Fast scatter density plots for Matplotlib

Overview

Azure Status Coverage Status

About

Plotting millions of points can be slow. Real slow... 😴

So why not use density maps? âš¡

The mpl-scatter-density mini-package provides functionality to make it easy to make your own scatter density maps, both for interactive and non-interactive use. Fast. The following animation shows real-time interactive use with 10 million points, but interactive performance is still good even with 100 million points (and more if you have enough RAM).

Demo of mpl-scatter-density with NY taxi data

When panning, the density map is shown at a lower resolution to keep things responsive (though this is customizable).

To install, simply do:

pip install mpl-scatter-density

This package requires Numpy, Matplotlib, and fast-histogram - these will be installed by pip if they are missing. Both Python 2.7 and Python 3.x are supported, and the package should work correctly on Linux, MacOS X, and Windows.

Usage

There are two main ways to use mpl-scatter-density, both of which are explained below.

scatter_density method

The easiest way to use this package is to simply import mpl_scatter_density, then create Matplotlib axes as usual but adding a projection='scatter_density' option (if your reaction is 'wait, what?', see here). This will return a ScatterDensityAxes instance that has a scatter_density method in addition to all the usual methods (scatter, plot, etc.).

import numpy as np
import mpl_scatter_density
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

# Generate fake data

N = 10000000
x = np.random.normal(4, 2, N)
y = np.random.normal(3, 1, N)

# Make the plot - note that for the projection option to work, the
# mpl_scatter_density module has to be imported above.

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(1, 1, 1, projection='scatter_density')
ax.scatter_density(x, y)
ax.set_xlim(-5, 10)
ax.set_ylim(-5, 10)
fig.savefig('gaussian.png')

Which gives:

Result from the example script

The scatter_density method takes the same options as imshow (for example cmap, alpha, norm, etc.), but also takes the following optional arguments:

  • dpi: this is an integer that is used to determine the resolution of the density map. By default, this is 72, but you can change it as needed, or set it to None to use the default for the Matplotlib backend you are using.
  • downres_factor: this is an integer that is used to determine how much to downsample the density map when panning in interactive mode. Set this to 1 if you don't want any downsampling.
  • color: this can be set to any valid matplotlib color, and will be used to automatically make a monochromatic colormap based on this color. The colormap will fade to transparent, which means that this mode is ideal when showing multiple density maps together.

Here is an example of using the color option:

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import mpl_scatter_density  # noqa

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(1, 1, 1, projection='scatter_density')

n = 10000000

x = np.random.normal(0.5, 0.3, n)
y = np.random.normal(0.5, 0.3, n)

ax.scatter_density(x, y, color='red')

x = np.random.normal(1.0, 0.2, n)
y = np.random.normal(0.6, 0.2, n)

ax.scatter_density(x, y, color='blue')

ax.set_xlim(-0.5, 1.5)
ax.set_ylim(-0.5, 1.5)

fig.savefig('double.png')

Which produces the following output:

Result from the example script

ScatterDensityArtist

If you are a more experienced Matplotlib user, you might want to use the ScatterDensityArtist directly (this is used behind the scenes in the above example). To use this, initialize the ScatterDensityArtist with the axes as first argument, followed by any arguments you would have passed to scatter_density above (you can also take a look at the docstring for ScatterDensityArtist). You should then add the artist to the axes:

from mpl_scatter_density import ScatterDensityArtist
a = ScatterDensityArtist(ax, x, y)
ax.add_artist(a)

Advanced

Non-linear stretches for high dynamic range plots

In some cases, your density map might have a high dynamic range, and you might therefore want to show the log of the counts rather than the counts. You can do this by passing a matplotlib.colors.Normalize object to the norm argument in the same wasy as for imshow. For example, the astropy package includes a nice framework for making such a Normalize object for different functions. The following example shows how to show the density map on a log scale:

import numpy as np
import mpl_scatter_density
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

# Make the norm object to define the image stretch
from astropy.visualization import LogStretch
from astropy.visualization.mpl_normalize import ImageNormalize
norm = ImageNormalize(vmin=0., vmax=1000, stretch=LogStretch())

N = 10000000
x = np.random.normal(4, 2, N)
y = np.random.normal(3, 1, N)

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(1, 1, 1, projection='scatter_density')
ax.scatter_density(x, y, norm=norm)
ax.set_xlim(-5, 10)
ax.set_ylim(-5, 10)
fig.savefig('gaussian_log.png')

