Layouts
As of v0.7.0, Plots has taken control of subplot positioning, allowing complex, nested grids of subplots and components. Care has been taken to keep the framework flexible and generic, so that backends need only support the ability to precisely define the absolute position of a subplot, and they get the full power of nesting, plot area alignment, and more. Just set the layout
keyword in a call to plot(...)
It's helpful at this point to review terminology:
- Plot: The whole figure/window
- Subplot: One subplot, containing a title, axes, colorbar, legend, and plot area.
- Axis: One axis of a subplot, containing axis guide (label), tick labels, and tick marks.
- Plot Area: The part of a subplot where the data is shown... contains the series, grid lines, etc.
- Series: One distinct visualization of data. (For example: a line or a set of markers)
Simple Layouts
Pass an integer to layout
to allow it to automatically compute a grid size for that many subplots:
# create a 2x2 grid, and map each of the 4 series to one of the subplots
plot(rand(100, 4), layout = 4)
Pass a tuple to layout
to create a grid of that size:
# create a 4x1 grid, and map each of the 4 series to one of the subplots
plot(rand(100, 4), layout = (4, 1))
More complex grid layouts can be created with the grid(...)
constructor:
plot(rand(100, 4), layout = grid(4, 1, heights=[0.1 ,0.4, 0.4, 0.1]))
Titles and labels can be easily added:
plot(rand(100,4), layout = 4, label=["a" "b" "c" "d"],
title=["1" "2" "3" "4"])
Advanced Layouts
The @layout
macro is the easiest way to define complex layouts, using Julia's multidimensional Array construction as the basis for a custom layout syntax. Precise sizing can be achieved with curly brackets, otherwise the free space is equally split between the plot areas of subplots.
The symbols themselves (a
and b
in the example below) can be any valid identifier and don't have any special meaning.
l = @layout [
a{0.3w} [grid(3,3)
b{0.2h} ]
]
plot(
rand(10, 11),
layout = l, legend = false, seriestype = [:bar :scatter :path],
title = ["($i)" for j in 1:1, i in 1:11], titleloc = :right, titlefont = font(8)
)
Create inset (floating) subplots using the inset_subplots
attribute. inset_subplots
takes a list of (parent_layout, BoundingBox) tuples, where the bounding box is relative to the parent.
Use px
/mm
/inch
for absolute coords, w
/h
for percentage relative to the parent. Origin is top-left. h_anchor
/v_anchor
define what the x
/y
inputs of the bounding box refer to.
# boxplot is defined in StatsPlots
using StatsPlots
gr(leg = false, bg = :lightgrey)
# Create a filled contour and boxplot side by side.
plot(contourf(randn(10, 20)), boxplot(rand(1:4, 1000), randn(1000)))
# Add a histogram inset on the heatmap.
# We set the (optional) position relative to bottom-right of the 1st subplot.
# The call is `bbox(x, y, width, height, origin...)`, where numbers are treated as
# "percent of parent".
histogram!(
randn(1000),
inset = (1, bbox(0.05, 0.05, 0.5, 0.25, :bottom, :right)),
ticks = nothing,
subplot = 3,
bg_inside = nothing
)
# Add sticks floating in the window (inset relative to the window, as opposed to being
# relative to a subplot)
sticks!(
randn(100),
inset = bbox(0, -0.2, 200Plots.px, 100Plots.px, :center),
ticks = nothing,
subplot = 4
)
Adding Subplots incrementally
You can also combine multiple plots to a single plot. To do this, simply pass the variables holding the previous plots to the plot
function:
l = @layout [a ; b c]
p1 = plot(...)
p2 = plot(...)
p3 = plot(...)
plot(p1, p2, p3, layout = l)
Ignore plots in layout
You can use the _
character to ignore plots in the layout (blank plots):
plot((plot() for i in 1:7)..., layout=@layout([_ ° _; ° ° °; ° ° °]))