plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene package¶
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.
Annotation
(arg=None, align=None, arrowcolor=None, arrowhead=None, arrowside=None, arrowsize=None, arrowwidth=None, ax=None, ay=None, bgcolor=None, bordercolor=None, borderpad=None, borderwidth=None, captureevents=None, font=None, height=None, hoverlabel=None, hovertext=None, name=None, opacity=None, showarrow=None, standoff=None, startarrowhead=None, startarrowsize=None, startstandoff=None, templateitemname=None, text=None, textangle=None, valign=None, visible=None, width=None, x=None, xanchor=None, xshift=None, y=None, yanchor=None, yshift=None, z=None, **kwargs)¶ Bases:
plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
-
property
align
¶ Sets the horizontal alignment of the
text
within the box. Has an effect only iftext
spans two or more lines (i.e.text
contains one or more <br> HTML tags) or if an explicit width is set to override the text width.- The ‘align’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘left’, ‘center’, ‘right’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
arrowcolor
¶ Sets the color of the annotation arrow.
- The ‘arrowcolor’ 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
arrowhead
¶ Sets the end annotation arrow head style.
- The ‘arrowhead’ property is a integer and may be specified as:
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [0, 8]
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
arrowside
¶ Sets the annotation arrow head position.
The ‘arrowside’ property is a flaglist and may be specified as a string containing:
Any combination of [‘end’, ‘start’] joined with ‘+’ characters (e.g. ‘end+start’) OR exactly one of [‘none’] (e.g. ‘none’)
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
arrowsize
¶ Sets the size of the end annotation arrow head, relative to
arrowwidth
. A value of 1 (default) gives a head about 3x as wide as the line.- The ‘arrowsize’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0.3, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
arrowwidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of annotation arrow line.
- The ‘arrowwidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0.1, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
ax
¶ Sets the x component of the arrow tail about the arrow head (in pixels).
- The ‘ax’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
ay
¶ Sets the y component of the arrow tail about the arrow head (in pixels).
- The ‘ay’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
bgcolor
¶ Sets the background color of the annotation.
- 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
-
property
bordercolor
¶ Sets the color of the border enclosing the annotation
text
.- 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
-
property
borderpad
¶ Sets the padding (in px) between the
text
and the enclosing border.- The ‘borderpad’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
borderwidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the border enclosing the annotation
text
.- 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
captureevents
¶ Determines whether the annotation text box captures mouse move and click events, or allows those events to pass through to data points in the plot that may be behind the annotation. By default
captureevents
is False unlesshovertext
is provided. If you use the eventplotly_clickannotation
withouthovertext
you must explicitly enablecaptureevents
.The ‘captureevents’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
font
¶ Sets the annotation text font.
The ‘font’ property is an instance of Font that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.annotation.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
height
¶ Sets an explicit height for the text box. null (default) lets the text set the box height. Taller text will be clipped.
- The ‘height’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [1, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
hoverlabel
¶ The ‘hoverlabel’ property is an instance of Hoverlabel that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.annotation.Hoverlabel
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Hoverlabel constructor
Supported dict properties:
- bgcolor
Sets the background color of the hover label. By default uses the annotation’s
bgcolor
made opaque, or white if it was transparent.- bordercolor
Sets the border color of the hover label. By default uses either dark grey or white, for maximum contrast with
hoverlabel.bgcolor
.- font
Sets the hover label text font. By default uses the global hover font and size, with color from
hoverlabel.bordercolor
.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
hovertext
¶ Sets text to appear when hovering over this annotation. If omitted or blank, no hover label will appear.
- The ‘hovertext’ property is a string and must be specified as:
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
- 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
opacity
¶ Sets the opacity of the annotation (text + arrow).
- The ‘opacity’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
showarrow
¶ Determines whether or not the annotation is drawn with an arrow. If True,
text
is placed near the arrow’s tail. If False,text
lines up with thex
andy
provided.The ‘showarrow’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
standoff
¶ Sets a distance, in pixels, to move the end arrowhead away from the position it is pointing at, for example to point at the edge of a marker independent of zoom. Note that this shortens the arrow from the
ax
/ay
vector, in contrast toxshift
/yshift
which moves everything by this amount.- The ‘standoff’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
startarrowhead
¶ Sets the start annotation arrow head style.
- The ‘startarrowhead’ property is a integer and may be specified as:
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [0, 8]
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
startarrowsize
¶ Sets the size of the start annotation arrow head, relative to
arrowwidth
. A value of 1 (default) gives a head about 3x as wide as the line.- The ‘startarrowsize’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0.3, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
startstandoff
¶ Sets a distance, in pixels, to move the start arrowhead away from the position it is pointing at, for example to point at the edge of a marker independent of zoom. Note that this shortens the arrow from the
ax
/ay
vector, in contrast toxshift
/yshift
which moves everything by this amount.- The ‘startstandoff’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
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
text
¶ Sets the text associated with this annotation. Plotly uses a subset of HTML tags to do things like newline (<br>), bold (<b></b>), italics (<i></i>), hyperlinks (<a href=’…’></a>). Tags <em>, <sup>, <sub>, <s>, <u> <span> are also supported.
