Annotate the point xy with text text.
In the simplest form, the text is placed at xy.
Optionally, the text can be displayed in another position xytext. An arrow pointing from the text to the annotated point xy can then be added by defining arrowprops.
The text of the annotation.
The point (x, y) to annotate. The coordinate system is determined by xycoords.
The position (x, y) to place the text at. The coordinate system is determined by textcoords.
Artist
or Transform
or callable or (float, float), default: 'data'
The coordinate system that xy is given in. The following types of values are supported:
One of the following strings:
Value | Description |
---|---|
'figure points' | Points from the lower left of the figure |
'figure pixels' | Pixels from the lower left of the figure |
'figure fraction' | Fraction of figure from lower left |
'subfigure points' | Points from the lower left of the subfigure |
'subfigure pixels' | Pixels from the lower left of the subfigure |
'subfigure fraction' | Fraction of subfigure from lower left |
'axes points' | Points from lower left corner of axes |
'axes pixels' | Pixels from lower left corner of axes |
'axes fraction' | Fraction of axes from lower left |
'data' | Use the coordinate system of the object being annotated (default) |
'polar' | (theta, r) if not native 'data' coordinates |
Note that 'subfigure pixels' and 'figure pixels' are the same for the parent figure, so users who want code that is usable in a subfigure can use 'subfigure pixels'.
Artist
: xy is interpreted as a fraction of the artist's Bbox
. E.g. (0, 0) would be the lower left corner of the bounding box and (0.5, 1) would be the center top of the bounding box.Transform
to transform xy to screen coordinates.A function with one of the following signatures:
def transform(renderer) -> Bbox def transform(renderer) -> Transform
where renderer is a RendererBase
subclass.
The result of the function is interpreted like the Artist
and Transform
cases above.
See Advanced Annotations for more details.
Artist
or Transform
or callable or (float, float), default: value of xycoords
The coordinate system that xytext is given in.
All xycoords values are valid as well as the following strings:
Value | Description |
---|---|
'offset points' | Offset (in points) from the xy value |
'offset pixels' | Offset (in pixels) from the xy value |
The properties used to draw a FancyArrowPatch
arrow between the positions xy and xytext. Defaults to None, i.e. no arrow is drawn.
For historical reasons there are two different ways to specify arrows, "simple" and "fancy":
Simple arrow:
If arrowprops does not contain the key 'arrowstyle' the allowed keys are:
Key | Description |
---|---|
width | The width of the arrow in points |
headwidth | The width of the base of the arrow head in points |
headlength | The length of the arrow head in points |
shrink | Fraction of total length to shrink from both ends |
? | Any key to |
The arrow is attached to the edge of the text box, the exact position (corners or centers) depending on where it's pointing to.
Fancy arrow:
This is used if 'arrowstyle' is provided in the arrowprops.
Valid keys are the following FancyArrowPatch
parameters:
Key | Description |
---|---|
arrowstyle | the arrow style |
connectionstyle | the connection style |
relpos | see below; default is (0.5, 0.5) |
patchA | default is bounding box of the text |
patchB | default is None |
shrinkA | default is 2 points |
shrinkB | default is 2 points |
mutation_scale | default is text size (in points) |
mutation_aspect | default is 1. |
? | any key for |
The exact starting point position of the arrow is defined by relpos. It's a tuple of relative coordinates of the text box, where (0, 0) is the lower left corner and (1, 1) is the upper right corner. Values <0 and >1 are supported and specify points outside the text box. By default (0.5, 0.5) the starting point is centered in the text box.
Whether to draw the annotation when the annotation point xy is outside the axes area.
Additional kwargs are passed to Text
.
See also
matplotlib.axes.Axes.annotate
© 2012–2021 Matplotlib Development Team. All rights reserved.
Licensed under the Matplotlib License Agreement.
https://matplotlib.org/3.5.1/api/_as_gen/matplotlib.axes.Axes.annotate.html