AIM-PIbd-32-Kurbanova-A-A/aimenv/Lib/site-packages/matplotlib/cbook.py

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2024-10-02 22:15:59 +04:00
"""
A collection of utility functions and classes. Originally, many
(but not all) were from the Python Cookbook -- hence the name cbook.
"""
import collections
import collections.abc
import contextlib
import functools
import gzip
import itertools
import math
import operator
import os
from pathlib import Path
import shlex
import subprocess
import sys
import time
import traceback
import types
import weakref
import numpy as np
try:
from numpy.exceptions import VisibleDeprecationWarning # numpy >= 1.25
except ImportError:
from numpy import VisibleDeprecationWarning
import matplotlib
from matplotlib import _api, _c_internal_utils
def _get_running_interactive_framework():
"""
Return the interactive framework whose event loop is currently running, if
any, or "headless" if no event loop can be started, or None.
Returns
-------
Optional[str]
One of the following values: "qt", "gtk3", "gtk4", "wx", "tk",
"macosx", "headless", ``None``.
"""
# Use ``sys.modules.get(name)`` rather than ``name in sys.modules`` as
# entries can also have been explicitly set to None.
QtWidgets = (
sys.modules.get("PyQt6.QtWidgets")
or sys.modules.get("PySide6.QtWidgets")
or sys.modules.get("PyQt5.QtWidgets")
or sys.modules.get("PySide2.QtWidgets")
)
if QtWidgets and QtWidgets.QApplication.instance():
return "qt"
Gtk = sys.modules.get("gi.repository.Gtk")
if Gtk:
if Gtk.MAJOR_VERSION == 4:
from gi.repository import GLib
if GLib.main_depth():
return "gtk4"
if Gtk.MAJOR_VERSION == 3 and Gtk.main_level():
return "gtk3"
wx = sys.modules.get("wx")
if wx and wx.GetApp():
return "wx"
tkinter = sys.modules.get("tkinter")
if tkinter:
codes = {tkinter.mainloop.__code__, tkinter.Misc.mainloop.__code__}
for frame in sys._current_frames().values():
while frame:
if frame.f_code in codes:
return "tk"
frame = frame.f_back
# premetively break reference cycle between locals and the frame
del frame
macosx = sys.modules.get("matplotlib.backends._macosx")
if macosx and macosx.event_loop_is_running():
return "macosx"
if not _c_internal_utils.display_is_valid():
return "headless"
return None
def _exception_printer(exc):
if _get_running_interactive_framework() in ["headless", None]:
raise exc
else:
traceback.print_exc()
class _StrongRef:
"""
Wrapper similar to a weakref, but keeping a strong reference to the object.
"""
def __init__(self, obj):
self._obj = obj
def __call__(self):
return self._obj
def __eq__(self, other):
return isinstance(other, _StrongRef) and self._obj == other._obj
def __hash__(self):
return hash(self._obj)
def _weak_or_strong_ref(func, callback):
"""
Return a `WeakMethod` wrapping *func* if possible, else a `_StrongRef`.
"""
try:
return weakref.WeakMethod(func, callback)
except TypeError:
return _StrongRef(func)
class CallbackRegistry:
"""
Handle registering, processing, blocking, and disconnecting
for a set of signals and callbacks:
>>> def oneat(x):
... print('eat', x)
>>> def ondrink(x):
... print('drink', x)
>>> from matplotlib.cbook import CallbackRegistry
>>> callbacks = CallbackRegistry()
>>> id_eat = callbacks.connect('eat', oneat)
>>> id_drink = callbacks.connect('drink', ondrink)
>>> callbacks.process('drink', 123)
drink 123
>>> callbacks.process('eat', 456)
eat 456
>>> callbacks.process('be merry', 456) # nothing will be called
>>> callbacks.disconnect(id_eat)
>>> callbacks.process('eat', 456) # nothing will be called
>>> with callbacks.blocked(signal='drink'):
... callbacks.process('drink', 123) # nothing will be called
>>> callbacks.process('drink', 123)
drink 123
In practice, one should always disconnect all callbacks when they are
no longer needed to avoid dangling references (and thus memory leaks).
However, real code in Matplotlib rarely does so, and due to its design,
it is rather difficult to place this kind of code. To get around this,
and prevent this class of memory leaks, we instead store weak references
to bound methods only, so when the destination object needs to die, the
CallbackRegistry won't keep it alive.
Parameters
----------
exception_handler : callable, optional
If not None, *exception_handler* must be a function that takes an
`Exception` as single parameter. It gets called with any `Exception`
raised by the callbacks during `CallbackRegistry.process`, and may
either re-raise the exception or handle it in another manner.
The default handler prints the exception (with `traceback.print_exc`) if
an interactive event loop is running; it re-raises the exception if no
interactive event loop is running.
signals : list, optional
If not None, *signals* is a list of signals that this registry handles:
attempting to `process` or to `connect` to a signal not in the list
throws a `ValueError`. The default, None, does not restrict the
handled signals.
"""
# We maintain two mappings:
# callbacks: signal -> {cid -> weakref-to-callback}
# _func_cid_map: signal -> {weakref-to-callback -> cid}
def __init__(self, exception_handler=_exception_printer, *, signals=None):
self._signals = None if signals is None else list(signals) # Copy it.
self.exception_handler = exception_handler
self.callbacks = {}
self._cid_gen = itertools.count()
self._func_cid_map = {}
# A hidden variable that marks cids that need to be pickled.
self._pickled_cids = set()
def __getstate__(self):
return {
**vars(self),
# In general, callbacks may not be pickled, so we just drop them,
# unless directed otherwise by self._pickled_cids.
"callbacks": {s: {cid: proxy() for cid, proxy in d.items()
if cid in self._pickled_cids}
for s, d in self.callbacks.items()},
# It is simpler to reconstruct this from callbacks in __setstate__.
"_func_cid_map": None,
"_cid_gen": next(self._cid_gen)
}
def __setstate__(self, state):
cid_count = state.pop('_cid_gen')
vars(self).update(state)
self.callbacks = {
s: {cid: _weak_or_strong_ref(func, self._remove_proxy)
for cid, func in d.items()}
for s, d in self.callbacks.items()}
self._func_cid_map = {
s: {proxy: cid for cid, proxy in d.items()}
for s, d in self.callbacks.items()}
self._cid_gen = itertools.count(cid_count)
def connect(self, signal, func):
"""Register *func* to be called when signal *signal* is generated."""
if self._signals is not None:
_api.check_in_list(self._signals, signal=signal)
self._func_cid_map.setdefault(signal, {})
proxy = _weak_or_strong_ref(func, self._remove_proxy)
if proxy in self._func_cid_map[signal]:
return self._func_cid_map[signal][proxy]
cid = next(self._cid_gen)
self._func_cid_map[signal][proxy] = cid
self.callbacks.setdefault(signal, {})
self.callbacks[signal][cid] = proxy
return cid
def _connect_picklable(self, signal, func):
"""
Like `.connect`, but the callback is kept when pickling/unpickling.
