plotly.graph_objects
.Parcoords¶
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.
Parcoords
(arg=None, 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, **kwargs)¶ -
__init__
(arg=None, 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, **kwargs)¶ Construct a new Parcoords object
Parallel coordinates for multidimensional exploratory data analysis. The samples are specified in
dimensions
. The colors are set inline.color
.- Parameters
arg – dict of properties compatible with this constructor or an instance of
plotly.graph_objects.Parcoords
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).
- Returns
- Return type
-
plotly.graph_objects
.parcoords¶
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
Dimension
(arg=None, constraintrange=None, label=None, multiselect=None, name=None, range=None, templateitemname=None, tickformat=None, ticktext=None, ticktextsrc=None, tickvals=None, tickvalssrc=None, values=None, valuessrc=None, visible=None, **kwargs)¶ -
property
constraintrange
¶ - The domain range to which the filter on the dimension is
constrained. Must be an array of
[fromValue, toValue]
withfromValue <= toValue
, or ifmultiselect
is not disabled, you may give an array of arrays, where each inner array is[fromValue, toValue]
.The ‘constraintrange’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
The ‘constraintrange[0]’ property accepts values of any type
The ‘constraintrange[1]’ property accepts values of any type
a 2D list where:
The ‘constraintrange[i][0]’ property accepts values of any type
The ‘constraintrange[i][1]’ property accepts values of any type
list
-
property
label
¶ The shown name of the dimension.
- The ‘label’ property is a string and must be specified as:
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
multiselect
¶ Do we allow multiple selection ranges or just a single range?
The ‘multiselect’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
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.- The ‘name’ property is a string and must be specified as:
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
range
¶ - The domain range that represents the full, shown axis extent.
Defaults to the
values
extent. Must be an array of[fromValue, toValue]
with finite numbers as elements.The ‘range’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
- The ‘range[0]’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- The ‘range[1]’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
list
-
property
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
.- The ‘templateitemname’ property is a string and must be specified as:
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
-
property
ticktext
¶ Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via
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
-
property
tickvals
¶ Sets the values at which ticks on this axis appear.
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
-
property
values
¶ Dimension values.
values[n]
represents the value of then`th point in the dataset, therefore the `values
vector for all dimensions must be the same (longer vectors will be truncated). Each value must be a finite number.The ‘values’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
- Returns
- Return type
numpy.ndarray
-
property
valuessrc
¶ Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
values
.The ‘valuessrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
Domain
(arg=None, column=None, row=None, x=None, y=None, **kwargs)¶ -
property
column
¶ If there is a layout grid, use the domain for this column in the grid for this parcoords trace .
- The ‘column’ 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
-
property
row
¶ If there is a layout grid, use the domain for this row in the grid for this parcoords trace .
- The ‘row’ 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
-
property
x
¶ - Sets the horizontal domain of this parcoords trace (in plot
fraction).
The ‘x’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
- The ‘x[0]’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
- The ‘x[1]’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
list
-
property
y
¶ - Sets the vertical domain of this parcoords trace (in plot
fraction).
The ‘y’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
- The ‘y[0]’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
- The ‘y[1]’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
list
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
Labelfont
(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
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
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.parcoords.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
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
Line
(arg=None, autocolorscale=None, cauto=None, cmax=None, cmid=None, cmin=None, color=None, coloraxis=None, colorbar=None, colorscale=None, colorsrc=None, reversescale=None, showscale=None, **kwargs)¶ -
property
autocolorscale
¶ Determines whether the colorscale is a default palette (
autocolorscale: true
) or the palette determined byline.colorscale
. Has an effect only if inline.color
is set to a numerical array. 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.The ‘autocolorscale’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
cauto
¶ Determines whether or not the color domain is computed with respect to the input data (here in
line.color
) or the bounds set inline.cmin
andline.cmax
Has an effect only if inline.color
is set to a numerical array. Defaults tofalse
whenline.cmin
andline.cmax
are set by the user.The ‘cauto’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
cmax
¶ Sets the upper bound of the color domain. Has an effect only if in
line.color
is set to a numerical array. Value should have the same units as inline.color
and if set,line.cmin
must be set as well.- The ‘cmax’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
cmid
¶ Sets the mid-point of the color domain by scaling
line.cmin
and/orline.cmax
to be equidistant to this point. Has an effect only if inline.color
is set to a numerical array. Value should have the same units as inline.color
. Has no effect whenline.cauto
isfalse
.- The ‘cmid’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
cmin
¶ Sets the lower bound of the color domain. Has an effect only if in
line.color
is set to a numerical array. Value should have the same units as inline.color
and if set,line.cmax
must be set as well.- The ‘cmin’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
color
¶ Sets the line color. It accepts either a specific color or an array of numbers that are mapped to the colorscale relative to the max and min values of the array or relative to
line.cmin
andline.cmax
if set.- 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
A number that will be interpreted as a color according to parcoords.line.colorscale
A list or array of any of the above
- Returns
- Return type
str|numpy.ndarray
-
property
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.The ‘coloraxis’ property is an identifier of a particular subplot, of type ‘coloraxis’, that may be specified as the string ‘coloraxis’ optionally followed by an integer >= 1 (e.g. ‘coloraxis’, ‘coloraxis1’, ‘coloraxis2’, ‘coloraxis3’, etc.)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
colorbar
¶ The ‘colorbar’ property is an instance of ColorBar that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.line.ColorBar
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the ColorBar constructor
Supported dict properties:
- bgcolor
Sets the color of padded area.
