines the number of pixels wide the plot is. The default is set in plotly.js.
height (int or float) – An integer or float that determines the number of pixels wide the plot is. The default is set in plotly.js.
config (dict) – A dict of parameters to configure the figure. The defaults are set in plotly.js.
- Returns
- Return type
-
to_dict
()¶ Convert figure to a dictionary
Note: the dictionary includes the properties explicitly set by the user, it does not include default values of unspecified properties
- Returns
- Return type
-
to_html
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Convert a figure to an HTML string representation.
- Parameters
config (dict or None (default None)) – Plotly.js figure config options
auto_play (bool (default=True)) – Whether to automatically start the animation sequence on page load if the figure contains frames. Has no effect if the figure does not contain frames.
include_plotlyjs (bool or string (default True)) –
Specifies how the plotly.js library is included/loaded in the output div string.
If True, a script tag containing the plotly.js source code (~3MB) is included in the output. HTML files generated with this option are fully self-contained and can be used offline.
If ‘cdn’, a script tag that references the plotly.js CDN is included in the output. HTML files generated with this option are about 3MB smaller than those generated with include_plotlyjs=True, but they require an active internet connection in order to load the plotly.js library.
If ‘directory’, a script tag is included that references an external plotly.min.js bundle that is assumed to reside in the same directory as the HTML file.
If ‘require’, Plotly.js is loaded using require.js. This option assumes that require.js is globally available and that it has been globally configured to know how to find Plotly.js as ‘plotly’. This option is not advised when full_html=True as it will result in a non-functional html file.
If a string that ends in ‘.js’, a script tag is included that references the specified path. This approach can be used to point the resulting HTML file to an alternative CDN or local bundle.
If False, no script tag referencing plotly.js is included. This is useful when the resulting div string will be placed inside an HTML document that already loads plotly.js. This option is not advised when full_html=True as it will result in a non-functional html file.
include_mathjax (bool or string (default False)) –
Specifies how the MathJax.js library is included in the output html div string. MathJax is required in order to display labels with LaTeX typesetting.
If False, no script tag referencing MathJax.js will be included in the output.
If ‘cdn’, a script tag that references a MathJax CDN location will be included in the output. HTML div strings generated with this option will be able to display LaTeX typesetting as long as internet access is available.
If a string that ends in ‘.js’, a script tag is included that references the specified path. This approach can be used to point the resulting HTML div string to an alternative CDN.
post_script (str or list or None (default None)) – JavaScript snippet(s) to be included in the resulting div just after plot creation. The string(s) may include ‘{plot_id}’ placeholders that will then be replaced by the
id
of the div element that the plotly.js figure is associated with. One application for this script is to install custom plotly.js event handlers.full_html (bool (default True)) – If True, produce a string containing a complete HTML document starting with an <html> tag. If False, produce a string containing a single <div> element.
animation_opts (dict or None (default None)) – dict of custom animation parameters to be passed to the function Plotly.animate in Plotly.js. See https://github.com/plotly/plotly.js/blob/master/src/plots/animation_attributes.js for available options. Has no effect if the figure does not contain frames, or auto_play is False.
default_width (number or str (default '100%')) – The default figure width/height to use if the provided figure does not specify its own layout.width/layout.height property. May be specified in pixels as an integer (e.g. 500), or as a css width style string (e.g. ‘500px’, ‘100%’).
default_height (number or str (default '100%')) – The default figure width/height to use if the provided figure does not specify its own layout.width/layout.height property. May be specified in pixels as an integer (e.g. 500), or as a css width style string (e.g. ‘500px’, ‘100%’).
validate (bool (default True)) – True if the figure should be validated before being converted to JSON, False otherwise.
div_id (str (default None)) – If provided, this is the value of the id attribute of the div tag. If None, the id attribute is a UUID.
- Returns
Representation of figure as an HTML div string
- Return type
-
to_image
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Convert a figure to a static image bytes string
- Parameters
- The desired image format. One of
’png’
’jpg’ or ‘jpeg’
’webp’
’svg’
’pdf’
’eps’ (Requires the poppler library to be installed)
If not specified, will default to
plotly.io.config.default_format
The width of the exported image in layout pixels. If the
scale
property is 1.0, this will also be the width of the exported image in physical pixels.If not specified, will default to
plotly.io.config.default_width
The height of the exported image in layout pixels. If the
scale
property is 1.0, this will also be the height of the exported image in physical pixels.If not specified, will default to
plotly.io.config.default_height
scale (int or float or None) –
The scale factor to use when exporting the figure. A scale factor larger than 1.0 will increase the image resolution with respect to the figure’s layout pixel dimensions. Whereas as scale factor of less than 1.0 will decrease the image resolution.
