Help required on matplotlib
. Yes, I did not forget calling the pyplot.show()
.
$ ipython --pylab
import matplotlib.pyplot as p
p.plot(range(20), range(20))
It returns matplotlib.lines.Line2D at 0xade2b2c
as the output.
p.show()
There is nothing to happen. No 开发者_JAVA百科error message. No new window. Nothing. I install matplotlib
by using pip
and I didn't take any error messages.
Details:
I use,
- Ubuntu
- IPython v0.11
- Python v2.6.6
- matplotlib v1.0.1
If I set my backend to template
in ~/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc
,
then I can reproduce your symptoms:
~/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc:
# backend : GtkAgg
backend : template
Note that the file matplotlibrc
may not be in directory ~/.matplotlib/
. In this case, the following code shows where it is:
>>> import matplotlib
>>> matplotlib.matplotlib_fname()
In [1]: import matplotlib.pyplot as p
In [2]: p.plot(range(20),range(20))
Out[2]: [<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0xa64932c>]
In [3]: p.show()
If you edit ~/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc
and change the backend to something like GtkAgg
, you should see a plot. You can list all the backends available on your machine with
import matplotlib.rcsetup as rcsetup
print(rcsetup.all_backends)
It should return a list like:
['GTK', 'GTKAgg', 'GTKCairo', 'FltkAgg', 'MacOSX', 'QtAgg', 'Qt4Agg',
'TkAgg', 'WX', 'WXAgg', 'CocoaAgg', 'agg', 'cairo', 'emf', 'gdk', 'pdf',
'ps', 'svg', 'template']
Reference:
- Customizing matplotlib
I ran into the exact same problem on Ubuntu 12.04, because I installed matplotlib (within a virtualenv) using
pip install matplotlib
To make long story short, my advice is: don't try to install matplotlib using pip or by hand; let a real package manager (e.g. apt-get / synaptic) install it and all its dependencies for you.
Unfortunately, matplotlib's backends (alternative methods for actually rendering your plots) have all sorts of dependencies that pip will not deal with. Even worse, it fails silently; that is, pip install matplotlib
appears to install matplotlib successfully. But when you try to use it (e.g. pyplot.show()
), no plot window will appear. I tried all the different backends that people on the web suggest (Qt4Agg, GTK, etc.), and they all failed (i.e. when I tried to import matplotlib.pyplot, I get ImportError
because it's trying to import some dependency that's missing). I then researched how to install those dependencies, but it just made me want to give up using pip (within virtualenv) as a viable installation solution for any package that has non-Python package dependencies.
The whole experience sent me crawling back to apt-get / synaptic (i.e. the Ubuntu package manager) to install software like matplotlib. That worked perfectly. Of course, that means you can only install into your system directories, no virtualenv goodness, and you are stuck with the versions that Ubuntu distributes, which may be way behind the current version...
%matplotlib inline
For me working with notebook, adding the above line before the plot works.
Just type:
plt.ion()
See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zmV8lZsHF4 at 23:30 !
plt
is used because of my import: import matplotlib.pyplot
as plt
I'm using python2.7 on a mac with iTerm2.
For future reference,
I have encountered the same problem -- pylab was not showing under ipython. The problem was fixed by changing ipython's config file {ipython_config.py}. In the config file
c.InteractiveShellApp.pylab = 'auto'
I changed 'auto' to 'qt' and now I see graphs
What solved my problem was just using the below two lines in ipython notebook at the top
%matplotib inline
%pylab inline
And it worked. I'm using Ubuntu16.04 and ipython-5.1
Adding the following two lines before importing pylab seems to work for me
import matplotlib
matplotlib.use("gtk")
import sys
import pylab
import numpy as np
I had to install matplotlib from source to get this to work. The key instructions (from http://www.pyimagesearch.com/2015/08/24/resolved-matplotlib-figures-not-showing-up-or-displaying/) are:
$ workon plotting
$ pip uninstall matplotlib
$ git clone https://github.com/matplotlib/matplotlib.git
$ cd matplotlib
$ python setup.py install
By changing the backend, as @unutbu says, I just ran into loads more problems with all the different backends not working either.
Similar to @Rikki, I solved this problem by upgrading matplotlib
with pip install matplotlib --upgrade
. If you can't upgrade uninstalling and reinstalling may work.
pip uninstall matplotlib
pip install matplotlib
Be sure to have this startup script enabled : ( Preferences > Console > Advanced Options )
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/spyderlib/scientific_startup.py
If the standard PYTHONSTARTUP is enabled you won't have an interactive plot
For me the problem happens if I simply create an empty matplotlibrc
file under ~/.matplotlib
on macOS. Adding "backend: macosx" in it fixes the problem.
I think it is a bug: if backend
is not specified in my matplotlibrc
it should take the default value.
After running your code include:
import pylab as p
p.show()
if you are a nube from ruby, don't forget the parenthesis - show()
If you are working with yolov5
the fixes described here might not work as in my case. YOLOv5 developers have turned off the preview of the images using plt.show()
, so most likely this will happen to you. To resolve make sure that your environment is correctly configured using requirements.txt file that comes with yolov5 and then use the workaround:
import torch
import matplotlib
model = torch.hub.load('ultralytics/yolov5', 'yolov5s') # Load model first
matplotlib.use('TkAgg') # Change backend after loading model
as described here: https://github.com/ultralytics/yolov5/issues/2779
you can also try another backend from the ones mentioned above like 'Qt4Agg'
or smth else.
I found that I needed window = Tk()
and then window.mainloop()
It also shows the error when you don't call plt.plot() on anything. I got that error haha. I though I was calling it in a loop but right before the loop I overwrote my array to a blank array so it never entered the loop
This is not a great long-term solution, but if none of this is working for you, you can get around it by using this instead of p.show()
:
p.savefig("output_plot.png")
This will create the plot image in the same directory. You can open it separately in a normal image viewer.
For Ubuntu 12.04:
sudo apt-get install python-qt4
virtualenv .env --no-site-packages
source .env/bin/activate
easy_install -U distribute
ln -s /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/PyQt4 .
ln -s /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/sip.so .
pip install matplotlib
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