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Matplotlib.colors.LogNorm class in Python

Matplotlib is an amazing visualization library in Python for 2D plots of arrays. Matplotlib is a multi-platform data visualization library built on NumPy arrays and designed to work with the broader SciPy stack.

matplotlib.colors.LogNorm()

The matplotlib.colors.LogNorm() class belongs to the matplotlib.colors module. The matplotlib.colors module is used for converting color or numbers arguments to RGBA or RGB.This module is used for mapping numbers to colors or color specification conversion in a 1-D array of colors also known as colormap.

The matplotlib.colors.LogNorm class is used to normalize a value to the range of 0-1 on a log scale. If vmax or vmin is not set, they are initialized from the maximum and minimum value of the first input processed respectively. This means __call__(A) calls autoscale_None(A). If the clip is set to True and the value given falls outside range, the value returned is 0 or 1, whichever is closest. If vmin==vmax than it returns 0. It works with arrays or scalars that also includes masked arrays. If the clip is set True the masked values are set to else they remain masked. The default of the clip is set to False.

Methods of the class:

  1. autoscale(self, A): It is used to set the vmax, vmin to maximum and minimum of A respectively.
  2. autoscale_None(self, A): It is used to autoscale only the none-valued vmin or vmax.
  3. inverse(self, value): It returns reversed value of the colormap.

Example 1:




import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
from matplotlib import colors
from matplotlib.ticker import PercentFormatter
  
# Setting random state for 
# reproducibility
np.random.seed(19680801)
  
max_points = 100000
all_bins = 20
  
# Generate a normal distribution, 
# center at x = 0 and y = 5
a = np.random.randn(max_points)
b = .4 * a + np.random.randn(100000) + 5
  
figure, axes = plt.subplots(3, 1,
                            figsize =(5, 15),
                            sharex = True
                            sharey = True,
                            tight_layout = True)
  
# Incrementing the number of 
# bins on each axis
axes[0].hist2d(a, b, bins = 40)
  
# Defining normalization of 
# the colors
axes[1].hist2d(a, b, bins = 40,
               norm = colors.LogNorm())
  
# defining custom numbers of bins 
# for each axis
axes[2].hist2d(a, b, bins =(80, 10),
               norm = colors.LogNorm())
  
plt.show()



Output:

matplotlib.colors.LogNorm
matplotlib.colors.LogNormmatplotlib.colors.LogNorm

Example 2:




import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
from matplotlib.colors import LogNorm
  
  
N = 100
A, B = np.mgrid[-3:3:complex(0, N),
                -2:2:complex(0, N)]
  
X1 = np.exp(-(A)**2 - (B)**2)
X2 = np.exp(-(A * 10)**2 - (B * 10)**2)
X = X1 + 50 * X2
  
figure, (axes0, axes1) = plt.subplots(2, 1)
  
P = axes0.pcolor(A, B, X,
               norm = LogNorm(vmin = X.min(),
                              vmax = X.max()),
                 cmap ='PuBu_r')
  
figure.colorbar(P, ax = axes0)
  
P = axes1.pcolor(A, B, X,
                 cmap ='PuBu_r')
  
figure.colorbar(P, ax = axes1)
  
plt.show()


Output:
matplotlib.colors.LogNorm

Dominic Rubhabha-Wardslaus
Dominic Rubhabha-Wardslaushttp://wardslaus.com
infosec,malicious & dos attacks generator, boot rom exploit philanthropist , wild hacker , game developer,
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