I am plotting some weather data for a research project. The plot consists of 18 timesteps. I decided the best way to accomplish this was to make a new plot for each timestep, save it a file, and create a new plot for the next timestep (using a for loop).
For example:
map_init #[Basemap Instance]
extra_shapes #[Basemap.readshapefile object]
for i in range(timesteps):
#plot the weather data for current timestep to current plot
map_init.imshow(data[i])
# extra_shapes are county boundaries. Plot those as polygons
pyplot.Polygon(map_init.extra_shapes[i])
# Plot the state boundaries (开发者_StackOverflow中文版in basemap)
map_init.drawstates()
# add a colorbar
pyplot.colorbar()
# Save the figure
pyplot.savefig(filepath)
#close figure and loop again (if necessary)
pyplot.clf()
The problem lies with pyplot.clf()
The code works except for one thing. Only the first plot comes out as expected. Every subsequent plot is missing the extra_shapes
(ie no county boundaries). I do not understand the relation between presence of pyplot.clf()
and the failure of pyplot.Polygon()
?
If removed, extra_shapes
is plotted, but then every plot has multiple colorbars (depending on the value of i
). The only reason pyplot.clf()
is there is to avoid having 18 colorbars in the final plot. Is there a way to force one and only one colorbar per plot?
Try making a new figure instead of using clf().
e.g.
for i in range(timesteps):
fig = pyplot.figure()
...
fig.savefig(filepath)
Alternatively (and faster) you could just update the data in your image object (returned by imshow()).
e.g. something like (completely untested):
map_init #[Basemap Instance]
extra_shapes #[Basemap.readshapefile object]
#plot the weather data for current timestep to current plot
img = map_init.imshow(data[0])
# extra_shapes are county boundaries. Plot those as polygons
plygn = pyplot.Polygon(map_init.extra_shapes[0])
# Plot the state boundaries (in basemap)
map_init.drawstates()
# add a colorbar
pyplot.colorbar()
for i in range(timestamps):
img.set_data(data[i])
plygn.set_xy(map_init.extra_shapes[i])
pyplot.draw()
pyplot.savefig(filepath)
However, there's a chance that that method might not play well with basemap. I may also be misremembering the correct way to redraw the figure, but I'm fairly sure it's just plt.draw()...
Hope that helps a bit anyway
Edit: Just noticed that you're drawing your polygons inside of a loop, as well. Updated the second example to properly reflect that.
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