If not specified, will default to
plotly.io.config.default_scale
validate (bool) – True if the figure should be validated before being converted to an image, False otherwise.
engine (str) –
- Image export engine to use:
”kaleido”: Use Kaleido for image export
”orca”: Use Orca for image export
”auto” (default): Use Kaleido if installed, otherwise use orca
- Returns
The image data
- Return type
-
to_json
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Convert a figure to a JSON string representation
- Parameters
validate (bool (default True)) – True if the figure should be validated before being converted to JSON, False otherwise.
pretty (bool (default False)) – True if JSON representation should be pretty-printed, False if representation should be as compact as possible.
remove_uids (bool (default True)) – True if trace UIDs should be omitted from the JSON representation
engine (str (default None)) –
- The JSON encoding engine to use. One of:
”json” for an encoder based on the built-in Python json module
”orjson” for a fast encoder the requires the orjson package
If not specified, the default encoder is set to the current value of plotly.io.json.config.default_encoder.
- Returns
Representation of figure as a JSON string
- Return type
-
to_plotly_json
()¶ Convert figure to a JSON representation as a Python dict
Note: May include some JSON-invalid data types, use the
PlotlyJSONEncoder
util or theto_json
method to encode to a string.- Returns
- Return type
-
update
(dict1=None, overwrite=False, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Update the properties of the figure with a dict and/or with keyword arguments.
This recursively updates the structure of the figure object with the values in the input dict / keyword arguments.
- Parameters
dict1 (dict) – Dictionary of properties to be updated
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
kwargs – Keyword/value pair of properties to be updated
Examples
>>> import plotly.graph_objects as go >>> fig = go.Figure(data=[{'y': [1, 2, 3]}]) >>> fig.update(data=[{'y': [4, 5, 6]}]) Figure(...) >>> fig.to_plotly_json() {'data': [{'type': 'scatter', 'uid': 'e86a7c7a-346a-11e8-8aa8-a0999b0c017b', 'y': array([4, 5, 6], dtype=int32)}], 'layout': {}}
>>> fig = go.Figure(layout={'xaxis': ... {'color': 'green', ... 'range': [0, 1]}}) >>> fig.update({'layout': {'xaxis': {'color': 'pink'}}}) Figure(...) >>> fig.to_plotly_json() {'data': [], 'layout': {'xaxis': {'color': 'pink', 'range': [0, 1]}}}
- Returns
Updated figure
- Return type
-
update_annotations
(patch=None, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all annotations that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict or None (default None)) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all annotations that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all annotations are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each annotation and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth annotation matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of annotations to select. To select annotations by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those annotation that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all annotations are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of annotations to select. To select annotations by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those annotation that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all annotations are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select annotations associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select annotations associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter annotations based on secondary y-axis.
To select annotations by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected annotation. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_coloraxes
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all coloraxis objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all coloraxis objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. coloraxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each coloraxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of coloraxis objects to select. To select coloraxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of coloraxis objects to select. To select coloraxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all coloraxis objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected coloraxis object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_geos
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all geo objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all geo objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. geo objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each geo and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of geo objects to select. To select geo objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of geo objects to select. To select geo objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all geo objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected geo object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_layout
(dict1=None, overwrite=False, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Update the properties of the figure’s layout with a dict and/or with keyword arguments.
This recursively updates the structure of the original layout with the values in the input dict / keyword arguments.
- Parameters
dict1 (dict) – Dictionary of properties to be updated
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
kwargs – Keyword/value pair of properties to be updated
- Returns
The Figure object that the update_layout method was called on
- Return type
-
update_layout_images
(patch=None, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all images that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict or None (default None)) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all images that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all images are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each image and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth image matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of images to select. To select images by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those image that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all images are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of images to select. To select images by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those image that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all images are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select images associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select images associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter images based on secondary y-axis.
To select images by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected image. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_legends
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all legend objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all legend objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. legend objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each legend and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of legend objects to select. To select legend objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of legend objects to select. To select legend objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all legend objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected legend object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_mapboxes
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all mapbox objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all mapbox objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. mapbox objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each mapbox and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of mapbox objects to select. To select mapbox objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of mapbox objects to select. To select mapbox objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all mapbox objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected mapbox object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_maps
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all map objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all map objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. map objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all map objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each map and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of map objects to select. To select map objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all map objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of map objects to select. To select map objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all map objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected map object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_polars
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all polar objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all polar objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. polar objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each polar and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of polar objects to select. To select polar objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of polar objects to select. To select polar objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all polar objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected polar object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_scenes
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all scene objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all scene objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. scene objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each scene and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of scene objects to select. To select scene objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of scene objects to select. To select scene objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all scene objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected scene object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_selections
(patch=None, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all selections that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict or None (default None)) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all selections that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all selections are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each selection and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth selection matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of selections to select. To select selections by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those selection that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all selections are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of selections to select. To select selections by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those selection that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all selections are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select selections associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select selections associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter selections based on secondary y-axis.