- 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
-
property
textangle
¶ Sets the angle at which the
text
is drawn with respect to the horizontal.The ‘textangle’ 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
valign
¶ Sets the vertical alignment of the
text
within the box. Has an effect only if an explicit height is set to override the text height.- The ‘valign’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘top’, ‘middle’, ‘bottom’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
visible
¶ Determines whether or not this annotation is visible.
The ‘visible’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
width
¶ Sets an explicit width for the text box. null (default) lets the text set the box width. Wider text will be clipped. There is no automatic wrapping; use <br> to start a new line.
- The ‘width’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [1, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
x
¶ Sets the annotation’s x position.
The ‘x’ property accepts values of any type
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
xanchor
¶ Sets the text box’s horizontal position anchor This anchor binds the
x
position to the “left”, “center” or “right” of the annotation. For example, ifx
is set to 1,xref
to “paper” andxanchor
to “right” then the right-most portion of the annotation lines up with the right-most edge of the plotting area. If “auto”, the anchor is equivalent to “center” for data-referenced annotations or if there is an arrow, whereas for paper-referenced with no arrow, the anchor picked corresponds to the closest side.- The ‘xanchor’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘auto’, ‘left’, ‘center’, ‘right’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
xshift
¶ Shifts the position of the whole annotation and arrow to the right (positive) or left (negative) by this many pixels.
- The ‘xshift’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
y
¶ Sets the annotation’s y position.
The ‘y’ property accepts values of any type
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
yanchor
¶ Sets the text box’s vertical position anchor This anchor binds the
y
position to the “top”, “middle” or “bottom” of the annotation. For example, ify
is set to 1,yref
to “paper” andyanchor
to “top” then the top-most portion of the annotation lines up with the top-most edge of the plotting area. If “auto”, the anchor is equivalent to “middle” for data- referenced annotations or if there is an arrow, whereas for paper-referenced with no arrow, the anchor picked corresponds to the closest side.- The ‘yanchor’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘auto’, ‘top’, ‘middle’, ‘bottom’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
yshift
¶ Shifts the position of the whole annotation and arrow up (positive) or down (negative) by this many pixels.
- The ‘yshift’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
z
¶ Sets the annotation’s z position.
The ‘z’ property accepts values of any type
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.
Aspectratio
(arg=None, x=None, y=None, z=None, **kwargs)¶ Bases:
plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
-
property
x
¶ - The ‘x’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
y
¶ - The ‘y’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
z
¶ - The ‘z’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.
Camera
(arg=None, center=None, eye=None, projection=None, up=None, **kwargs)¶ Bases:
plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
-
property
center
¶ Sets the (x,y,z) components of the ‘center’ camera vector This vector determines the translation (x,y,z) space about the center of this scene. By default, there is no such translation.
The ‘center’ property is an instance of Center that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.camera.Center
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Center constructor
Supported dict properties:
x
y
z
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
eye
¶ Sets the (x,y,z) components of the ‘eye’ camera vector. This vector determines the view point about the origin of this scene.
The ‘eye’ property is an instance of Eye that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.camera.Eye
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Eye constructor
Supported dict properties:
x
y
z
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
projection
¶ The ‘projection’ property is an instance of Projection that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.camera.Projection
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Projection constructor
Supported dict properties:
- type
Sets the projection type. The projection type could be either “perspective” or “orthographic”. The default is “perspective”.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
up
¶ Sets the (x,y,z) components of the ‘up’ camera vector. This vector determines the up direction of this scene with respect to the page. The default is {x: 0, y: 0, z: 1} which means that the z axis points up.
The ‘up’ property is an instance of Up that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.camera.Up
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Up constructor
Supported dict properties:
x
y
z
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.
Domain
(arg=None, column=None, row=None, x=None, y=None, **kwargs)¶ Bases:
plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
-
property
column
¶ If there is a layout grid, use the domain for this column in the grid for this scene subplot .
- 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 scene subplot .
- 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 scene subplot (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 scene subplot (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.layout.scene.