Currently internal-use only.
"""
cid = self.connect(signal, func)
self._pickled_cids.add(cid)
return cid
# Keep a reference to sys.is_finalizing, as sys may have been cleared out
# at that point.
def _remove_proxy(self, proxy, *, _is_finalizing=sys.is_finalizing):
if _is_finalizing():
# Weakrefs can't be properly torn down at that point anymore.
return
for signal, proxy_to_cid in list(self._func_cid_map.items()):
cid = proxy_to_cid.pop(proxy, None)
if cid is not None:
del self.callbacks[signal][cid]
self._pickled_cids.discard(cid)
break
else:
# Not found
return
# Clean up empty dicts
if len(self.callbacks[signal]) == 0:
del self.callbacks[signal]
del self._func_cid_map[signal]
def disconnect(self, cid):
"""
Disconnect the callback registered with callback id *cid*.
No error is raised if such a callback does not exist.
"""
self._pickled_cids.discard(cid)
# Clean up callbacks
for signal, cid_to_proxy in list(self.callbacks.items()):
proxy = cid_to_proxy.pop(cid, None)
if proxy is not None:
break
else:
# Not found
return
proxy_to_cid = self._func_cid_map[signal]
for current_proxy, current_cid in list(proxy_to_cid.items()):
if current_cid == cid:
assert proxy is current_proxy
del proxy_to_cid[current_proxy]
# Clean up empty dicts
if len(self.callbacks[signal]) == 0:
del self.callbacks[signal]
del self._func_cid_map[signal]
def process(self, s, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Process signal *s*.
All of the functions registered to receive callbacks on *s* will be
called with ``*args`` and ``**kwargs``.
"""
if self._signals is not None:
_api.check_in_list(self._signals, signal=s)
for ref in list(self.callbacks.get(s, {}).values()):
func = ref()
if func is not None:
try:
func(*args, **kwargs)
# this does not capture KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit,
# and GeneratorExit
except Exception as exc:
if self.exception_handler is not None:
self.exception_handler(exc)
else:
raise
@contextlib.contextmanager
def blocked(self, *, signal=None):
"""
Block callback signals from being processed.
A context manager to temporarily block/disable callback signals
from being processed by the registered listeners.
Parameters
----------
signal : str, optional
The callback signal to block. The default is to block all signals.
"""
orig = self.callbacks
try:
if signal is None:
# Empty out the callbacks
self.callbacks = {}
else:
# Only remove the specific signal
self.callbacks = {k: orig[k] for k in orig if k != signal}
yield
finally:
self.callbacks = orig
class silent_list(list):
"""
A list with a short ``repr()``.
This is meant to be used for a homogeneous list of artists, so that they
don't cause long, meaningless output.
Instead of ::
[<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x7f5749fed3c8>,
<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x7f5749fed4e0>,
<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0x7f5758016550>]
one will get ::
<a list of 3 Line2D objects>
If ``self.type`` is None, the type name is obtained from the first item in
the list (if any).
"""
def __init__(self, type, seq=None):
self.type = type
if seq is not None:
self.extend(seq)
def __repr__(self):
if self.type is not None or len(self) != 0:
tp = self.type if self.type is not None else type(self[0]).__name__
return f"<a list of {len(self)} {tp} objects>"
else:
return "<an empty list>"
def _local_over_kwdict(
local_var, kwargs, *keys,
warning_cls=_api.MatplotlibDeprecationWarning):
out = local_var
for key in keys:
kwarg_val = kwargs.pop(key, None)
if kwarg_val is not None:
if out is None:
out = kwarg_val
else:
_api.warn_external(f'"{key}" keyword argument will be ignored',
warning_cls)
return out
def strip_math(s):
"""
Remove latex formatting from mathtext.
Only handles fully math and fully non-math strings.
"""
if len(s) >= 2 and s[0] == s[-1] == "$":
s = s[1:-1]
for tex, plain in [
(r"\times", "x"), # Specifically for Formatter support.
(r"\mathdefault", ""),
(r"\rm", ""),
(r"\cal", ""),
(r"\tt", ""),
(r"\it", ""),
("\\", ""),
("{", ""),
("}", ""),
]:
s = s.replace(tex, plain)
return s
def _strip_comment(s):
"""Strip everything from the first unquoted #."""
pos = 0
while True:
quote_pos = s.find('"', pos)
hash_pos = s.find('#', pos)
if quote_pos < 0:
without_comment = s if hash_pos < 0 else s[:hash_pos]
return without_comment.strip()
elif 0 <= hash_pos < quote_pos:
return s[:hash_pos].strip()
else:
closing_quote_pos = s.find('"', quote_pos + 1)
if closing_quote_pos < 0:
raise ValueError(
f"Missing closing quote in: {s!r}. If you need a double-"
'quote inside a string, use escaping: e.g. "the \" char"')
pos = closing_quote_pos + 1 # behind closing quote
def is_writable_file_like(obj):
"""Return whether *obj* looks like a file object with a *write* method."""
return callable(getattr(obj, 'write', None))
def file_requires_unicode(x):
"""
Return whether the given writable file-like object requires Unicode to be
written to it.
"""
try:
x.write(b'')
except TypeError:
return True
else:
return False
def to_filehandle(fname, flag='r', return_opened=False, encoding=None):
"""
Convert a path to an open file handle or pass-through a file-like object.
Consider using `open_file_cm` instead, as it allows one to properly close
newly created file objects more easily.
Parameters
----------
fname : str or path-like or file-like
If `str` or `os.PathLike`, the file is opened using the flags specified
by *flag* and *encoding*. If a file-like object, it is passed through.
flag : str, default: 'r'
Passed as the *mode* argument to `open` when *fname* is `str` or
`os.PathLike`; ignored if *fname* is file-like.
return_opened : bool, default: False
If True, return both the file object and a boolean indicating whether
this was a new file (that the caller needs to close). If False, return
only the new file.
encoding : str or None, default: None
Passed as the *mode* argument to `open` when *fname* is `str` or
`os.PathLike`; ignored if *fname* is file-like.
Returns
-------
fh : file-like
opened : bool
*opened* is only returned if *return_opened* is True.