To select selections by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected selection. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_shapes
(patch=None, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all shapes that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict or None (default None)) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all shapes that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all shapes are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each shape and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth shape matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of shapes to select. To select shapes by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those shape that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all shapes are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of shapes to select. To select shapes by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. To select only those shape that are in paper coordinates, set row and col to the string ‘paper’. If None (the default), all shapes are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select shapes associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select shapes associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter shapes based on secondary y-axis.
To select shapes by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected shape. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_smiths
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all smith objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all smith objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. smith objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each smith and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of smith objects to select. To select smith objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of smith objects to select. To select smith objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all smith objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected smith object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_ternaries
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all ternary objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all ternary objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. ternary objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each ternary and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of ternary objects to select. To select ternary objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of ternary objects to select. To select ternary objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all ternary objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected ternary object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_traces
(patch=None, selector=None, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, overwrite=False, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all traces that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict or None (default None)) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all traces that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, int, str or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. Traces will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all traces are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each trace and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection. If an int N, the Nth trace matching row and col will be selected (N can be negative). If a string S, the selector is equivalent to dict(type=S).
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of traces to select. To select traces by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all traces are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of traces to select. To select traces by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all traces are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select traces associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select traces associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter traces based on secondary y-axis.
To select traces by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected trace. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_xaxes
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all xaxis objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all xaxis objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. xaxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each xaxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of xaxis objects to select. To select xaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of xaxis objects to select. To select xaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all xaxis objects are selected.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected xaxis object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
update_yaxes
(patch=None, selector=None, overwrite=False, row=None, col=None, secondary_y=None, **kwargs) → plotly.graph_objects._figure.Figure¶ Perform a property update operation on all yaxis objects that satisfy the specified selection criteria
- Parameters
patch (dict) – Dictionary of property updates to be applied to all yaxis objects that satisfy the selection criteria.
selector (dict, function, or None (default None)) – Dict to use as selection criteria. yaxis objects will be selected if they contain properties corresponding to all of the dictionary’s keys, with values that exactly match the supplied values. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected. If a function, it must be a function accepting a single argument and returning a boolean. The function will be called on each yaxis and those for which the function returned True will be in the selection.
overwrite (bool) – If True, overwrite existing properties. If False, apply updates to existing properties recursively, preserving existing properties that are not specified in the update operation.
row (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of yaxis objects to select. To select yaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected.
col (int or None (default None)) – Subplot row and column index of yaxis objects to select. To select yaxis objects by row and column, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. If None (the default), all yaxis objects are selected.
secondary_y (boolean or None (default None)) –
If True, only select yaxis objects associated with the secondary y-axis of the subplot.
If False, only select yaxis objects associated with the primary y-axis of the subplot.
If None (the default), do not filter yaxis objects based on a secondary y-axis condition.
To select yaxis objects by secondary y-axis, the Figure must have been created using plotly.subplots.make_subplots. See the docstring for the specs argument to make_subplots for more info on creating subplots with secondary y-axes.
**kwargs – Additional property updates to apply to each selected yaxis object. If a property is specified in both patch and in **kwargs then the one in **kwargs takes precedence.
- Returns
Returns the Figure object that the method was called on
- Return type
self
-
write_html
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Write a figure to an HTML file representation
- Parameters
file (str or writeable) – A string representing a local file path or a writeable object (e.g. a pathlib.Path object or an open file descriptor)
config (dict or None (default None)) – Plotly.js figure config options
auto_play (bool (default=True)) – Whether to automatically start the animation sequence on page load if the figure contains frames. Has no effect if the figure does not contain frames.
include_plotlyjs (bool or string (default True)) –
Specifies how the plotly.js library is included/loaded in the output div string.
If True, a script tag containing the plotly.js source code (~3MB) is included in the output. HTML files generated with this option are fully self-contained and can be used offline.
If ‘cdn’, a script tag that references the plotly.js CDN is included in the output. HTML files generated with this option are about 3MB smaller than those generated with include_plotlyjs=True, but they require an active internet connection in order to load the plotly.js library.
If ‘directory’, a script tag is included that references an external plotly.min.js bundle that is assumed to reside in the same directory as the HTML file. If
file
is a string to a local file path andfull_html
is True, then the plotly.min.js bundle is copied into the directory of the resulting HTML file. If a file named plotly.min.js already exists in the output directory then this file is left unmodified and no copy is performed. HTML files generated with this option can be used offline, but they require a copy of the plotly.min.js bundle in the same directory. This option is useful when many figures will be saved as HTML files in the same directory because the plotly.js source code will be included only once per output directory, rather than once per output file.If ‘require’, Plotly.js is loaded using require.js. This option assumes that require.js is globally available and that it has been globally configured to know how to find Plotly.js as ‘plotly’. This option is not advised when full_html=True as it will result in a non-functional html file.
