plotly.graph_objects.Histogram2dContour

class plotly.graph_objects.Histogram2dContour(arg=None, 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, **kwargs)
__init__(arg=None, 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, **kwargs)

Construct a new Histogram2dContour object

The sample data from which statistics are computed is set in x and y (where x and y represent marginal distributions, binning is set in xbins and ybins in this case) or z (where z represent the 2D distribution and binning set, binning is set by x and y in this case). The resulting distribution is visualized as a contour plot.

Parameters
  • arg – dict of properties compatible with this constructor or an instance of plotly.graph_objects.Histogram2dContour

  • autobinx – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and autobinx is not needed. However, we accept autobinx: true or false and will update xbins accordingly before deleting autobinx from the trace.

  • autobiny – Obsolete: since v1.42 each bin attribute is auto- determined separately and autobiny is not needed. However, we accept autobiny: true or false and will update ybins accordingly before deleting autobiny from the trace.

  • autocolorscale – Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (autocolorscale: true) or the palette determined by colorscale. In case colorscale is unspecified or autocolorscale is true, the default palette will be chosen according to whether numbers in the color 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 in contours.

  • bingroup – Set the xbingroup and ybingroup default prefix For example, setting a bingroup 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.

  • colorbarplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.ColorBa r instance or dict with compatible properties

  • colorscale – 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, use zmin and zmax. 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.

  • contoursplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Contour s instance or dict with compatible properties

  • 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 or skip are set, no information is displayed upon hovering. But, if none is set, click and hover events are still fired.

  • hoverinfosrc – Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for hoverinfo.

  • hoverlabelplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Hoverla bel instance or dict with compatible properties

  • 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 in hovertemplate 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 are arrayOk: true) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variable z 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.

  • legendgrouptitleplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Legendg rouptitle 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.

  • lineplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Line instance or dict with compatible properties

  • markerplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Marker instance or dict with compatible properties

  • 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 colorbar title.text, annotation text rangeselector, updatemenues and sliders label text all support meta. To access the trace meta values in an attribute in the same trace, simply use %{meta[i]} where i is the index or key of the meta item in question. To access trace meta in layout attributes, use %{data[n[.meta[i]} where i is the index or key of the meta and n 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 if autocontour is True or if contours.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 and zmax 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.

  • streamplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Stream instance or dict with compatible properties

  • textfont – 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 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 are arrayOk: true) are available. Finally, the template string has access to variables x, y, z and 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 in parcoords traces, as well as some editable: true modifications such as name and colorbar.title. Defaults to layout.uirevision. Note that other user-driven trace attribute changes are controlled by layout attributes: trace.visible is controlled by layout.legend.uirevision, selectedpoints is controlled by layout.selectionrevision, and colorbar.(x|y) (accessible with config: {editable: true}) is controlled by layout.editrevision. Trace changes are tracked by uid, which only falls back on trace index if no uid is provided. So if your app can add/remove traces before the end of the data array, such that the same trace has a different index, you can still preserve user-driven changes if you give each trace a uid 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 to layout.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 same xbingroup value can be used to set (1D) histogram bingroup

  • xbinsplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.XBins instance or dict with compatible properties

  • 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 using xaxis.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 to layout.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 same ybingroup value can be used to set (1D) histogram bingroup

  • ybinsplotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.YBins instance or dict with compatible properties

  • 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 using yaxis.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 in zmin and zmax Defaults to false when zmin and zmax 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/or zmax to be equidistant to this point. Value should have the same units as in z. Has no effect when zauto is false.

  • 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.

Returns

Return type

Histogram2dContour

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.ColorBar(arg=None, bgcolor=None, bordercolor=None, borderwidth=None, dtick=None, exponentformat=None, labelalias=None, len=None, lenmode=None, minexponent=None, nticks=None, orientation=None, outlinecolor=None, outlinewidth=None, separatethousands=None, showexponent=None, showticklabels=None, showtickprefix=None, showticksuffix=None, thickness=None, thicknessmode=None, tick0=None, tickangle=None, tickcolor=None, tickfont=None, tickformat=None, tickformatstops=None, tickformatstopdefaults=None, ticklabeloverflow=None, ticklabelposition=None, ticklabelstep=None, ticklen=None, tickmode=None, tickprefix=None, ticks=None, ticksuffix=None, ticktext=None, ticktextsrc=None, tickvals=None, tickvalssrc=None, tickwidth=None, title=None, titlefont=None, titleside=None, x=None, xanchor=None, xpad=None, xref=None, y=None, yanchor=None, ypad=None, yref=None, **kwargs)
property bgcolor

Sets the color of padded area.