Which produces the following output:

Result from the example script

Adding a colorbar

You can show a colorbar in the same way as you would for an image - the following example shows how to do it:

import numpy as np
import mpl_scatter_density
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

N = 10000000
x = np.random.normal(4, 2, N)
y = np.random.normal(3, 1, N)

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(1, 1, 1, projection='scatter_density')
density = ax.scatter_density(x, y)
ax.set_xlim(-5, 10)
ax.set_ylim(-5, 10)
fig.colorbar(density, label='Number of points per pixel')
fig.savefig('gaussian_colorbar.png')

Which produces the following output:

Result from the example script

Color-coding 'markers' with individual values

In the same way that a 1-D array of values can be passed to Matplotlib's scatter function/method, a 1-D array of values can be passed to scatter_density using the c= argument:

import numpy as np
import mpl_scatter_density
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

N = 10000000
x = np.random.normal(4, 2, N)
y = np.random.normal(3, 1, N)
c = x - y + np.random.normal(0, 5, N)

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(1, 1, 1, projection='scatter_density')
ax.scatter_density(x, y, c=c, vmin=-10, vmax=+10, cmap=plt.cm.RdYlBu)
ax.set_xlim(-5, 13)
ax.set_ylim(-5, 11)
fig.savefig('gaussian_color_coded.png')

Which produces the following output:

Result from the example script

Note that to keep performance as good as possible, the values from the c attribute are averaged inside each pixel of the density map, then the colormap is applied. This is a little different to what scatter would converge to in the limit of many points (since in that case it would apply the color to all the markers than average the colors).

Q&A

Isn't this basically the same as datashader?

This follows the same ideas as datashader, but the aim of mpl-scatter-density is specifically to bring datashader-like functionality to Matplotlib users. Furthermore, mpl-scatter-density is intended to be very easy to install - for example it can be installed with pip. But if you have datashader installed and regularly use bokeh, mpl-scatter-density won't do much for you. Note that if you are interested in datashader and Matplotlib together, there is a work in progress (pull request) by @tacaswell to create a Matplotlib artist similar to that in this package but powered by datashader.

What about vaex?

Vaex is a powerful package to visualize large datasets on N-dimensional grids, and therefore has some functionality that overlaps with what is here. However, the aim of mpl-scatter-density is just to provide a lightweight solution to make it easy for users already using Matplotlib to add scatter density maps to their plots rather than provide a complete environment for data visualization. I highly recommend that you take a look at Vaex and determine which approach is right for you!

Why on earth have you defined scatter_density as a projection?

If you are a Matplotlib developer: I truly am sorry for distorting the intended purpose of projection 😊 . But you have to admit that it's a pretty convenient way to have users get a custom Axes sub-class even if it has nothing to do with actual projection!

Where do you see this going?

There are a number of things we could add to this package, for example a way to plot density maps as contours, or a way to color code each point by a third quantity and have that reflected in the density map. If you have ideas, please open issues, and even better contribute a pull request! 😄

Can I contribute?

I'm glad you asked - of course you are very welcome to contribute! If you have some ideas, you can open issues or create a pull request directly. Even if you don't have time to contribute actual code changes, I would love to hear from you if you are having issues using this package.

[![Build Status](https://dev.azure.com/thomasrobitaille/mpl-scatter-density/_apis/build/status/astrofrog.mpl-scatter-density?branchName=master)](https://dev.azure.com/thomasrobitaille/mpl-scatter-density/_build/latest?definitionId=17&branchName=master)

Running tests

To run the tests, you will need pytest and the pytest-mpl plugin. You can then run the tests with:

pytest mpl_scatter_density --mpl
Owner
Thomas Robitaille
Thomas Robitaille
A Jupyter - Three.js bridge

pythreejs A Python / ThreeJS bridge utilizing the Jupyter widget infrastructure. Getting Started Installation Using pip: pip install pythreejs And the

Jupyter Widgets 844 Dec 27, 2022
A script written in Python that generate output custom color (HEX or RGB input to x1b hexadecimal)

ColorShell ─ 1.5 Planned for v2: setup.sh for setup alias This script converts HEX and RGB code to x1b x1b is code for colorize outputs, works on ou

Riley 4 Oct 31, 2021
🎨 Python3 binding for `@AntV/G2Plot` Plotting Library .