"""
if isinstance(fname, os.PathLike):
fname = os.fspath(fname)
if isinstance(fname, str):
if fname.endswith('.gz'):
fh = gzip.open(fname, flag)
elif fname.endswith('.bz2'):
# python may not be compiled with bz2 support,
# bury import until we need it
import bz2
fh = bz2.BZ2File(fname, flag)
else:
fh = open(fname, flag, encoding=encoding)
opened = True
elif hasattr(fname, 'seek'):
fh = fname
opened = False
else:
raise ValueError('fname must be a PathLike or file handle')
if return_opened:
return fh, opened
return fh
def open_file_cm(path_or_file, mode="r", encoding=None):
r"""Pass through file objects and context-manage path-likes."""
fh, opened = to_filehandle(path_or_file, mode, True, encoding)
return fh if opened else contextlib.nullcontext(fh)
def is_scalar_or_string(val):
"""Return whether the given object is a scalar or string like."""
return isinstance(val, str) or not np.iterable(val)
@_api.delete_parameter(
"3.8", "np_load", alternative="open(get_sample_data(..., asfileobj=False))")
def get_sample_data(fname, asfileobj=True, *, np_load=True):
"""
Return a sample data file. *fname* is a path relative to the
:file:`mpl-data/sample_data` directory. If *asfileobj* is `True`
return a file object, otherwise just a file path.
Sample data files are stored in the 'mpl-data/sample_data' directory within
the Matplotlib package.
If the filename ends in .gz, the file is implicitly ungzipped. If the
filename ends with .npy or .npz, and *asfileobj* is `True`, the file is
loaded with `numpy.load`.
"""
path = _get_data_path('sample_data', fname)
if asfileobj:
suffix = path.suffix.lower()
if suffix == '.gz':
return gzip.open(path)
elif suffix in ['.npy', '.npz']:
if np_load:
return np.load(path)
else:
return path.open('rb')
elif suffix in ['.csv', '.xrc', '.txt']:
return path.open('r')
else:
return path.open('rb')
else:
return str(path)
def _get_data_path(*args):
"""
Return the `pathlib.Path` to a resource file provided by Matplotlib.
``*args`` specify a path relative to the base data path.
"""
return Path(matplotlib.get_data_path(), *args)
def flatten(seq, scalarp=is_scalar_or_string):
"""
Return a generator of flattened nested containers.
For example:
>>> from matplotlib.cbook import flatten
>>> l = (('John', ['Hunter']), (1, 23), [[([42, (5, 23)], )]])
>>> print(list(flatten(l)))
['John', 'Hunter', 1, 23, 42, 5, 23]
By: Composite of Holger Krekel and Luther Blissett
From: https://code.activestate.com/recipes/121294/
and Recipe 1.12 in cookbook
"""
for item in seq:
if scalarp(item) or item is None:
yield item
else:
yield from flatten(item, scalarp)
@_api.deprecated("3.8")
class Stack:
"""
Stack of elements with a movable cursor.
Mimics home/back/forward in a web browser.
"""
def __init__(self, default=None):
self.clear()
self._default = default
def __call__(self):
"""Return the current element, or None."""
if not self._elements:
return self._default
else:
return self._elements[self._pos]
def __len__(self):
return len(self._elements)
def __getitem__(self, ind):
return self._elements[ind]
def forward(self):
"""Move the position forward and return the current element."""
self._pos = min(self._pos + 1, len(self._elements) - 1)
return self()
def back(self):
"""Move the position back and return the current element."""
if self._pos > 0:
self._pos -= 1
return self()
def push(self, o):
"""
Push *o* to the stack at current position. Discard all later elements.
*o* is returned.
"""
self._elements = self._elements[:self._pos + 1] + [o]
self._pos = len(self._elements) - 1
return self()
def home(self):
"""
Push the first element onto the top of the stack.
The first element is returned.
"""
if not self._elements:
return
self.push(self._elements[0])
return self()
def empty(self):
"""Return whether the stack is empty."""
return len(self._elements) == 0
def clear(self):
"""Empty the stack."""
self._pos = -1
self._elements = []
def bubble(self, o):
"""
Raise all references of *o* to the top of the stack, and return it.
Raises
------
ValueError
If *o* is not in the stack.
"""
if o not in self._elements:
raise ValueError('Given element not contained in the stack')
old_elements = self._elements.copy()
self.clear()
top_elements = []
for elem in old_elements:
if elem == o:
top_elements.append(elem)
else:
self.push(elem)
for _ in top_elements:
self.push(o)
return o
def remove(self, o):
"""
Remove *o* from the stack.
Raises
------
ValueError
If *o* is not in the stack.
"""
if o not in self._elements:
raise ValueError('Given element not contained in the stack')
old_elements = self._elements.copy()
self.clear()
for elem in old_elements:
if elem != o:
self.push(elem)
class _Stack:
"""
Stack of elements with a movable cursor.
Mimics home/back/forward in a web browser.
"""
def __init__(self):
self._pos = -1
self._elements = []
def clear(self):
"""Empty the stack."""
self._pos = -1
self._elements = []
def __call__(self):
"""Return the current element, or None."""
return self._elements[self._pos] if self._elements else None
def __len__(self):
return len(self._elements)
def __getitem__(self, ind):
return self._elements[ind]
def forward(self):
"""Move the position forward and return the current element."""
self._pos = min(self._pos + 1, len(self._elements) - 1)
return self()
def back(self):
"""Move the position back and return the current element."""
self._pos = max(self._pos - 1, 0)
return self()
def push(self, o):
"""
Push *o* to the stack after the current position, and return *o*.
Discard all later elements.
"""
self._elements[self._pos + 1:] = [o]
self._pos = len(self._elements) - 1
return o
def home(self):
"""
Push the first element onto the top of the stack.
The first element is returned.
"""
return self.push(self._elements[0]) if self._elements else None
def safe_masked_invalid(x, copy=False):
x = np.array(x, subok=True, copy=copy)
if not x.dtype.isnative:
# If we have already made a copy, do the byteswap in place, else make a
# copy with the byte order swapped.
# Swap to native order.
x = x.byteswap(inplace=copy).view(x.dtype.newbyteorder('N'))
try:
xm = np.ma.masked_where(~(np.isfinite(x)), x, copy=False)
except TypeError:
return x
return xm
def print_cycles(objects, outstream=sys.stdout, show_progress=False):
"""
Print loops of cyclic references in the given *objects*.
It is often useful to pass in ``gc.garbage`` to find the cycles that are
preventing some objects from being garbage collected.
Parameters
----------
objects
A list of objects to find cycles in.
outstream
The stream for output.
show_progress : bool
If True, print the number of objects reached as they are found.