XAxis
(arg=None, autorange=None, autorangeoptions=None, autotypenumbers=None, backgroundcolor=None, calendar=None, categoryarray=None, categoryarraysrc=None, categoryorder=None, color=None, dtick=None, exponentformat=None, gridcolor=None, gridwidth=None, hoverformat=None, labelalias=None, linecolor=None, linewidth=None, maxallowed=None, minallowed=None, minexponent=None, mirror=None, nticks=None, range=None, rangemode=None, separatethousands=None, showaxeslabels=None, showbackground=None, showexponent=None, showgrid=None, showline=None, showspikes=None, showticklabels=None, showtickprefix=None, showticksuffix=None, spikecolor=None, spikesides=None, spikethickness=None, tick0=None, tickangle=None, tickcolor=None, tickfont=None, tickformat=None, tickformatstops=None, tickformatstopdefaults=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, type=None, visible=None, zeroline=None, zerolinecolor=None, zerolinewidth=None, **kwargs)¶ Bases:
plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
-
property
autorange
¶ Determines whether or not the range of this axis is computed in relation to the input data. See
rangemode
for more info. Ifrange
is provided and it has a value for both the lower and upper bound,autorange
is set to False. Using “min” applies autorange only to set the minimum. Using “max” applies autorange only to set the maximum. Using min reversed applies autorange only to set the minimum on a reversed axis. Using max reversed applies autorange only to set the maximum on a reversed axis. Using “reversed” applies autorange on both ends and reverses the axis direction.- The ‘autorange’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[True, False, ‘reversed’, ‘min reversed’, ‘max reversed’, ‘min’, ‘max’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
autorangeoptions
¶ The ‘autorangeoptions’ property is an instance of Autorangeoptions that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.xaxis.Autorangeoptions
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Autorangeoptions constructor
Supported dict properties:
- clipmax
Clip autorange maximum if it goes beyond this value. Has no effect when
autorangeoptions.maxallowed
is provided.- clipmin
Clip autorange minimum if it goes beyond this value. Has no effect when
autorangeoptions.minallowed
is provided.- include
Ensure this value is included in autorange.
- includesrc
Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
include
.- maxallowed
Use this value exactly as autorange maximum.
- minallowed
Use this value exactly as autorange minimum.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
autotypenumbers
¶ Using “strict” a numeric string in trace data is not converted to a number. Using convert types a numeric string in trace data may be treated as a number during automatic axis
type
detection. Defaults to layout.autotypenumbers.- The ‘autotypenumbers’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘convert types’, ‘strict’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
backgroundcolor
¶ Sets the background color of this axis’ wall.
- The ‘backgroundcolor’ 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
calendar
¶ Sets the calendar system to use for
range
andtick0
if this is a date axis. This does not set the calendar for interpreting data on this axis, that’s specified in the trace or via the globallayout.calendar
- The ‘calendar’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘chinese’, ‘coptic’, ‘discworld’, ‘ethiopian’, ‘gregorian’, ‘hebrew’, ‘islamic’, ‘jalali’, ‘julian’, ‘mayan’, ‘nanakshahi’, ‘nepali’, ‘persian’, ‘taiwan’, ‘thai’, ‘ummalqura’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
categoryarray
¶ Sets the order in which categories on this axis appear. Only has an effect if
categoryorder
is set to “array”. Used withcategoryorder
.The ‘categoryarray’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
- Returns
- Return type
numpy.ndarray
-
property
categoryarraysrc
¶ Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
categoryarray
.The ‘categoryarraysrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
categoryorder
¶ Specifies the ordering logic for the case of categorical variables. By default, plotly uses “trace”, which specifies the order that is present in the data supplied. Set
categoryorder
to category ascending or category descending if order should be determined by the alphanumerical order of the category names. Setcategoryorder
to “array” to derive the ordering from the attributecategoryarray
. If a category is not found in thecategoryarray
array, the sorting behavior for that attribute will be identical to the “trace” mode. The unspecified categories will follow the categories incategoryarray
. Setcategoryorder
to total ascending or total descending if order should be determined by the numerical order of the values. Similarly, the order can be determined by the min, max, sum, mean, geometric mean or median of all the values.- The ‘categoryorder’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘trace’, ‘category ascending’, ‘category descending’, ‘array’, ‘total ascending’, ‘total descending’, ‘min ascending’, ‘min descending’, ‘max ascending’, ‘max descending’, ‘sum ascending’, ‘sum descending’, ‘mean ascending’, ‘mean descending’, ‘geometric mean ascending’, ‘geometric mean descending’, ‘median ascending’, ‘median descending’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
color
¶ Sets default for all colors associated with this axis all at once: line, font, tick, and grid colors. Grid color is lightened by blending this with the plot background Individual pieces can override this.
- 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
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”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
gridcolor
¶ Sets the color of the grid lines.
- The ‘gridcolor’ 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
gridwidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the grid lines.
- The ‘gridwidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
hoverformat
¶ Sets the hover text 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 ‘hoverformat’ property is a string and must be specified as:
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
linecolor
¶ Sets the axis line color.
- The ‘linecolor’ 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
linewidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.
- The ‘linewidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
maxallowed
¶ Determines the maximum range of this axis.
The ‘maxallowed’ property accepts values of any type
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
minallowed
¶ Determines the minimum range of this axis.