PyG2Plot 🎨 Python3 binding for @AntV/G2Plot which an interactive and responsive charting library. Based on the grammar of graphics, you can easily ma

hustcc 990 Jan 05, 2023
High performance, editable, stylable datagrids in jupyter and jupyterlab

An ipywidgets wrapper of regular-table for Jupyter. Examples Two Billion Rows Notebook Click Events Notebook Edit Events Notebook Styling Notebook Pan

J.P. Morgan Chase 75 Dec 15, 2022
China and India Population and GDP Visualization

China and India Population and GDP Visualization Historical Population Comparison between India and China This graph shows the population data of Indi

Nicolas De Mello 10 Oct 27, 2021
Here I plotted data for the average test scores across schools and class sizes across school districts.

HW_02 Here I plotted data for the average test scores across schools and class sizes across school districts. Average Test Score by Race This graph re

7 Oct 27, 2021
A dashboard built using Plotly-Dash for interactive visualization of Dex-connected individuals across the country.

Dashboard For The DexConnect Platform of Dexterity Global Working prototype submission for internship at Dexterity Global Group. Dashboard for real ti

Yashasvi Misra 2 Jun 15, 2021
Simple implementation of Self Organizing Maps (SOMs) with rectangular and hexagonal grid topologies

py-self-organizing-map Simple implementation of Self Organizing Maps (SOMs) with rectangular and hexagonal grid topologies. A SOM is a simple unsuperv

Jonas Grebe 1 Feb 10, 2022
The windML framework provides an easy-to-use access to wind data sources within the Python world, building upon numpy, scipy, sklearn, and matplotlib. Renewable Wind Energy, Forecasting, Prediction

windml Build status : The importance of wind in smart grids with a large number of renewable energy resources is increasing. With the growing infrastr

Computational Intelligence Group 125 Dec 24, 2022
Visualize the training curve from the *.csv file (tensorboard format).

Training-Curve-Vis Visualize the training curve from the *.csv file (tensorboard format). Feature Custom labels Curve smoothing Support for multiple c

Luckky 7 Feb 23, 2022
An interactive dashboard for visualisation, integration and classification of data using Active Learning.

AstronomicAL An interactive dashboard for visualisation, integration and classification of data using Active Learning. AstronomicAL is a human-in-the-

45 Nov 28, 2022
A tool for creating Toontown-style nametags in Panda3D

Toontown-Nametag Toontown-Nametag is a tool for creating Toontown Online/Toontown Rewritten-style nametags in Panda3D. It contains a function, createN

BoggoTV 2 Dec 23, 2021
A way of looking at COVID-19 data that I haven't seen before.

Visualizing Omicron: COVID-19 Deaths vs. Cases Click here for other countries. Data is from Our World in Data/Johns Hopkins University. About this pro

1 Jan 10, 2022
Collection of scripts for making high quality beautiful math-related posters.

Poster Collection of scripts for making high quality beautiful math-related posters. The poster can have as large printing size as 3x2 square feet wit

Nattawut Phetmak 3 Jun 09, 2022
A simple project on Data Visualization for CSCI-40 course.

Simple-Data-Visualization A simple project on Data Visualization for CSCI-40 course - the instructions can be found here SAT results in New York in 20

Hugo Matousek 8 Oct 27, 2021
Python package that generates hardware pinout diagrams as SVG images

PinOut A Python package that generates hardware pinout diagrams as SVG images. The package is designed to be quite flexible and works well for general

336 Dec 20, 2022
Draw datasets from within Jupyter.

drawdata This small python app allows you to draw a dataset in a jupyter notebook. This should be very useful when teaching machine learning algorithm

vincent d warmerdam 505 Nov 27, 2022
Monochromatic colorscheme for matplotlib with opinionated sensible default

Monochromatic colorscheme for matplotlib with opinionated sensible default If you need a simple monochromatic colorscheme for your matplotlib figures,

Aria Ghora Prabono 2 May 06, 2022
Scientific measurement library for instruments, experiments, and live-plotting

PyMeasure scientific package PyMeasure makes scientific measurements easy to set up and run. The package contains a repository of instrument classes a

PyMeasure 445 Jan 04, 2023
Rick and Morty Data Visualization with python

Rick and Morty Data Visualization For this project I looked at data for the TV show Rick and Morty Number of Episodes at a Certain Location Here is th

7 Aug 29, 2022