The ‘bgcolor’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

Returns

Return type

str

property bordercolor

Sets the axis line color.

The ‘bordercolor’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

Returns

Return type

str

property borderwidth

Sets the width (in px) or the border enclosing this color bar.

The ‘borderwidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property dtick

Sets the step in-between ticks on this axis. Use with tick0. Must be a positive number, or special strings available to “log” and “date” axes. If the axis type is “log”, then ticks are set every 10^(n*dtick) where n is the tick number. For example, to set a tick mark at 1, 10, 100, 1000, … set dtick to 1. To set tick marks at 1, 100, 10000, … set dtick to 2. To set tick marks at 1, 5, 25, 125, 625, 3125, … set dtick to log_10(5), or 0.69897000433. “log” has several special values; “L<f>”, where f is a positive number, gives ticks linearly spaced in value (but not position). For example tick0 = 0.1, dtick = “L0.5” will put ticks at 0.1, 0.6, 1.1, 1.6 etc. To show powers of 10 plus small digits between, use “D1” (all digits) or “D2” (only 2 and 5). tick0 is ignored for “D1” and “D2”. If the axis type is “date”, then you must convert the time to milliseconds. For example, to set the interval between ticks to one day, set dtick to 86400000.0. “date” also has special values “M<n>” gives ticks spaced by a number of months. n must be a positive integer. To set ticks on the 15th of every third month, set tick0 to “2000-01-15” and dtick to “M3”. To set ticks every 4 years, set dtick to “M48”

The ‘dtick’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

property exponentformat

Determines a formatting rule for the tick exponents. For example, consider the number 1,000,000,000. If “none”, it appears as 1,000,000,000. If “e”, 1e+9. If “E”, 1E+9. If “power”, 1x10^9 (with 9 in a super script). If “SI”, 1G. If “B”, 1B.

The ‘exponentformat’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘none’, ‘e’, ‘E’, ‘power’, ‘SI’, ‘B’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property labelalias

Replacement text for specific tick or hover labels. For example using {US: ‘USA’, CA: ‘Canada’} changes US to USA and CA to Canada. The labels we would have shown must match the keys exactly, after adding any tickprefix or ticksuffix. For negative numbers the minus sign symbol used (U+2212) is wider than the regular ascii dash. That means you need to use −1 instead of -1. labelalias can be used with any axis type, and both keys (if needed) and values (if desired) can include html- like tags or MathJax.

The ‘labelalias’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

property len

Sets the length of the color bar This measure excludes the padding of both ends. That is, the color bar length is this length minus the padding on both ends.

The ‘len’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property lenmode

Determines whether this color bar’s length (i.e. the measure in the color variation direction) is set in units of plot “fraction” or in *pixels. Use len to set the value.

The ‘lenmode’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘fraction’, ‘pixels’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property minexponent

Hide SI prefix for 10^n if |n| is below this number. This only has an effect when tickformat is “SI” or “B”.

The ‘minexponent’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property nticks

Specifies the maximum number of ticks for the particular axis. The actual number of ticks will be chosen automatically to be less than or equal to nticks. Has an effect only if tickmode is set to “auto”.

The ‘nticks’ property is a integer and may be specified as:
  • An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [0, 9223372036854775807]

Returns

Return type

int

property orientation

Sets the orientation of the colorbar.

The ‘orientation’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘h’, ‘v’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property outlinecolor

Sets the axis line color.

The ‘outlinecolor’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

Returns

Return type

str

property outlinewidth

Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.

The ‘outlinewidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property separatethousands

If “true”, even 4-digit integers are separated

The ‘separatethousands’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)

Returns

Return type

bool

property showexponent

If “all”, all exponents are shown besides their significands. If “first”, only the exponent of the first tick is shown. If “last”, only the exponent of the last tick is shown. If “none”, no exponents appear.

The ‘showexponent’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property showticklabels

Determines whether or not the tick labels are drawn.