The ‘minallowed’ property accepts values of any type
- 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
mirror
¶ Determines if the axis lines or/and ticks are mirrored to the opposite side of the plotting area. If True, the axis lines are mirrored. If “ticks”, the axis lines and ticks are mirrored. If False, mirroring is disable. If “all”, axis lines are mirrored on all shared-axes subplots. If “allticks”, axis lines and ticks are mirrored on all shared-axes subplots.
- The ‘mirror’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[True, ‘ticks’, False, ‘all’, ‘allticks’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
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 iftickmode
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
-
property
range
¶ - Sets the range of this axis. If the axis
type
is “log”, then you must take the log of your desired range (e.g. to set the range from 1 to 100, set the range from 0 to 2). If the axis
type
is “date”, it should be date strings, like date data, though Date objects and unix milliseconds will be accepted and converted to strings. If the axistype
is “category”, it should be numbers, using the scale where each category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it appears. Leaving either or both elementsnull
impacts the defaultautorange
.The ‘range’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
The ‘range[0]’ property accepts values of any type
The ‘range[1]’ property accepts values of any type
list
- Sets the range of this axis. If the axis
-
property
rangemode
¶ If “normal”, the range is computed in relation to the extrema of the input data. If *tozero*`, the range extends to 0, regardless of the input data If “nonnegative”, the range is non-negative, regardless of the input data. Applies only to linear axes.
- The ‘rangemode’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘normal’, ‘tozero’, ‘nonnegative’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
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
-
property
showaxeslabels
¶ Sets whether or not this axis is labeled
The ‘showaxeslabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showbackground
¶ Sets whether or not this axis’ wall has a background color.
The ‘showbackground’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
showgrid
¶ Determines whether or not grid lines are drawn. If True, the grid lines are drawn at every tick mark.
The ‘showgrid’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showline
¶ Determines whether or not a line bounding this axis is drawn.
The ‘showline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showspikes
¶ Sets whether or not spikes starting from data points to this axis’ wall are shown on hover.
The ‘showspikes’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
-
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
spikecolor
¶ Sets the color of the spikes.
- The ‘spikecolor’ 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
spikesides
¶ Sets whether or not spikes extending from the projection data points to this axis’ wall boundaries are shown on hover.
The ‘spikesides’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
spikethickness
¶ Sets the thickness (in px) of the spikes.
- The ‘spikethickness’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
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.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
-
property
tickfont
¶ Sets the tick font.
The ‘tickfont’ property is an instance of Tickfont that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.xaxis.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
-
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
tickformatstopdefaults
¶ When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.scene.xaxis.tickformatstopdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.scene.xaxis.tickformatstops
The ‘tickformatstopdefaults’ property is an instance of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.xaxis.Tickformatstop
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
- Returns
- Return type
-
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.layout.scene.xaxis.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 itsdtickrange
.- 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.- 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
.- value
string - dtickformat for described zoom level, the same as “tickformat”
- Returns
- Return type
tuple[plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.xaxis.Tickformatstop]
-
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 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).- 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
-
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
-
property
ticktext
¶ Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via
tickvals
. Only has an effect iftickmode
is set to “array”. Used withtickvals
.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. Only has an effect if
tickmode
is set to “array”. Used withticktext
.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
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.layout.scene.xaxis.Title
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Title constructor
Supported dict properties:
- font
Sets this axis’ title font. Note that the title’s font used to be customized by the now deprecated
titlefont
attribute.- text
Sets the title of this axis. Note that before the existence of
title.text
, the title’s contents used to be defined as thetitle
attribute itself. This behavior has been deprecated.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
titlefont
¶ Please use layout.scene.xaxis.title.font instead. Sets this axis’ title font. Note that the title’s font used to be customized 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.layout.scene.xaxis.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
type
¶ Sets the axis type. By default, plotly attempts to determined the axis type by looking into the data of the traces that referenced the axis in question.
- The ‘type’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘-‘, ‘linear’, ‘log’, ‘date’, ‘category’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
visible
¶ A single toggle to hide the axis while preserving interaction like dragging. Default is true when a cheater plot is present on the axis, otherwise false
The ‘visible’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
zeroline
¶ Determines whether or not a line is drawn at along the 0 value of this axis. If True, the zero line is drawn on top of the grid lines.
The ‘zeroline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
zerolinecolor
¶ Sets the line color of the zero line.
- The ‘zerolinecolor’ 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
zerolinewidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the zero line.
- The ‘zerolinewidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.
