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Matplotlib 3.0 Cookbook

Matplotlib 3.0 Cookbook

By : Poladi, Borkar
3 (5)
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Matplotlib 3.0 Cookbook

Matplotlib 3.0 Cookbook

3 (5)
By: Poladi, Borkar

Overview of this book

Matplotlib provides a large library of customizable plots, along with a comprehensive set of backends. Matplotlib 3.0 Cookbook is your hands-on guide to exploring the world of Matplotlib, and covers the most effective plotting packages for Python 3.7. With the help of this cookbook, you'll be able to tackle any problem you might come across while designing attractive, insightful data visualizations. With the help of over 150 recipes, you'll learn how to develop plots related to business intelligence, data science, and engineering disciplines with highly detailed visualizations. Once you've familiarized yourself with the fundamentals, you'll move on to developing professional dashboards with a wide variety of graphs and sophisticated grid layouts in 2D and 3D. You'll annotate and add rich text to the plots, enabling the creation of a business storyline. In addition to this, you'll learn how to save figures and animations in various formats for downstream deployment, followed by extending the functionality offered by various internal and third-party toolkits, such as axisartist, axes_grid, Cartopy, and Seaborn. By the end of this book, you'll be able to create high-quality customized plots and deploy them on the web and on supported GUI applications such as Tkinter, Qt 5, and wxPython by implementing real-world use cases and examples.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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Plotting 2D data in 3D

In this recipe, we will learn how we can plot 2D data in 3D. We will plot product defects by reason code as a bar plot, and cumulative defects as a line plot. We will have defect reason codes on the x axis, the number of defects on the z axis, and cumulative defect percentage on the y axis. There are kind of two y axes in 2D space, where one of them will have the scale for the bar graph and the other will have the scale for the line graph.

Getting ready

Import the required libraries:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from mpl_toolkits.mplot3d import Axes3D

How to do it...

...
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