The ‘showticklabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)

Returns

Return type

bool

property showtickprefix

If “all”, all tick labels are displayed with a prefix. If “first”, only the first tick is displayed with a prefix. If “last”, only the last tick is displayed with a suffix. If “none”, tick prefixes are hidden.

The ‘showtickprefix’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property showticksuffix

Same as showtickprefix but for tick suffixes.

The ‘showticksuffix’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property thickness

Sets the thickness of the color bar This measure excludes the size of the padding, ticks and labels.

The ‘thickness’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property thicknessmode

Determines whether this color bar’s thickness (i.e. the measure in the constant color direction) is set in units of plot “fraction” or in “pixels”. Use thickness to set the value.

The ‘thicknessmode’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘fraction’, ‘pixels’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property tick0

Sets the placement of the first tick on this axis. Use with dtick. If the axis type is “log”, then you must take the log of your starting tick (e.g. to set the starting tick to 100, set the tick0 to 2) except when dtick`=*L<f>* (see `dtick for more info). If the axis type is “date”, it should be a date string, like date data. If the axis type is “category”, it should be a number, using the scale where each category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it appears.

The ‘tick0’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

property tickangle

Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the horizontal. For example, a tickangle of -90 draws the tick labels vertically.

The ‘tickangle’ property is a angle (in degrees) that may be specified as a number between -180 and 180. Numeric values outside this range are converted to the equivalent value (e.g. 270 is converted to -90).

Returns

Return type

int|float

property tickcolor

Sets the tick color.

The ‘tickcolor’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

Returns

Return type

str

property tickfont

Sets the color bar’s tick label font

The ‘tickfont’ property is an instance of Tickfont that may be specified as:

  • An instance of plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.Tickfont

  • A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickfont constructor

    Supported dict properties:

    color

    family

    HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.

    lineposition

    Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.

    shadow

    Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.

    size

    style

    Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.

    textcase

    Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.

    variant

    Sets the variant of the font.

    weight

    Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.

Returns

Return type

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.Tickfont

property tickformat

Sets the tick label 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. 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”

The ‘tickformat’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A string

  • A number that will be converted to a string

Returns

Return type

str

property tickformatstopdefaults

When used in a template (as layout.template.data.histogram2dcon tour.colorbar.tickformatstopdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of histogram2dcontour.colorbar.tickformatstops

The ‘tickformatstopdefaults’ property is an instance of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:

Returns

Return type

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.Tickformatstop

property tickformatstops

The ‘tickformatstops’ property is a tuple of instances of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:

  • A list or tuple of instances of plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.Tickformatstop

  • A list or tuple of dicts of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor

    Supported dict properties:

    dtickrange

    range [min, max], where “min”, “max” - dtick values which describe some zoom level, it is possible to omit “min” or “max” value by passing “null”

    enabled

    Determines whether or not this stop is used. If false, this stop is ignored even within its dtickrange.

    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 this name alongside your modifications (including visible: false or enabled: false to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.

    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 its name, alongside your modifications (including visible: false or enabled: false to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it with visible: true.

    value

    string - dtickformat for described zoom level, the same as “tickformat”

Returns

Return type

tuple[plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.Tickformatstop]

property ticklabeloverflow

Determines how we handle tick labels that would overflow either the graph div or the domain of the axis. The default value for inside tick labels is hide past domain. In other cases the default is hide past div.

The ‘ticklabeloverflow’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘allow’, ‘hide past div’, ‘hide past domain’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property ticklabelposition

Determines where tick labels are drawn relative to the ticks. Left and right options are used when orientation is “h”, top and bottom when orientation is “v”.

The ‘ticklabelposition’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘outside’, ‘inside’, ‘outside top’, ‘inside top’, ‘outside left’, ‘inside left’, ‘outside right’, ‘inside right’, ‘outside bottom’, ‘inside bottom’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property ticklabelstep

Sets the spacing between tick labels as compared to the spacing between ticks. A value of 1 (default) means each tick gets a label. A value of 2 means shows every 2nd label. A larger value n means only every nth tick is labeled. tick0 determines which labels are shown. Not implemented for axes with type “log” or “multicategory”, or when tickmode is “array”.

The ‘ticklabelstep’ property is a integer and may be specified as:
  • An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 9223372036854775807]

Returns

Return type

int

property ticklen

Sets the tick length (in px).