YAxis
(arg=None, autorange=None, autorangeoptions=None, autotypenumbers=None, backgroundcolor=None, calendar=None, categoryarray=None, categoryarraysrc=None, categoryorder=None, color=None, dtick=None, exponentformat=None, gridcolor=None, gridwidth=None, hoverformat=None, labelalias=None, linecolor=None, linewidth=None, maxallowed=None, minallowed=None, minexponent=None, mirror=None, nticks=None, range=None, rangemode=None, separatethousands=None, showaxeslabels=None, showbackground=None, showexponent=None, showgrid=None, showline=None, showspikes=None, showticklabels=None, showtickprefix=None, showticksuffix=None, spikecolor=None, spikesides=None, spikethickness=None, tick0=None, tickangle=None, tickcolor=None, tickfont=None, tickformat=None, tickformatstops=None, tickformatstopdefaults=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, type=None, visible=None, zeroline=None, zerolinecolor=None, zerolinewidth=None, **kwargs)¶ Bases:
plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
-
property
autorange
¶ Determines whether or not the range of this axis is computed in relation to the input data. See
rangemode
for more info. Ifrange
is provided and it has a value for both the lower and upper bound,autorange
is set to False. Using “min” applies autorange only to set the minimum. Using “max” applies autorange only to set the maximum. Using min reversed applies autorange only to set the minimum on a reversed axis. Using max reversed applies autorange only to set the maximum on a reversed axis. Using “reversed” applies autorange on both ends and reverses the axis direction.- The ‘autorange’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[True, False, ‘reversed’, ‘min reversed’, ‘max reversed’, ‘min’, ‘max’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
autorangeoptions
¶ The ‘autorangeoptions’ property is an instance of Autorangeoptions that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.yaxis.Autorangeoptions
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Autorangeoptions constructor
Supported dict properties:
- clipmax
Clip autorange maximum if it goes beyond this value. Has no effect when
autorangeoptions.maxallowed
is provided.- clipmin
Clip autorange minimum if it goes beyond this value. Has no effect when
autorangeoptions.minallowed
is provided.- include
Ensure this value is included in autorange.
- includesrc
Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
include
.- maxallowed
Use this value exactly as autorange maximum.
- minallowed
Use this value exactly as autorange minimum.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
autotypenumbers
¶ Using “strict” a numeric string in trace data is not converted to a number. Using convert types a numeric string in trace data may be treated as a number during automatic axis
type
detection. Defaults to layout.autotypenumbers.- The ‘autotypenumbers’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘convert types’, ‘strict’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
backgroundcolor
¶ Sets the background color of this axis’ wall.
- The ‘backgroundcolor’ 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
calendar
¶ Sets the calendar system to use for
range
andtick0
if this is a date axis. This does not set the calendar for interpreting data on this axis, that’s specified in the trace or via the globallayout.calendar
- The ‘calendar’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘chinese’, ‘coptic’, ‘discworld’, ‘ethiopian’, ‘gregorian’, ‘hebrew’, ‘islamic’, ‘jalali’, ‘julian’, ‘mayan’, ‘nanakshahi’, ‘nepali’, ‘persian’, ‘taiwan’, ‘thai’, ‘ummalqura’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
categoryarray
¶ Sets the order in which categories on this axis appear. Only has an effect if
categoryorder
is set to “array”. Used withcategoryorder
.The ‘categoryarray’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
- Returns
- Return type
numpy.ndarray
-
property
categoryarraysrc
¶ Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
categoryarray
.The ‘categoryarraysrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
categoryorder
¶ Specifies the ordering logic for the case of categorical variables. By default, plotly uses “trace”, which specifies the order that is present in the data supplied. Set
categoryorder
to category ascending or category descending if order should be determined by the alphanumerical order of the category names. Setcategoryorder
to “array” to derive the ordering from the attributecategoryarray
. If a category is not found in thecategoryarray
array, the sorting behavior for that attribute will be identical to the “trace” mode. The unspecified categories will follow the categories incategoryarray
. Setcategoryorder
to total ascending or total descending if order should be determined by the numerical order of the values. Similarly, the order can be determined by the min, max, sum, mean, geometric mean or median of all the values.- The ‘categoryorder’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘trace’, ‘category ascending’, ‘category descending’, ‘array’, ‘total ascending’, ‘total descending’, ‘min ascending’, ‘min descending’, ‘max ascending’, ‘max descending’, ‘sum ascending’, ‘sum descending’, ‘mean ascending’, ‘mean descending’, ‘geometric mean ascending’, ‘geometric mean descending’, ‘median ascending’, ‘median descending’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
color
¶ Sets default for all colors associated with this axis all at once: line, font, tick, and grid colors. Grid color is lightened by blending this with the plot background Individual pieces can override this.
- 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
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”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
gridcolor
¶ Sets the color of the grid lines.
- The ‘gridcolor’ 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
gridwidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the grid lines.
- The ‘gridwidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
hoverformat
¶ Sets the hover text 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 ‘hoverformat’ property is a string and must be specified as:
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
linecolor
¶ Sets the axis line color.
- The ‘linecolor’ 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
linewidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.
- The ‘linewidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
maxallowed
¶ Determines the maximum range of this axis.
The ‘maxallowed’ property accepts values of any type
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
minallowed
¶ Determines the minimum range of this axis.