If a string that ends in ‘.js’, a script tag is included that references the specified path. This approach can be used to point the resulting HTML file to an alternative CDN or local bundle.
If False, no script tag referencing plotly.js is included. This is useful when the resulting div string will be placed inside an HTML document that already loads plotly.js. This option is not advised when full_html=True as it will result in a non-functional html file.
include_mathjax (bool or string (default False)) –
Specifies how the MathJax.js library is included in the output html div string. MathJax is required in order to display labels with LaTeX typesetting.
If False, no script tag referencing MathJax.js will be included in the output.
If ‘cdn’, a script tag that references a MathJax CDN location will be included in the output. HTML div strings generated with this option will be able to display LaTeX typesetting as long as internet access is available.
If a string that ends in ‘.js’, a script tag is included that references the specified path. This approach can be used to point the resulting HTML div string to an alternative CDN.
post_script (str or list or None (default None)) – JavaScript snippet(s) to be included in the resulting div just after plot creation. The string(s) may include ‘{plot_id}’ placeholders that will then be replaced by the
id
of the div element that the plotly.js figure is associated with. One application for this script is to install custom plotly.js event handlers.full_html (bool (default True)) – If True, produce a string containing a complete HTML document starting with an <html> tag. If False, produce a string containing a single <div> element.
animation_opts (dict or None (default None)) – dict of custom animation parameters to be passed to the function Plotly.animate in Plotly.js. See https://github.com/plotly/plotly.js/blob/master/src/plots/animation_attributes.js for available options. Has no effect if the figure does not contain frames, or auto_play is False.
default_width (number or str (default '100%')) – The default figure width/height to use if the provided figure does not specify its own layout.width/layout.height property. May be specified in pixels as an integer (e.g. 500), or as a css width style string (e.g. ‘500px’, ‘100%’).
default_height (number or str (default '100%')) – The default figure width/height to use if the provided figure does not specify its own layout.width/layout.height property. May be specified in pixels as an integer (e.g. 500), or as a css width style string (e.g. ‘500px’, ‘100%’).
validate (bool (default True)) – True if the figure should be validated before being converted to JSON, False otherwise.
auto_open (bool (default True)) – If True, open the saved file in a web browser after saving. This argument only applies if
full_html
is True.div_id (str (default None)) – If provided, this is the value of the id attribute of the div tag. If None, the id attribute is a UUID.
- Returns
- Return type
-
write_image
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Convert a figure to a static image and write it to a file or writeable object
- Parameters
file (str or writeable) – A string representing a local file path or a writeable object (e.g. a pathlib.Path object or an open file descriptor)
- The desired image format. One of
’png’
’jpg’ or ‘jpeg’
’webp’
’svg’
’pdf’
’eps’ (Requires the poppler library to be installed)
If not specified and
file
is a string then this will default to the file extension. If not specified andfile
is not a string then this will default toplotly.io.config.default_format
The width of the exported image in layout pixels. If the
scale
property is 1.0, this will also be the width of the exported image in physical pixels.If not specified, will default to
plotly.io.config.default_width
The height of the exported image in layout pixels. If the
scale
property is 1.0, this will also be the height of the exported image in physical pixels.If not specified, will default to
plotly.io.config.default_height
scale (int or float or None) –
The scale factor to use when exporting the figure. A scale factor larger than 1.0 will increase the image resolution with respect to the figure’s layout pixel dimensions. Whereas as scale factor of less than 1.0 will decrease the image resolution.
If not specified, will default to
plotly.io.config.default_scale
validate (bool) – True if the figure should be validated before being converted to an image, False otherwise.
engine (str) –
- Image export engine to use:
”kaleido”: Use Kaleido for image export
”orca”: Use Orca for image export
”auto” (default): Use Kaleido if installed, otherwise use orca
- Returns
- Return type
-
write_json
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Convert a figure to JSON and write it to a file or writeable object
- Parameters
file (str or writeable) – A string representing a local file path or a writeable object (e.g. an open file descriptor)
pretty (bool (default False)) – True if JSON representation should be pretty-printed, False if representation should be as compact as possible.
remove_uids (bool (default True)) – True if trace UIDs should be omitted from the JSON representation
engine (str (default None)) –
- The JSON encoding engine to use. One of:
”json” for an encoder based on the built-in Python json module
”orjson” for a fast encoder the requires the orjson package
If not specified, the default encoder is set to the current value of plotly.io.json.config.default_encoder.
- Returns
- Return type
-