"""
import gc
def print_path(path):
for i, step in enumerate(path):
# next "wraps around"
next = path[(i + 1) % len(path)]
outstream.write(" %s -- " % type(step))
if isinstance(step, dict):
for key, val in step.items():
if val is next:
outstream.write(f"[{key!r}]")
break
if key is next:
outstream.write(f"[key] = {val!r}")
break
elif isinstance(step, list):
outstream.write("[%d]" % step.index(next))
elif isinstance(step, tuple):
outstream.write("( tuple )")
else:
outstream.write(repr(step))
outstream.write(" ->\n")
outstream.write("\n")
def recurse(obj, start, all, current_path):
if show_progress:
outstream.write("%d\r" % len(all))
all[id(obj)] = None
referents = gc.get_referents(obj)
for referent in referents:
# If we've found our way back to the start, this is
# a cycle, so print it out
if referent is start:
print_path(current_path)
# Don't go back through the original list of objects, or
# through temporary references to the object, since those
# are just an artifact of the cycle detector itself.
elif referent is objects or isinstance(referent, types.FrameType):
continue
# We haven't seen this object before, so recurse
elif id(referent) not in all:
recurse(referent, start, all, current_path + [obj])
for obj in objects:
outstream.write(f"Examining: {obj!r}\n")
recurse(obj, obj, {}, [])
class Grouper:
"""
A disjoint-set data structure.
Objects can be joined using :meth:`join`, tested for connectedness
using :meth:`joined`, and all disjoint sets can be retrieved by
using the object as an iterator.
The objects being joined must be hashable and weak-referenceable.
Examples
--------
>>> from matplotlib.cbook import Grouper
>>> class Foo:
... def __init__(self, s):
... self.s = s
... def __repr__(self):
... return self.s
...
>>> a, b, c, d, e, f = [Foo(x) for x in 'abcdef']
>>> grp = Grouper()
>>> grp.join(a, b)
>>> grp.join(b, c)
>>> grp.join(d, e)
>>> list(grp)
[[a, b, c], [d, e]]
>>> grp.joined(a, b)
True
>>> grp.joined(a, c)
True
>>> grp.joined(a, d)
False
"""
def __init__(self, init=()):
self._mapping = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary(
{x: weakref.WeakSet([x]) for x in init})
self._ordering = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary()
for x in init:
if x not in self._ordering:
self._ordering[x] = len(self._ordering)
self._next_order = len(self._ordering) # Plain int to simplify pickling.
def __getstate__(self):
return {
**vars(self),
# Convert weak refs to strong ones.
"_mapping": {k: set(v) for k, v in self._mapping.items()},
"_ordering": {**self._ordering},
}
def __setstate__(self, state):
vars(self).update(state)
# Convert strong refs to weak ones.
self._mapping = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary(
{k: weakref.WeakSet(v) for k, v in self._mapping.items()})
self._ordering = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary(self._ordering)
def __contains__(self, item):
return item in self._mapping
@_api.deprecated("3.8", alternative="none, you no longer need to clean a Grouper")
def clean(self):
"""Clean dead weak references from the dictionary."""
def join(self, a, *args):
"""
Join given arguments into the same set. Accepts one or more arguments.
"""
mapping = self._mapping
try:
set_a = mapping[a]
except KeyError:
set_a = mapping[a] = weakref.WeakSet([a])
self._ordering[a] = self._next_order
self._next_order += 1
for arg in args:
try:
set_b = mapping[arg]
except KeyError:
set_b = mapping[arg] = weakref.WeakSet([arg])
self._ordering[arg] = self._next_order
self._next_order += 1
if set_b is not set_a:
if len(set_b) > len(set_a):
set_a, set_b = set_b, set_a
set_a.update(set_b)
for elem in set_b:
mapping[elem] = set_a
def joined(self, a, b):
"""Return whether *a* and *b* are members of the same set."""
return (self._mapping.get(a, object()) is self._mapping.get(b))
def remove(self, a):
"""Remove *a* from the grouper, doing nothing if it is not there."""
self._mapping.pop(a, {a}).remove(a)
self._ordering.pop(a, None)
def __iter__(self):
"""
Iterate over each of the disjoint sets as a list.
The iterator is invalid if interleaved with calls to join().
"""
unique_groups = {id(group): group for group in self._mapping.values()}
for group in unique_groups.values():
yield sorted(group, key=self._ordering.__getitem__)
def get_siblings(self, a):
"""Return all of the items joined with *a*, including itself."""
siblings = self._mapping.get(a, [a])
return sorted(siblings, key=self._ordering.get)
class GrouperView:
"""Immutable view over a `.Grouper`."""
def __init__(self, grouper): self._grouper = grouper
def __contains__(self, item): return item in self._grouper
def __iter__(self): return iter(self._grouper)
def joined(self, a, b): return self._grouper.joined(a, b)
def get_siblings(self, a): return self._grouper.get_siblings(a)
def simple_linear_interpolation(a, steps):
"""
Resample an array with ``steps - 1`` points between original point pairs.
Along each column of *a*, ``(steps - 1)`` points are introduced between
each original values; the values are linearly interpolated.
Parameters
----------
a : array, shape (n, ...)
steps : int
Returns
-------
array
shape ``((n - 1) * steps + 1, ...)``
"""
fps = a.reshape((len(a), -1))
xp = np.arange(len(a)) * steps
x = np.arange((len(a) - 1) * steps + 1)
return (np.column_stack([np.interp(x, xp, fp) for fp in fps.T])
.reshape((len(x),) + a.shape[1:]))
def delete_masked_points(*args):
"""
Find all masked and/or non-finite points in a set of arguments,
and return the arguments with only the unmasked points remaining.
Arguments can be in any of 5 categories:
1) 1-D masked arrays
2) 1-D ndarrays
3) ndarrays with more than one dimension
4) other non-string iterables
5) anything else
The first argument must be in one of the first four categories;
any argument with a length differing from that of the first
argument (and hence anything in category 5) then will be
passed through unchanged.
Masks are obtained from all arguments of the correct length
in categories 1, 2, and 4; a point is bad if masked in a masked
array or if it is a nan or inf. No attempt is made to
extract a mask from categories 2, 3, and 4 if `numpy.isfinite`
does not yield a Boolean array.
All input arguments that are not passed unchanged are returned
as ndarrays after removing the points or rows corresponding to
masks in any of the arguments.
A vastly simpler version of this function was originally
written as a helper for Axes.scatter().