The ‘minallowed’ property accepts values of any type
- 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
mirror
¶ Determines if the axis lines or/and ticks are mirrored to the opposite side of the plotting area. If True, the axis lines are mirrored. If “ticks”, the axis lines and ticks are mirrored. If False, mirroring is disable. If “all”, axis lines are mirrored on all shared-axes subplots. If “allticks”, axis lines and ticks are mirrored on all shared-axes subplots.
- The ‘mirror’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[True, ‘ticks’, False, ‘all’, ‘allticks’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
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 iftickmode
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
-
property
range
¶ - Sets the range of this axis. If the axis
type
is “log”, then you must take the log of your desired range (e.g. to set the range from 1 to 100, set the range from 0 to 2). If the axis
type
is “date”, it should be date strings, like date data, though Date objects and unix milliseconds will be accepted and converted to strings. If the axistype
is “category”, it should be numbers, using the scale where each category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it appears. Leaving either or both elementsnull
impacts the defaultautorange
.The ‘range’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
The ‘range[0]’ property accepts values of any type
The ‘range[1]’ property accepts values of any type
list
- Sets the range of this axis. If the axis
-
property
rangemode
¶ If “normal”, the range is computed in relation to the extrema of the input data. If *tozero*`, the range extends to 0, regardless of the input data If “nonnegative”, the range is non-negative, regardless of the input data. Applies only to linear axes.
- The ‘rangemode’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘normal’, ‘tozero’, ‘nonnegative’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
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
-
property
showaxeslabels
¶ Sets whether or not this axis is labeled
The ‘showaxeslabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showbackground
¶ Sets whether or not this axis’ wall has a background color.
The ‘showbackground’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
showgrid
¶ Determines whether or not grid lines are drawn. If True, the grid lines are drawn at every tick mark.
The ‘showgrid’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showline
¶ Determines whether or not a line bounding this axis is drawn.
The ‘showline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showspikes
¶ Sets whether or not spikes starting from data points to this axis’ wall are shown on hover.
The ‘showspikes’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
-
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
spikecolor
¶ Sets the color of the spikes.
- The ‘spikecolor’ 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
spikesides
¶ Sets whether or not spikes extending from the projection data points to this axis’ wall boundaries are shown on hover.
The ‘spikesides’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
spikethickness
¶ Sets the thickness (in px) of the spikes.
- The ‘spikethickness’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
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.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
-
property
tickfont
¶ Sets the tick font.
The ‘tickfont’ property is an instance of Tickfont that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.yaxis.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
-
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
tickformatstopdefaults
¶ When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.scene.yaxis.tickformatstopdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.scene.yaxis.tickformatstops
The ‘tickformatstopdefaults’ property is an instance of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.yaxis.Tickformatstop
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
- Returns
- Return type
-
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.layout.scene.yaxis.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 itsdtickrange
.- 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.- 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
.- value
string - dtickformat for described zoom level, the same as “tickformat”
- Returns
- Return type
tuple[plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.yaxis.Tickformatstop]
-
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 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).- 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
-
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
-
property
ticktext
¶ Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via
tickvals
. Only has an effect iftickmode
is set to “array”. Used withtickvals
.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. Only has an effect if
tickmode
is set to “array”. Used withticktext
.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
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.layout.scene.yaxis.Title
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Title constructor
Supported dict properties:
- font
Sets this axis’ title font. Note that the title’s font used to be customized by the now deprecated
titlefont
attribute.- text
Sets the title of this axis. Note that before the existence of
title.text
, the title’s contents used to be defined as thetitle
attribute itself. This behavior has been deprecated.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
titlefont
¶ Please use layout.scene.yaxis.title.font instead. Sets this axis’ title font. Note that the title’s font used to be customized 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.layout.scene.yaxis.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
type
¶ Sets the axis type. By default, plotly attempts to determined the axis type by looking into the data of the traces that referenced the axis in question.
- The ‘type’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘-‘, ‘linear’, ‘log’, ‘date’, ‘category’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
visible
¶ A single toggle to hide the axis while preserving interaction like dragging. Default is true when a cheater plot is present on the axis, otherwise false
The ‘visible’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
zeroline
¶ Determines whether or not a line is drawn at along the 0 value of this axis. If True, the zero line is drawn on top of the grid lines.
The ‘zeroline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
zerolinecolor
¶ Sets the line color of the zero line.
- The ‘zerolinecolor’ 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
zerolinewidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the zero line.
- The ‘zerolinewidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
-
class
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.