The ‘ticklen’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property tickmode

Sets the tick mode for this axis. If “auto”, the number of ticks is set via nticks. If “linear”, the placement of the ticks is determined by a starting position tick0 and a tick step dtick (“linear” is the default value if tick0 and dtick are provided). If “array”, the placement of the ticks is set via tickvals and the tick text is ticktext. (“array” is the default value if tickvals is provided).

The ‘tickmode’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘auto’, ‘linear’, ‘array’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property tickprefix

Sets a tick label prefix.

The ‘tickprefix’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A string

  • A number that will be converted to a string

Returns

Return type

str

property ticks

Determines whether ticks are drawn or not. If “”, this axis’ ticks are not drawn. If “outside” (“inside”), this axis’ are drawn outside (inside) the axis lines.

The ‘ticks’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘outside’, ‘inside’, ‘’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property ticksuffix

Sets a tick label suffix.

The ‘ticksuffix’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A string

  • A number that will be converted to a string

Returns

Return type

str

property ticktext

Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via tickvals. Only has an effect if tickmode is set to “array”. Used with tickvals.

The ‘ticktext’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series

Returns

Return type

numpy.ndarray

property ticktextsrc

Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for ticktext.

The ‘ticktextsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object

Returns

Return type

str

property tickvals

Sets the values at which ticks on this axis appear. Only has an effect if tickmode is set to “array”. Used with ticktext.

The ‘tickvals’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series

Returns

Return type

numpy.ndarray

property tickvalssrc

Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for tickvals.

The ‘tickvalssrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object

Returns

Return type

str

property tickwidth

Sets the tick width (in px).

The ‘tickwidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property title

The ‘title’ property is an instance of Title that may be specified as:

  • An instance of plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.Title

  • A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Title constructor

    Supported dict properties:

    font

    Sets this color bar’s title font. Note that the title’s font used to be set by the now deprecated titlefont attribute.

    side

    Determines the location of color bar’s title with respect to the color bar. Defaults to “top” when orientation if “v” and defaults to “right” when orientation if “h”. Note that the title’s location used to be set by the now deprecated titleside attribute.

    text

    Sets the title of the color bar. Note that before the existence of title.text, the title’s contents used to be defined as the title attribute itself. This behavior has been deprecated.

Returns

Return type

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.Title

property titlefont

Please use histogram2dcontour.colorbar.title.font instead. Sets this color bar’s title font. Note that the title’s font used to be set by the now deprecated titlefont attribute.

The ‘font’ property is an instance of Font that may be specified as:

  • An instance of plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.colorbar.title.Font

  • A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Font constructor

    Supported dict properties:

    color

    family

    HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.

    lineposition

    Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.

    shadow

    Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.

    size

    style

    Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.

    textcase

    Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.

    variant

    Sets the variant of the font.

    weight

    Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.

Type

Deprecated

property titleside

Please use histogram2dcontour.colorbar.title.side instead. Determines the location of color bar’s title with respect to the color bar. Defaults to “top” when orientation if “v” and defaults to “right” when orientation if “h”. Note that the title’s location used to be set by the now deprecated titleside attribute.

The ‘side’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘right’, ‘top’, ‘bottom’]

Type

Deprecated

property x

Sets the x position with respect to xref of the color bar (in plot fraction). When xref is “paper”, defaults to 1.02 when orientation is “v” and 0.5 when orientation is “h”. When xref is “container”, defaults to 1 when orientation is “v” and 0.5 when orientation is “h”. Must be between 0 and 1 if xref is “container” and between “-2” and 3 if xref is “paper”.

The ‘x’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float

Returns

Return type

int|float

property xanchor

Sets this color bar’s horizontal position anchor. This anchor binds the x position to the “left”, “center” or “right” of the color bar. Defaults to “left” when orientation is “v” and “center” when orientation is “h”.

The ‘xanchor’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘left’, ‘center’, ‘right’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property xpad

Sets the amount of padding (in px) along the x direction.

The ‘xpad’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property xref

Sets the container x refers to. “container” spans the entire width of the plot. “paper” refers to the width of the plotting area only.

The ‘xref’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘container’, ‘paper’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property y

Sets the y position with respect to yref of the color bar (in plot fraction). When yref is “paper”, defaults to 0.5 when orientation is “v” and 1.02 when orientation is “h”. When yref is “container”, defaults to 0.5 when orientation is “v” and 1 when orientation is “h”. Must be between 0 and 1 if yref is “container” and between “-2” and 3 if yref is “paper”.