- bordercolor
Sets the axis line color.
- borderwidth
Sets the width (in px) or the border enclosing this color bar.
- 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 axistype
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>”, wheref
is a positive number, gives ticks linearly spaced in value (but not position). For exampletick0
= 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 axistype
is “date”, then you must convert the time to milliseconds. For example, to set the interval between ticks to one day, setdtick
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, settick0
to “2000-01-15” anddtick
to “M3”. To set ticks every 4 years, setdtick
to “M48”- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.- minexponent
Hide SI prefix for 10^n if |n| is below this number. This only has an effect when
tickformat
is “SI” or “B”.- 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 iftickmode
is set to “auto”.- orientation
Sets the orientation of the colorbar.
- outlinecolor
Sets the axis line color.
- outlinewidth
Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.
- separatethousands
If “true”, even 4-digit integers are separated
- 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.
- showticklabels
Determines whether or not the tick labels are drawn.
- 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.
- showticksuffix
Same as
showtickprefix
but for tick suffixes.- thickness
Sets the thickness of the color bar This measure excludes the size of the padding, ticks and labels.
- 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.- tick0
Sets the placement of the first tick on this axis. Use with
dtick
. If the axistype
is “log”, then you must take the log of your starting tick (e.g. to set the starting tick to 100, set thetick0
to 2) except whendtick`=*L<f>* (see `dtick
for more info). If the axistype
is “date”, it should be a date string, like date data. If the axistype
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.- tickangle
Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the horizontal. For example, a
tickangle
of -90 draws the tick labels vertically.- tickcolor
Sets the tick color.
- tickfont
Sets the color bar’s tick label font
- tickformat
Sets the tick label formatting rule using d3 formatting mini-languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: h ttps://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”
- tickformatstops
A tuple of
plotly.graph_objects.parcoor ds.line.colorbar.Tickformatstop
instances or dicts with compatible properties- tickformatstopdefaults
When used in a template (as layout.template.dat a.parcoords.line.colorbar.tickformatstopdefault s), sets the default property values to use for elements of parcoords.line.colorbar.tickformatstops
- 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.
- ticklabelposition
Determines where tick labels are drawn relative to the ticks. Left and right options are used when
orientation
is “h”, top and bottom whenorientation
is “v”.- 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 withtype
“log” or “multicategory”, or whentickmode
is “array”.- ticklen
Sets the tick length (in px).
- 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 positiontick0
and a tick stepdtick
(“linear” is the default value iftick0
anddtick
are provided). If “array”, the placement of the ticks is set viatickvals
and the tick text isticktext
. (“array” is the default value iftickvals
is provided).- tickprefix
Sets a tick label prefix.
- 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.
- ticksuffix
Sets a tick label suffix.
- ticktext
Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via
tickvals
. Only has an effect iftickmode
is set to “array”. Used withtickvals
.- ticktextsrc
Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
ticktext
.- tickvals
Sets the values at which ticks on this axis appear. Only has an effect if
tickmode
is set to “array”. Used withticktext
.- tickvalssrc
Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
tickvals
.- tickwidth
Sets the tick width (in px).
- title
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.line.col orbar.Title
instance or dict with compatible properties- titlefont
Deprecated: Please use parcoords.line.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.- titleside
Deprecated: Please use parcoords.line.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” whenorientation
if “h”. Note that the title’s location used to be set by the now deprecatedtitleside
attribute.- x
Sets the x position with respect to
xref
of the color bar (in plot fraction). Whenxref
is “paper”, defaults to 1.02 whenorientation
is “v” and 0.5 whenorientation
is “h”. Whenxref
is “container”, defaults to 1 whenorientation
is “v” and 0.5 whenorientation
is “h”. Must be between 0 and 1 ifxref
is “container” and between “-2” and 3 ifxref
is “paper”.- 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” whenorientation
is “v” and “center” whenorientation
is “h”.- xpad
Sets the amount of padding (in px) along the x direction.