"""
if not len(args):
return ()
if is_scalar_or_string(args[0]):
raise ValueError("First argument must be a sequence")
nrecs = len(args[0])
margs = []
seqlist = [False] * len(args)
for i, x in enumerate(args):
if not isinstance(x, str) and np.iterable(x) and len(x) == nrecs:
seqlist[i] = True
if isinstance(x, np.ma.MaskedArray):
if x.ndim > 1:
raise ValueError("Masked arrays must be 1-D")
else:
x = np.asarray(x)
margs.append(x)
masks = [] # List of masks that are True where good.
for i, x in enumerate(margs):
if seqlist[i]:
if x.ndim > 1:
continue # Don't try to get nan locations unless 1-D.
if isinstance(x, np.ma.MaskedArray):
masks.append(~np.ma.getmaskarray(x)) # invert the mask
xd = x.data
else:
xd = x
try:
mask = np.isfinite(xd)
if isinstance(mask, np.ndarray):
masks.append(mask)
except Exception: # Fixme: put in tuple of possible exceptions?
pass
if len(masks):
mask = np.logical_and.reduce(masks)
igood = mask.nonzero()[0]
if len(igood) < nrecs:
for i, x in enumerate(margs):
if seqlist[i]:
margs[i] = x[igood]
for i, x in enumerate(margs):
if seqlist[i] and isinstance(x, np.ma.MaskedArray):
margs[i] = x.filled()
return margs
def _combine_masks(*args):
"""
Find all masked and/or non-finite points in a set of arguments,
and return the arguments as masked arrays with a common mask.
Arguments can be in any of 5 categories:
1) 1-D masked arrays
2) 1-D ndarrays
3) ndarrays with more than one dimension
4) other non-string iterables
5) anything else
The first argument must be in one of the first four categories;
any argument with a length differing from that of the first
argument (and hence anything in category 5) then will be
passed through unchanged.
Masks are obtained from all arguments of the correct length
in categories 1, 2, and 4; a point is bad if masked in a masked
array or if it is a nan or inf. No attempt is made to
extract a mask from categories 2 and 4 if `numpy.isfinite`
does not yield a Boolean array. Category 3 is included to
support RGB or RGBA ndarrays, which are assumed to have only
valid values and which are passed through unchanged.
All input arguments that are not passed unchanged are returned
as masked arrays if any masked points are found, otherwise as
ndarrays.
"""
if not len(args):
return ()
if is_scalar_or_string(args[0]):
raise ValueError("First argument must be a sequence")
nrecs = len(args[0])
margs = [] # Output args; some may be modified.
seqlist = [False] * len(args) # Flags: True if output will be masked.
masks = [] # List of masks.
for i, x in enumerate(args):
if is_scalar_or_string(x) or len(x) != nrecs:
margs.append(x) # Leave it unmodified.
else:
if isinstance(x, np.ma.MaskedArray) and x.ndim > 1:
raise ValueError("Masked arrays must be 1-D")
try:
x = np.asanyarray(x)
except (VisibleDeprecationWarning, ValueError):
# NumPy 1.19 raises a warning about ragged arrays, but we want
# to accept basically anything here.
x = np.asanyarray(x, dtype=object)
if x.ndim == 1:
x = safe_masked_invalid(x)
seqlist[i] = True
if np.ma.is_masked(x):
masks.append(np.ma.getmaskarray(x))
margs.append(x) # Possibly modified.
if len(masks):
mask = np.logical_or.reduce(masks)
for i, x in enumerate(margs):
if seqlist[i]:
margs[i] = np.ma.array(x, mask=mask)
return margs
def _broadcast_with_masks(*args, compress=False):
"""
Broadcast inputs, combining all masked arrays.
Parameters
----------
*args : array-like
The inputs to broadcast.
compress : bool, default: False
Whether to compress the masked arrays. If False, the masked values
are replaced by NaNs.
Returns
-------
list of array-like
The broadcasted and masked inputs.
"""
# extract the masks, if any
masks = [k.mask for k in args if isinstance(k, np.ma.MaskedArray)]
# broadcast to match the shape
bcast = np.broadcast_arrays(*args, *masks)
inputs = bcast[:len(args)]
masks = bcast[len(args):]
if masks:
# combine the masks into one
mask = np.logical_or.reduce(masks)
# put mask on and compress
if compress:
inputs = [np.ma.array(k, mask=mask).compressed()
for k in inputs]
else:
inputs = [np.ma.array(k, mask=mask, dtype=float).filled(np.nan).ravel()
for k in inputs]
else:
inputs = [np.ravel(k) for k in inputs]
return inputs
def boxplot_stats(X, whis=1.5, bootstrap=None, labels=None, autorange=False):
r"""
Return a list of dictionaries of statistics used to draw a series of box
and whisker plots using `~.Axes.bxp`.
Parameters
----------
X : array-like
Data that will be represented in the boxplots. Should have 2 or
fewer dimensions.
whis : float or (float, float), default: 1.5
The position of the whiskers.
If a float, the lower whisker is at the lowest datum above
``Q1 - whis*(Q3-Q1)``, and the upper whisker at the highest datum below
``Q3 + whis*(Q3-Q1)``, where Q1 and Q3 are the first and third
quartiles. The default value of ``whis = 1.5`` corresponds to Tukey's
original definition of boxplots.
If a pair of floats, they indicate the percentiles at which to draw the
whiskers (e.g., (5, 95)). In particular, setting this to (0, 100)
results in whiskers covering the whole range of the data.
In the edge case where ``Q1 == Q3``, *whis* is automatically set to
(0, 100) (cover the whole range of the data) if *autorange* is True.
Beyond the whiskers, data are considered outliers and are plotted as
individual points.
bootstrap : int, optional
Number of times the confidence intervals around the median
should be bootstrapped (percentile method).
labels : list of str, optional
Labels for each dataset. Length must be compatible with
dimensions of *X*.
autorange : bool, optional (False)
When `True` and the data are distributed such that the 25th and 75th
percentiles are equal, ``whis`` is set to (0, 100) such that the
whisker ends are at the minimum and maximum of the data.
Returns
-------
list of dict
A list of dictionaries containing the results for each column
of data. Keys of each dictionary are the following:
======== ===================================
Key Value Description
======== ===================================
label tick label for the boxplot
mean arithmetic mean value
med 50th percentile
q1 first quartile (25th percentile)
q3 third quartile (75th percentile)
iqr interquartile range
cilo lower notch around the median
cihi upper notch around the median
whislo end of the lower whisker
whishi end of the upper whisker
fliers outliers
======== ===================================
Notes
-----
Non-bootstrapping approach to confidence interval uses Gaussian-based
asymptotic approximation:
.. math::
\mathrm{med} \pm 1.57 \times \frac{\mathrm{iqr}}{\sqrt{N}}
General approach from:
McGill, R., Tukey, J.W., and Larsen, W.A. (1978) "Variations of
Boxplots", The American Statistician, 32:12-16.
