matplotlib 3.5.1

BackRef

The rectangle extends from xy[0] to xy[0] + width in x-direction and from xy[1] to xy[1] + height in y-direction. :

:                +------------------+
:                |                  |
:              height               |
:                |                  |
:               (xy)---- width -----+

One may picture xy as the bottom left corner, but which corner xy is actually depends on the direction of the axis and the sign of width and height; e.g. xy would be the bottom right corner if the x-axis was inverted or if width was negative.

A rectangle defined via an anchor point xy and its width and height.

Examples

See :

Back References

The following pages refer to to this document either explicitly or contain code examples using this.

matplotlib.axes._axes.Axes.indicate_inset matplotlib.patches.FancyBboxPatch matplotlib.legend.Legend.get_frame matplotlib.artist.Artist.set_clip_path matplotlib.table.Cell matplotlib.figure.Figure

Local connectivity graph

Hover to see nodes names; edges to Self not shown, Caped at 50 nodes.

Using a canvas is more power efficient and can get hundred of nodes ; but does not allow hyperlinks; , arrows or text (beyond on hover)

SVG is more flexible but power hungry; and does not scale well to 50 + nodes.

All aboves nodes referred to, (or are referred from) current nodes; Edges from Self to other have been omitted (or all nodes would be connected to the central node "self" which is not useful). Nodes are colored by the library they belong to, and scaled with the number of references pointing them


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type: <class 'type'>
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