- xref
Sets the container
x
refers to. “container” spans the entirewidth
of the plot. “paper” refers to the width of the plotting area only.- y
Sets the y position with respect to
yref
of the color bar (in plot fraction). Whenyref
is “paper”, defaults to 0.5 whenorientation
is “v” and 1.02 whenorientation
is “h”. Whenyref
is “container”, defaults to 0.5 whenorientation
is “v” and 1 whenorientation
is “h”. Must be between 0 and 1 ifyref
is “container” and between “-2” and 3 ifyref
is “paper”.- 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” whenorientation
is “v” and “bottom” whenorientation
is “h”.- ypad
Sets the amount of padding (in px) along the y direction.
- yref
Sets the container
y
refers to. “container” spans the entireheight
of the plot. “paper” refers to the height of the plotting area only.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
colorscale
¶ Sets the colorscale. Has an effect only if in
line.color
is set to a numerical array. 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, useline.cmin
andline.cmax
. Alternatively,colorscale
may be a palette name string of the following list: Blackbody,Bluered, Blues,Cividis,Earth,Electric,Greens,Greys,Hot,Jet,Picnic,Portla nd,Rainbow,RdBu,Reds,Viridis,YlGnBu,YlOrRd.The ‘colorscale’ property is a colorscale and may be specified as:
A list of colors that will be spaced evenly to create the colorscale. Many predefined colorscale lists are included in the sequential, diverging, and cyclical modules in the plotly.colors package.
A list of 2-element lists where the first element is the normalized color level value (starting at 0 and ending at 1), and the second item is a valid color string. (e.g. [[0, ‘green’], [0.5, ‘red’], [1.0, ‘rgb(0, 0, 255)’]])
- One of the following named colorscales:
- [‘aggrnyl’, ‘agsunset’, ‘algae’, ‘amp’, ‘armyrose’, ‘balance’,
‘blackbody’, ‘bluered’, ‘blues’, ‘blugrn’, ‘bluyl’, ‘brbg’, ‘brwnyl’, ‘bugn’, ‘bupu’, ‘burg’, ‘burgyl’, ‘cividis’, ‘curl’, ‘darkmint’, ‘deep’, ‘delta’, ‘dense’, ‘earth’, ‘edge’, ‘electric’, ‘emrld’, ‘fall’, ‘geyser’, ‘gnbu’, ‘gray’, ‘greens’, ‘greys’, ‘haline’, ‘hot’, ‘hsv’, ‘ice’, ‘icefire’, ‘inferno’, ‘jet’, ‘magenta’, ‘magma’, ‘matter’, ‘mint’, ‘mrybm’, ‘mygbm’, ‘oranges’, ‘orrd’, ‘oryel’, ‘oxy’, ‘peach’, ‘phase’, ‘picnic’, ‘pinkyl’, ‘piyg’, ‘plasma’, ‘plotly3’, ‘portland’, ‘prgn’, ‘pubu’, ‘pubugn’, ‘puor’, ‘purd’, ‘purp’, ‘purples’, ‘purpor’, ‘rainbow’, ‘rdbu’, ‘rdgy’, ‘rdpu’, ‘rdylbu’, ‘rdylgn’, ‘redor’, ‘reds’, ‘solar’, ‘spectral’, ‘speed’, ‘sunset’, ‘sunsetdark’, ‘teal’, ‘tealgrn’, ‘tealrose’, ‘tempo’, ‘temps’, ‘thermal’, ‘tropic’, ‘turbid’, ‘turbo’, ‘twilight’, ‘viridis’, ‘ylgn’, ‘ylgnbu’, ‘ylorbr’, ‘ylorrd’].
Appending ‘_r’ to a named colorscale reverses it.
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
-
property
reversescale
¶ Reverses the color mapping if true. Has an effect only if in
line.color
is set to a numerical array. If true,line.cmin
will correspond to the last color in the array andline.cmax
will correspond to the first color.The ‘reversescale’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
Rangefont
(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
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
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
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
Tickfont
(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
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.
Unselected
(arg=None, line=None, **kwargs)¶ -
property
line
¶ The ‘line’ property is an instance of Line that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.parcoords.unselected.Line
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Line constructor
Supported dict properties:
- color
Sets the base color of unselected lines. in connection with
unselected.line.opacity
.- opacity
Sets the opacity of unselected lines. The default “auto” decreases the opacity smoothly as the number of lines increases. Use 1 to achieve exact
unselected.line.color
.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property