"""
def _bootstrap_median(data, N=5000):
# determine 95% confidence intervals of the median
M = len(data)
percentiles = [2.5, 97.5]
bs_index = np.random.randint(M, size=(N, M))
bsData = data[bs_index]
estimate = np.median(bsData, axis=1, overwrite_input=True)
CI = np.percentile(estimate, percentiles)
return CI
def _compute_conf_interval(data, med, iqr, bootstrap):
if bootstrap is not None:
# Do a bootstrap estimate of notch locations.
# get conf. intervals around median
CI = _bootstrap_median(data, N=bootstrap)
notch_min = CI[0]
notch_max = CI[1]
else:
N = len(data)
notch_min = med - 1.57 * iqr / np.sqrt(N)
notch_max = med + 1.57 * iqr / np.sqrt(N)
return notch_min, notch_max
# output is a list of dicts
bxpstats = []
# convert X to a list of lists
X = _reshape_2D(X, "X")
ncols = len(X)
if labels is None:
labels = itertools.repeat(None)
elif len(labels) != ncols:
raise ValueError("Dimensions of labels and X must be compatible")
input_whis = whis
for ii, (x, label) in enumerate(zip(X, labels)):
# empty dict
stats = {}
if label is not None:
stats['label'] = label
# restore whis to the input values in case it got changed in the loop
whis = input_whis
# note tricksiness, append up here and then mutate below
bxpstats.append(stats)
# if empty, bail
if len(x) == 0:
stats['fliers'] = np.array([])
stats['mean'] = np.nan
stats['med'] = np.nan
stats['q1'] = np.nan
stats['q3'] = np.nan
stats['iqr'] = np.nan
stats['cilo'] = np.nan
stats['cihi'] = np.nan
stats['whislo'] = np.nan
stats['whishi'] = np.nan
continue
# up-convert to an array, just to be safe
x = np.ma.asarray(x)
x = x.data[~x.mask].ravel()
# arithmetic mean
stats['mean'] = np.mean(x)
# medians and quartiles
q1, med, q3 = np.percentile(x, [25, 50, 75])
# interquartile range
stats['iqr'] = q3 - q1
if stats['iqr'] == 0 and autorange:
whis = (0, 100)
# conf. interval around median
stats['cilo'], stats['cihi'] = _compute_conf_interval(
x, med, stats['iqr'], bootstrap
)
# lowest/highest non-outliers
if np.iterable(whis) and not isinstance(whis, str):
loval, hival = np.percentile(x, whis)
elif np.isreal(whis):
loval = q1 - whis * stats['iqr']
hival = q3 + whis * stats['iqr']
else:
raise ValueError('whis must be a float or list of percentiles')
# get high extreme
wiskhi = x[x <= hival]
if len(wiskhi) == 0 or np.max(wiskhi) < q3:
stats['whishi'] = q3
else:
stats['whishi'] = np.max(wiskhi)
# get low extreme
wisklo = x[x >= loval]
if len(wisklo) == 0 or np.min(wisklo) > q1:
stats['whislo'] = q1
else:
stats['whislo'] = np.min(wisklo)
# compute a single array of outliers
stats['fliers'] = np.concatenate([
x[x < stats['whislo']],
x[x > stats['whishi']],
])
# add in the remaining stats
stats['q1'], stats['med'], stats['q3'] = q1, med, q3
return bxpstats
#: Maps short codes for line style to their full name used by backends.
ls_mapper = {'-': 'solid', '--': 'dashed', '-.': 'dashdot', ':': 'dotted'}
#: Maps full names for line styles used by backends to their short codes.
ls_mapper_r = {v: k for k, v in ls_mapper.items()}
def contiguous_regions(mask):
"""
Return a list of (ind0, ind1) such that ``mask[ind0:ind1].all()`` is
True and we cover all such regions.
"""
mask = np.asarray(mask, dtype=bool)
if not mask.size:
return []
# Find the indices of region changes, and correct offset
idx, = np.nonzero(mask[:-1] != mask[1:])
idx += 1
# List operations are faster for moderately sized arrays
idx = idx.tolist()
# Add first and/or last index if needed
if mask[0]:
idx = [0] + idx
if mask[-1]:
idx.append(len(mask))
return list(zip(idx[::2], idx[1::2]))
def is_math_text(s):
"""
Return whether the string *s* contains math expressions.
This is done by checking whether *s* contains an even number of
non-escaped dollar signs.
"""
s = str(s)
dollar_count = s.count(r'$') - s.count(r'\$')
even_dollars = (dollar_count > 0 and dollar_count % 2 == 0)
return even_dollars
def _to_unmasked_float_array(x):
"""
Convert a sequence to a float array; if input was a masked array, masked
values are converted to nans.
"""
if hasattr(x, 'mask'):
return np.ma.asarray(x, float).filled(np.nan)
else:
return np.asarray(x, float)
def _check_1d(x):
"""Convert scalars to 1D arrays; pass-through arrays as is."""
# Unpack in case of e.g. Pandas or xarray object
x = _unpack_to_numpy(x)
# plot requires `shape` and `ndim`. If passed an
# object that doesn't provide them, then force to numpy array.
# Note this will strip unit information.
if (not hasattr(x, 'shape') or
not hasattr(x, 'ndim') or
len(x.shape) < 1):
return np.atleast_1d(x)
else:
return x
def _reshape_2D(X, name):
"""
Use Fortran ordering to convert ndarrays and lists of iterables to lists of
1D arrays.
Lists of iterables are converted by applying `numpy.asanyarray` to each of
their elements. 1D ndarrays are returned in a singleton list containing
them. 2D ndarrays are converted to the list of their *columns*.
*name* is used to generate the error message for invalid inputs.
"""
# Unpack in case of e.g. Pandas or xarray object
X = _unpack_to_numpy(X)
# Iterate over columns for ndarrays.
if isinstance(X, np.ndarray):
X = X.T
if len(X) == 0:
return [[]]
elif X.ndim == 1 and np.ndim(X[0]) == 0:
# 1D array of scalars: directly return it.
return [X]
elif X.ndim in [1, 2]:
# 2D array, or 1D array of iterables: flatten them first.
return [np.reshape(x, -1) for x in X]
else:
raise ValueError(f'{name} must have 2 or fewer dimensions')
# Iterate over list of iterables.
if len(X) == 0:
return [[]]
result = []
is_1d = True
for xi in X:
# check if this is iterable, except for strings which we
# treat as singletons.
if not isinstance(xi, str):
try:
iter(xi)
except TypeError:
pass
else:
is_1d = False
xi = np.asanyarray(xi)
nd = np.ndim(xi)
if nd > 1:
raise ValueError(f'{name} must have 2 or fewer dimensions')
result.append(xi.reshape(-1))
if is_1d:
# 1D array of scalars: directly return it.
return [np.reshape(result, -1)]
else:
# 2D array, or 1D array of iterables: use flattened version.
return result
def violin_stats(X, method, points=100, quantiles=None):
"""
Return a list of dictionaries of data which can be used to draw a series
of violin plots.