The ‘y’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float

Returns

Return type

int|float

property yanchor

Sets this color bar’s vertical position anchor This anchor binds the y position to the “top”, “middle” or “bottom” of the color bar. Defaults to “middle” when orientation is “v” and “bottom” when orientation is “h”.

The ‘yanchor’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘top’, ‘middle’, ‘bottom’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property ypad

Sets the amount of padding (in px) along the y direction.

The ‘ypad’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property yref

Sets the container y refers to. “container” spans the entire height of the plot. “paper” refers to the height of the plotting area only.

The ‘yref’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘container’, ‘paper’]

Returns

Return type

Any

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Contours(arg=None, coloring=None, end=None, labelfont=None, labelformat=None, operation=None, showlabels=None, showlines=None, size=None, start=None, type=None, value=None, **kwargs)
property coloring

Determines the coloring method showing the contour values. If “fill”, coloring is done evenly between each contour level If “heatmap”, a heatmap gradient coloring is applied between each contour level. If “lines”, coloring is done on the contour lines. If “none”, no coloring is applied on this trace.

The ‘coloring’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘fill’, ‘heatmap’, ‘lines’, ‘none’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property end

Sets the end contour level value. Must be more than contours.start

The ‘end’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float

Returns

Return type

int|float

property labelfont

Sets the font used for labeling the contour levels. The default color comes from the lines, if shown. The default family and size come from layout.font.

The ‘labelfont’ property is an instance of Labelfont that may be specified as:

  • An instance of plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.contours.Labelfont

  • A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Labelfont constructor

    Supported dict properties:

    color

    family

    HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.

    lineposition

    Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.

    shadow

    Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.

    size

    style

    Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.

    textcase

    Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.

    variant

    Sets the variant of the font.

    weight

    Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.

Returns

Return type

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.contours.Labelfont

property labelformat

Sets the contour label 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.

The ‘labelformat’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A string

  • A number that will be converted to a string

Returns

Return type

str

property operation

Sets the constraint operation. “=” keeps regions equal to value “<” and “<=” keep regions less than value “>” and “>=” keep regions greater than value “[]”, “()”, “[)”, and “(]” keep regions inside value[0] to value[1] “][“, “)(“, “](“, “)[” keep regions outside value[0] to value[1]` Open vs. closed intervals make no difference to constraint display, but all versions are allowed for consistency with filter transforms.

The ‘operation’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘=’, ‘<’, ‘>=’, ‘>’, ‘<=’, ‘[]’, ‘()’, ‘[)’, ‘(]’, ‘][‘, ‘)(‘, ‘](‘, ‘)[‘]

Returns

Return type

Any

property showlabels

Determines whether to label the contour lines with their values.

The ‘showlabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)

Returns

Return type

bool

property showlines

Determines whether or not the contour lines are drawn. Has an effect only if contours.coloring is set to “fill”.

The ‘showlines’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)

Returns

Return type

bool

property size

Sets the step between each contour level. Must be positive.

The ‘size’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property start

Sets the starting contour level value. Must be less than contours.end

The ‘start’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float

Returns

Return type

int|float

property type

If levels, the data is represented as a contour plot with multiple levels displayed. If constraint, the data is represented as constraints with the invalid region shaded as specified by the operation and value parameters.

The ‘type’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘levels’, ‘constraint’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property value

Sets the value or values of the constraint boundary. When operation is set to one of the comparison values (=,<,>=,>,<=) “value” is expected to be a number. When operation is set to one of the interval values ([],(),[),(],][,)(,](,)[) “value” is expected to be an array of two numbers where the first is the lower bound and the second is the upper bound.

The ‘value’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Hoverlabel(arg=None, align=None, alignsrc=None, bgcolor=None, bgcolorsrc=None, bordercolor=None, bordercolorsrc=None, font=None, namelength=None, namelengthsrc=None, **kwargs)
property align

Sets the horizontal alignment of the text content within hover label box. Has an effect only if the hover label text spans more two or more lines

The ‘align’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘left’, ‘right’, ‘auto’]

  • A tuple, list, or one-dimensional numpy array of the above

Returns

Return type

Any|numpy.ndarray

property alignsrc

Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for align.