ZAxis
(arg=None, autorange=None, autorangeoptions=None, autotypenumbers=None, backgroundcolor=None, calendar=None, categoryarray=None, categoryarraysrc=None, categoryorder=None, color=None, dtick=None, exponentformat=None, gridcolor=None, gridwidth=None, hoverformat=None, labelalias=None, linecolor=None, linewidth=None, maxallowed=None, minallowed=None, minexponent=None, mirror=None, nticks=None, range=None, rangemode=None, separatethousands=None, showaxeslabels=None, showbackground=None, showexponent=None, showgrid=None, showline=None, showspikes=None, showticklabels=None, showtickprefix=None, showticksuffix=None, spikecolor=None, spikesides=None, spikethickness=None, tick0=None, tickangle=None, tickcolor=None, tickfont=None, tickformat=None, tickformatstops=None, tickformatstopdefaults=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, type=None, visible=None, zeroline=None, zerolinecolor=None, zerolinewidth=None, **kwargs)¶ Bases:
plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
-
property
autorange
¶ Determines whether or not the range of this axis is computed in relation to the input data. See
rangemode
for more info. Ifrange
is provided and it has a value for both the lower and upper bound,autorange
is set to False. Using “min” applies autorange only to set the minimum. Using “max” applies autorange only to set the maximum. Using min reversed applies autorange only to set the minimum on a reversed axis. Using max reversed applies autorange only to set the maximum on a reversed axis. Using “reversed” applies autorange on both ends and reverses the axis direction.- The ‘autorange’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[True, False, ‘reversed’, ‘min reversed’, ‘max reversed’, ‘min’, ‘max’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
autorangeoptions
¶ The ‘autorangeoptions’ property is an instance of Autorangeoptions that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.zaxis.Autorangeoptions
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Autorangeoptions constructor
Supported dict properties:
- clipmax
Clip autorange maximum if it goes beyond this value. Has no effect when
autorangeoptions.maxallowed
is provided.- clipmin
Clip autorange minimum if it goes beyond this value. Has no effect when
autorangeoptions.minallowed
is provided.- include
Ensure this value is included in autorange.
- includesrc
Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
include
.- maxallowed
Use this value exactly as autorange maximum.
- minallowed
Use this value exactly as autorange minimum.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
autotypenumbers
¶ Using “strict” a numeric string in trace data is not converted to a number. Using convert types a numeric string in trace data may be treated as a number during automatic axis
type
detection. Defaults to layout.autotypenumbers.- The ‘autotypenumbers’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘convert types’, ‘strict’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
backgroundcolor
¶ Sets the background color of this axis’ wall.
- The ‘backgroundcolor’ 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
calendar
¶ Sets the calendar system to use for
range
andtick0
if this is a date axis. This does not set the calendar for interpreting data on this axis, that’s specified in the trace or via the globallayout.calendar
- The ‘calendar’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘chinese’, ‘coptic’, ‘discworld’, ‘ethiopian’, ‘gregorian’, ‘hebrew’, ‘islamic’, ‘jalali’, ‘julian’, ‘mayan’, ‘nanakshahi’, ‘nepali’, ‘persian’, ‘taiwan’, ‘thai’, ‘ummalqura’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
categoryarray
¶ Sets the order in which categories on this axis appear. Only has an effect if
categoryorder
is set to “array”. Used withcategoryorder
.The ‘categoryarray’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
- Returns
- Return type
numpy.ndarray
-
property
categoryarraysrc
¶ Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for
categoryarray
.The ‘categoryarraysrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
categoryorder
¶ Specifies the ordering logic for the case of categorical variables. By default, plotly uses “trace”, which specifies the order that is present in the data supplied. Set
categoryorder
to category ascending or category descending if order should be determined by the alphanumerical order of the category names. Setcategoryorder
to “array” to derive the ordering from the attributecategoryarray
. If a category is not found in thecategoryarray
array, the sorting behavior for that attribute will be identical to the “trace” mode. The unspecified categories will follow the categories incategoryarray
. Setcategoryorder
to total ascending or total descending if order should be determined by the numerical order of the values. Similarly, the order can be determined by the min, max, sum, mean, geometric mean or median of all the values.- The ‘categoryorder’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘trace’, ‘category ascending’, ‘category descending’, ‘array’, ‘total ascending’, ‘total descending’, ‘min ascending’, ‘min descending’, ‘max ascending’, ‘max descending’, ‘sum ascending’, ‘sum descending’, ‘mean ascending’, ‘mean descending’, ‘geometric mean ascending’, ‘geometric mean descending’, ‘median ascending’, ‘median descending’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
color
¶ Sets default for all colors associated with this axis all at once: line, font, tick, and grid colors. Grid color is lightened by blending this with the plot background Individual pieces can override this.
- 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
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”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
gridcolor
¶ Sets the color of the grid lines.
- The ‘gridcolor’ 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
gridwidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the grid lines.
- The ‘gridwidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
hoverformat
¶ Sets the hover text 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 ‘hoverformat’ property is a string and must be specified as:
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
linecolor
¶ Sets the axis line color.
- The ‘linecolor’ 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
linewidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.
- The ‘linewidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
maxallowed
¶ Determines the maximum range of this axis.