See the ``Returns`` section below to view the required keys of the
dictionary.
Users can skip this function and pass a user-defined set of dictionaries
with the same keys to `~.axes.Axes.violinplot` instead of using Matplotlib
to do the calculations. See the *Returns* section below for the keys
that must be present in the dictionaries.
Parameters
----------
X : array-like
Sample data that will be used to produce the gaussian kernel density
estimates. Must have 2 or fewer dimensions.
method : callable
The method used to calculate the kernel density estimate for each
column of data. When called via ``method(v, coords)``, it should
return a vector of the values of the KDE evaluated at the values
specified in coords.
points : int, default: 100
Defines the number of points to evaluate each of the gaussian kernel
density estimates at.
quantiles : array-like, default: None
Defines (if not None) a list of floats in interval [0, 1] for each
column of data, which represents the quantiles that will be rendered
for that column of data. Must have 2 or fewer dimensions. 1D array will
be treated as a singleton list containing them.
Returns
-------
list of dict
A list of dictionaries containing the results for each column of data.
The dictionaries contain at least the following:
- coords: A list of scalars containing the coordinates this particular
kernel density estimate was evaluated at.
- vals: A list of scalars containing the values of the kernel density
estimate at each of the coordinates given in *coords*.
- mean: The mean value for this column of data.
- median: The median value for this column of data.
- min: The minimum value for this column of data.
- max: The maximum value for this column of data.
- quantiles: The quantile values for this column of data.
"""
# List of dictionaries describing each of the violins.
vpstats = []
# Want X to be a list of data sequences
X = _reshape_2D(X, "X")
# Want quantiles to be as the same shape as data sequences
if quantiles is not None and len(quantiles) != 0:
quantiles = _reshape_2D(quantiles, "quantiles")
# Else, mock quantiles if it's none or empty
else:
quantiles = [[]] * len(X)
# quantiles should have the same size as dataset
if len(X) != len(quantiles):
raise ValueError("List of violinplot statistics and quantiles values"
" must have the same length")
# Zip x and quantiles
for (x, q) in zip(X, quantiles):
# Dictionary of results for this distribution
stats = {}
# Calculate basic stats for the distribution
min_val = np.min(x)
max_val = np.max(x)
quantile_val = np.percentile(x, 100 * q)
# Evaluate the kernel density estimate
coords = np.linspace(min_val, max_val, points)
stats['vals'] = method(x, coords)
stats['coords'] = coords
# Store additional statistics for this distribution
stats['mean'] = np.mean(x)
stats['median'] = np.median(x)
stats['min'] = min_val
stats['max'] = max_val
stats['quantiles'] = np.atleast_1d(quantile_val)
# Append to output
vpstats.append(stats)
return vpstats
def pts_to_prestep(x, *args):
"""
Convert continuous line to pre-steps.
Given a set of ``N`` points, convert to ``2N - 1`` points, which when
connected linearly give a step function which changes values at the
beginning of the intervals.
Parameters
----------
x : array
The x location of the steps. May be empty.
y1, ..., yp : array
y arrays to be turned into steps; all must be the same length as ``x``.
Returns
-------
array
The x and y values converted to steps in the same order as the input;
can be unpacked as ``x_out, y1_out, ..., yp_out``. If the input is
length ``N``, each of these arrays will be length ``2N + 1``. For
``N=0``, the length will be 0.
Examples
--------
>>> x_s, y1_s, y2_s = pts_to_prestep(x, y1, y2)
"""
steps = np.zeros((1 + len(args), max(2 * len(x) - 1, 0)))
# In all `pts_to_*step` functions, only assign once using *x* and *args*,
# as converting to an array may be expensive.
steps[0, 0::2] = x
steps[0, 1::2] = steps[0, 0:-2:2]
steps[1:, 0::2] = args
steps[1:, 1::2] = steps[1:, 2::2]
return steps
def pts_to_poststep(x, *args):
"""
Convert continuous line to post-steps.
Given a set of ``N`` points convert to ``2N + 1`` points, which when
connected linearly give a step function which changes values at the end of
the intervals.
Parameters
----------
x : array
The x location of the steps. May be empty.
y1, ..., yp : array
y arrays to be turned into steps; all must be the same length as ``x``.
Returns
-------
array
The x and y values converted to steps in the same order as the input;
can be unpacked as ``x_out, y1_out, ..., yp_out``. If the input is
length ``N``, each of these arrays will be length ``2N + 1``. For
``N=0``, the length will be 0.
Examples
--------
>>> x_s, y1_s, y2_s = pts_to_poststep(x, y1, y2)
"""
steps = np.zeros((1 + len(args), max(2 * len(x) - 1, 0)))
steps[0, 0::2] = x
steps[0, 1::2] = steps[0, 2::2]
steps[1:, 0::2] = args
steps[1:, 1::2] = steps[1:, 0:-2:2]
return steps
def pts_to_midstep(x, *args):
"""
Convert continuous line to mid-steps.
Given a set of ``N`` points convert to ``2N`` points which when connected
linearly give a step function which changes values at the middle of the
intervals.
Parameters
----------
x : array
The x location of the steps. May be empty.
y1, ..., yp : array
y arrays to be turned into steps; all must be the same length as
``x``.
Returns
-------
array
The x and y values converted to steps in the same order as the input;
can be unpacked as ``x_out, y1_out, ..., yp_out``. If the input is
length ``N``, each of these arrays will be length ``2N``.
Examples
--------
>>> x_s, y1_s, y2_s = pts_to_midstep(x, y1, y2)
"""
steps = np.zeros((1 + len(args), 2 * len(x)))
x = np.asanyarray(x)
steps[0, 1:-1:2] = steps[0, 2::2] = (x[:-1] + x[1:]) / 2
steps[0, :1] = x[:1] # Also works for zero-sized input.
steps[0, -1:] = x[-1:]
steps[1:, 0::2] = args
steps[1:, 1::2] = steps[1:, 0::2]
return steps
STEP_LOOKUP_MAP = {'default': lambda x, y: (x, y),
'steps': pts_to_prestep,
'steps-pre': pts_to_prestep,
'steps-post': pts_to_poststep,
'steps-mid': pts_to_midstep}
def index_of(y):
"""
A helper function to create reasonable x values for the given *y*.
This is used for plotting (x, y) if x values are not explicitly given.
First try ``y.index`` (assuming *y* is a `pandas.Series`), if that
fails, use ``range(len(y))``.