The ‘alignsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object

Returns

Return type

str

property bgcolor

Sets the background color of the hover labels for this trace

The ‘bgcolor’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

  • A list or array of any of the above

Returns

Return type

str|numpy.ndarray

property bgcolorsrc

Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for bgcolor.

The ‘bgcolorsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object

Returns

Return type

str

property bordercolor

Sets the border color of the hover labels for this trace.

The ‘bordercolor’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

  • A list or array of any of the above

Returns

Return type

str|numpy.ndarray

property bordercolorsrc

Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for bordercolor.

The ‘bordercolorsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object

Returns

Return type

str

property font

Sets the font used in hover labels.

The ‘font’ property is an instance of Font that may be specified as:

  • An instance of plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.hoverlabel.Font

  • A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Font constructor

    Supported dict properties:

    color

    colorsrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for color.

    family

    HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.

    familysrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for family.

    lineposition

    Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.

    linepositionsrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for lineposition.

    shadow

    Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.

    shadowsrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for shadow.

    size

    sizesrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for size.

    style

    Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.

    stylesrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for style.

    textcase

    Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.

    textcasesrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for textcase.

    variant

    Sets the variant of the font.

    variantsrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for variant.

    weight

    Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.

    weightsrc

    Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for weight.

Returns

Return type

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.hoverlabel.Font

property namelength

Sets the default length (in number of characters) of the trace name in the hover labels for all traces. -1 shows the whole name regardless of length. 0-3 shows the first 0-3 characters, and an integer >3 will show the whole name if it is less than that many characters, but if it is longer, will truncate to namelength - 3 characters and add an ellipsis.

The ‘namelength’ property is a integer and may be specified as:
  • An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [-1, 9223372036854775807]

  • A tuple, list, or one-dimensional numpy array of the above

Returns

Return type

int|numpy.ndarray

property namelengthsrc

Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for namelength.

The ‘namelengthsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object

Returns

Return type

str

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Legendgrouptitle(arg=None, font=None, text=None, **kwargs)
property font

Sets this legend group’s title font.

The ‘font’ property is an instance of Font that may be specified as:

  • An instance of plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.legendgrouptitle.Font

  • A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Font constructor

    Supported dict properties:

    color

    family

    HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.

    lineposition

    Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.

    shadow

    Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.

    size

    style

    Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.

    textcase

    Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.

    variant

    Sets the variant of the font.

    weight

    Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.

Returns

Return type

plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.legendgrouptitle.Font

property text

Sets the title of the legend group.

The ‘text’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A string

  • A number that will be converted to a string

Returns

Return type

str

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Line(arg=None, color=None, dash=None, smoothing=None, width=None, **kwargs)
property color

Sets the color of the contour level. Has no effect if contours.coloring is set to “lines”.

The ‘color’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

Returns

Return type

str

property dash

Sets the dash style of lines. Set to a dash type string (“solid”, “dot”, “dash”, “longdash”, “dashdot”, or “longdashdot”) or a dash length list in px (eg “5px,10px,2px,2px”).

The ‘dash’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following dash styles:

    [‘solid’, ‘dot’, ‘dash’, ‘longdash’, ‘dashdot’, ‘longdashdot’]

  • A string containing a dash length list in pixels or percentages

    (e.g. ‘5px 10px 2px 2px’, ‘5, 10, 2, 2’, ‘10% 20% 40%’, etc.)

Returns

Return type

str

property smoothing

Sets the amount of smoothing for the contour lines, where 0 corresponds to no smoothing.

The ‘smoothing’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, 1.3]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property width

Sets the contour line width in (in px)

The ‘width’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Marker(arg=None, color=None, colorsrc=None, **kwargs)
property color

Sets the aggregation data.

The ‘color’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series

Returns

Return type

numpy.ndarray

property colorsrc

Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for color.

The ‘colorsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object

Returns

Return type

str

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Stream(arg=None, maxpoints=None, token=None, **kwargs)
property maxpoints

Sets the maximum number of points to keep on the plots from an incoming stream. If maxpoints is set to 50, only the newest 50 points will be displayed on the plot.

The ‘maxpoints’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [0, 10000]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property token

The stream id number links a data trace on a plot with a stream. See https://chart-studio.plotly.com/settings for more details.