The ‘maxallowed’ property accepts values of any type
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
minallowed
¶ Determines the minimum range of this axis.
The ‘minallowed’ property accepts values of any type
- 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
mirror
¶ Determines if the axis lines or/and ticks are mirrored to the opposite side of the plotting area. If True, the axis lines are mirrored. If “ticks”, the axis lines and ticks are mirrored. If False, mirroring is disable. If “all”, axis lines are mirrored on all shared-axes subplots. If “allticks”, axis lines and ticks are mirrored on all shared-axes subplots.
- The ‘mirror’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[True, ‘ticks’, False, ‘all’, ‘allticks’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
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 iftickmode
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
-
property
range
¶ - Sets the range of this axis. If the axis
type
is “log”, then you must take the log of your desired range (e.g. to set the range from 1 to 100, set the range from 0 to 2). If the axis
type
is “date”, it should be date strings, like date data, though Date objects and unix milliseconds will be accepted and converted to strings. If the axistype
is “category”, it should be numbers, using the scale where each category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it appears. Leaving either or both elementsnull
impacts the defaultautorange
.The ‘range’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
The ‘range[0]’ property accepts values of any type
The ‘range[1]’ property accepts values of any type
list
- Sets the range of this axis. If the axis
-
property
rangemode
¶ If “normal”, the range is computed in relation to the extrema of the input data. If *tozero*`, the range extends to 0, regardless of the input data If “nonnegative”, the range is non-negative, regardless of the input data. Applies only to linear axes.
- The ‘rangemode’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘normal’, ‘tozero’, ‘nonnegative’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
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
-
property
showaxeslabels
¶ Sets whether or not this axis is labeled
The ‘showaxeslabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showbackground
¶ Sets whether or not this axis’ wall has a background color.
The ‘showbackground’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
showgrid
¶ Determines whether or not grid lines are drawn. If True, the grid lines are drawn at every tick mark.
The ‘showgrid’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showline
¶ Determines whether or not a line bounding this axis is drawn.
The ‘showline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
showspikes
¶ Sets whether or not spikes starting from data points to this axis’ wall are shown on hover.
The ‘showspikes’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
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
-
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
spikecolor
¶ Sets the color of the spikes.
- The ‘spikecolor’ 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
spikesides
¶ Sets whether or not spikes extending from the projection data points to this axis’ wall boundaries are shown on hover.
The ‘spikesides’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
spikethickness
¶ Sets the thickness (in px) of the spikes.
- The ‘spikethickness’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property
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.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
-
property
tickfont
¶ Sets the tick font.
The ‘tickfont’ property is an instance of Tickfont that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.zaxis.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
-
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
tickformatstopdefaults
¶ When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.scene.zaxis.tickformatstopdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.scene.zaxis.tickformatstops
The ‘tickformatstopdefaults’ property is an instance of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.zaxis.Tickformatstop
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
- Returns
- Return type
-
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.layout.scene.zaxis.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 itsdtickrange
.- 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.- 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
.- value
string - dtickformat for described zoom level, the same as “tickformat”
- Returns
- Return type
tuple[plotly.graph_objects.layout.scene.zaxis.Tickformatstop]
-
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 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).- 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
-
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
-
property
ticktext
¶ Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via
tickvals
. Only has an effect iftickmode
is set to “array”. Used withtickvals
.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. Only has an effect if
tickmode
is set to “array”. Used withticktext
.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
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.layout.scene.zaxis.Title
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Title constructor
Supported dict properties:
- font
Sets this axis’ title font. Note that the title’s font used to be customized by the now deprecated
titlefont
attribute.- text
Sets the title of this axis. Note that before the existence of
title.text
, the title’s contents used to be defined as thetitle
attribute itself. This behavior has been deprecated.
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
titlefont
¶ Please use layout.scene.zaxis.title.font instead. Sets this axis’ title font. Note that the title’s font used to be customized 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.layout.scene.zaxis.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
type
¶ Sets the axis type. By default, plotly attempts to determined the axis type by looking into the data of the traces that referenced the axis in question.
- The ‘type’ property is an enumeration that may be specified as:
- One of the following enumeration values:
[‘-‘, ‘linear’, ‘log’, ‘date’, ‘category’]
- Returns
- Return type
Any
-
property
visible
¶ A single toggle to hide the axis while preserving interaction like dragging. Default is true when a cheater plot is present on the axis, otherwise false
The ‘visible’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
zeroline
¶ Determines whether or not a line is drawn at along the 0 value of this axis. If True, the zero line is drawn on top of the grid lines.
The ‘zeroline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
- Returns
- Return type
-
property
zerolinecolor
¶ Sets the line color of the zero line.
- The ‘zerolinecolor’ 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
zerolinewidth
¶ Sets the width (in px) of the zero line.
- The ‘zerolinewidth’ property is a number and may be specified as:
An int or float
- Returns
- Return type
int|float
-
property