The ‘token’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A non-empty string

Returns

Return type

str

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.Textfont(arg=None, color=None, family=None, lineposition=None, shadow=None, size=None, style=None, textcase=None, variant=None, weight=None, **kwargs)
property color
The ‘color’ property is a color and may be specified as:
  • A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)

  • An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)

  • An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)

  • An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)

  • A named CSS color:

    aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen

Returns

Return type

str

property family

HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart- studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.

The ‘family’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A non-empty string

Returns

Return type

str

property lineposition

Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.

The ‘lineposition’ property is a flaglist and may be specified as a string containing:

  • Any combination of [‘under’, ‘over’, ‘through’] joined with ‘+’ characters (e.g. ‘under+over’) OR exactly one of [‘none’] (e.g. ‘none’)

Returns

Return type

Any

property shadow

Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.

The ‘shadow’ property is a string and must be specified as:
  • A string

  • A number that will be converted to a string

Returns

Return type

str

property size
The ‘size’ property is a number and may be specified as:
  • An int or float in the interval [1, inf]

Returns

Return type

int|float

property style

Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.

The ‘style’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘normal’, ‘italic’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property textcase

Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all-lowercase, or with each word capitalized.

The ‘textcase’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘normal’, ‘word caps’, ‘upper’, ‘lower’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property variant

Sets the variant of the font.

The ‘variant’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
  • One of the following enumeration values:

    [‘normal’, ‘small-caps’, ‘all-small-caps’, ‘all-petite-caps’, ‘petite-caps’, ‘unicase’]

Returns

Return type

Any

property weight

Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.

The ‘weight’ property is a integer and may be specified as:
  • An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 1000] OR exactly one of [‘normal’, ‘bold’] (e.g. ‘bold’)

Returns

Return type

int

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.XBins(arg=None, end=None, size=None, start=None, **kwargs)
property end

Sets the end value for the x axis bins. The last bin may not end exactly at this value, we increment the bin edge by size from start until we reach or exceed end. Defaults to the maximum data value. Like start, for dates use a date string, and for category data end is based on the category serial numbers.

The ‘end’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

property size

If nbinsx is 0 or omitted, we choose a nice round bin size such that the number of bins is about the same as the typical number of samples in each bin. If nbinsx is provided, we choose a nice round bin size giving no more than that many bins. For date data, use milliseconds or “M<n>” for months, as in axis.dtick. For category data, the number of categories to bin together (always defaults to 1).

The ‘size’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

Type

Sets the size of each x axis bin. Default behavior

property start

Sets the starting value for the x axis bins. Defaults to the minimum data value, shifted down if necessary to make nice round values and to remove ambiguous bin edges. For example, if most of the data is integers we shift the bin edges 0.5 down, so a size of 5 would have a default start of -0.5, so it is clear that 0-4 are in the first bin, 5-9 in the second, but continuous data gets a start of 0 and bins [0,5), [5,10) etc. Dates behave similarly, and start should be a date string. For category data, start is based on the category serial numbers, and defaults to -0.5.

The ‘start’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

class plotly.graph_objects.histogram2dcontour.YBins(arg=None, end=None, size=None, start=None, **kwargs)
property end

Sets the end value for the y axis bins. The last bin may not end exactly at this value, we increment the bin edge by size from start until we reach or exceed end. Defaults to the maximum data value. Like start, for dates use a date string, and for category data end is based on the category serial numbers.

The ‘end’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

property size

If nbinsy is 0 or omitted, we choose a nice round bin size such that the number of bins is about the same as the typical number of samples in each bin. If nbinsy is provided, we choose a nice round bin size giving no more than that many bins. For date data, use milliseconds or “M<n>” for months, as in axis.dtick. For category data, the number of categories to bin together (always defaults to 1).

The ‘size’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any

Type

Sets the size of each y axis bin. Default behavior

property start

Sets the starting value for the y axis bins. Defaults to the minimum data value, shifted down if necessary to make nice round values and to remove ambiguous bin edges. For example, if most of the data is integers we shift the bin edges 0.5 down, so a size of 5 would have a default start of -0.5, so it is clear that 0-4 are in the first bin, 5-9 in the second, but continuous data gets a start of 0 and bins [0,5), [5,10) etc. Dates behave similarly, and start should be a date string. For category data, start is based on the category serial numbers, and defaults to -0.5.

The ‘start’ property accepts values of any type

Returns

Return type

Any