This will be extended in the future to deal with more types of
labeled data.
Parameters
----------
y : float or array-like
Returns
-------
x, y : ndarray
The x and y values to plot.
"""
try:
return y.index.to_numpy(), y.to_numpy()
except AttributeError:
pass
try:
y = _check_1d(y)
except (VisibleDeprecationWarning, ValueError):
# NumPy 1.19 will warn on ragged input, and we can't actually use it.
pass
else:
return np.arange(y.shape[0], dtype=float), y
raise ValueError('Input could not be cast to an at-least-1D NumPy array')
def safe_first_element(obj):
"""
Return the first element in *obj*.
This is a type-independent way of obtaining the first element,
supporting both index access and the iterator protocol.
"""
if isinstance(obj, collections.abc.Iterator):
# needed to accept `array.flat` as input.
# np.flatiter reports as an instance of collections.Iterator but can still be
# indexed via []. This has the side effect of re-setting the iterator, but
# that is acceptable.
try:
return obj[0]
except TypeError:
pass
raise RuntimeError("matplotlib does not support generators as input")
return next(iter(obj))
def _safe_first_finite(obj):
"""
Return the first finite element in *obj* if one is available and skip_nonfinite is
True. Otherwise, return the first element.
This is a method for internal use.
This is a type-independent way of obtaining the first finite element, supporting
both index access and the iterator protocol.
"""
def safe_isfinite(val):
if val is None:
return False
try:
return math.isfinite(val)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
# if the outer object is 2d, then val is a 1d array, and
# - math.isfinite(numpy.zeros(3)) raises TypeError
# - math.isfinite(torch.zeros(3)) raises ValueError
pass
try:
return np.isfinite(val) if np.isscalar(val) else True
except TypeError:
# This is something that NumPy cannot make heads or tails of,
# assume "finite"
return True
if isinstance(obj, np.flatiter):
# TODO do the finite filtering on this
return obj[0]
elif isinstance(obj, collections.abc.Iterator):
raise RuntimeError("matplotlib does not support generators as input")
else:
for val in obj:
if safe_isfinite(val):
return val
return safe_first_element(obj)
def sanitize_sequence(data):
"""
Convert dictview objects to list. Other inputs are returned unchanged.
"""
return (list(data) if isinstance(data, collections.abc.MappingView)
else data)
def normalize_kwargs(kw, alias_mapping=None):
"""
Helper function to normalize kwarg inputs.
Parameters
----------
kw : dict or None
A dict of keyword arguments. None is explicitly supported and treated
as an empty dict, to support functions with an optional parameter of
the form ``props=None``.
alias_mapping : dict or Artist subclass or Artist instance, optional
A mapping between a canonical name to a list of aliases, in order of
precedence from lowest to highest.
If the canonical value is not in the list it is assumed to have the
highest priority.
If an Artist subclass or instance is passed, use its properties alias
mapping.
Raises
------
TypeError
To match what Python raises if invalid arguments/keyword arguments are
passed to a callable.
"""
from matplotlib.artist import Artist
if kw is None:
return {}
# deal with default value of alias_mapping
if alias_mapping is None:
alias_mapping = {}
elif (isinstance(alias_mapping, type) and issubclass(alias_mapping, Artist)
or isinstance(alias_mapping, Artist)):
alias_mapping = getattr(alias_mapping, "_alias_map", {})
to_canonical = {alias: canonical
for canonical, alias_list in alias_mapping.items()
for alias in alias_list}
canonical_to_seen = {}
ret = {} # output dictionary
for k, v in kw.items():
canonical = to_canonical.get(k, k)
if canonical in canonical_to_seen:
raise TypeError(f"Got both {canonical_to_seen[canonical]!r} and "
f"{k!r}, which are aliases of one another")
canonical_to_seen[canonical] = k
ret[canonical] = v
return ret
@contextlib.contextmanager
def _lock_path(path):
"""
Context manager for locking a path.
Usage::
with _lock_path(path):
...
Another thread or process that attempts to lock the same path will wait
until this context manager is exited.
The lock is implemented by creating a temporary file in the parent
directory, so that directory must exist and be writable.
"""
path = Path(path)
lock_path = path.with_name(path.name + ".matplotlib-lock")
retries = 50
sleeptime = 0.1
for _ in range(retries):
try:
with lock_path.open("xb"):
break
except FileExistsError:
time.sleep(sleeptime)
else:
raise TimeoutError("""\
Lock error: Matplotlib failed to acquire the following lock file:
{}
This maybe due to another process holding this lock file. If you are sure no
other Matplotlib process is running, remove this file and try again.""".format(
lock_path))
try:
yield
finally:
lock_path.unlink()
def _topmost_artist(
artists,
_cached_max=functools.partial(max, key=operator.attrgetter("zorder"))):
"""
Get the topmost artist of a list.
In case of a tie, return the *last* of the tied artists, as it will be
drawn on top of the others. `max` returns the first maximum in case of
ties, so we need to iterate over the list in reverse order.
"""
return _cached_max(reversed(artists))
def _str_equal(obj, s):
"""
Return whether *obj* is a string equal to string *s*.
This helper solely exists to handle the case where *obj* is a numpy array,
because in such cases, a naive ``obj == s`` would yield an array, which
cannot be used in a boolean context.
"""
return isinstance(obj, str) and obj == s
def _str_lower_equal(obj, s):
"""
Return whether *obj* is a string equal, when lowercased, to string *s*.
This helper solely exists to handle the case where *obj* is a numpy array,
because in such cases, a naive ``obj == s`` would yield an array, which
cannot be used in a boolean context.
"""
return isinstance(obj, str) and obj.lower() == s
def _array_perimeter(arr):
"""
Get the elements on the perimeter of *arr*.
Parameters
----------
arr : ndarray, shape (M, N)
The input array.
Returns
-------
ndarray, shape (2*(M - 1) + 2*(N - 1),)
The elements on the perimeter of the array::
[arr[0, 0], ..., arr[0, -1], ..., arr[-1, -1], ..., arr[-1, 0], ...]
Examples
--------
>>> i, j = np.ogrid[:3, :4]
>>> a = i*10 + j
>>> a
array([[ 0, 1, 2, 3],
[10, 11, 12, 13],
[20, 21, 22, 23]])
>>> _array_perimeter(a)
array([ 0, 1, 2, 3, 13, 23, 22, 21, 20, 10])
"""
# note we use Python's half-open ranges to avoid repeating
# the corners
forward = np.s_[0:-1] # [0 ... -1)
backward = np.s_[-1:0:-1] # [-1 ... 0)
return np.concatenate((
arr[0, forward],
arr[forward, -1],
arr[-1, backward],
arr[backward, 0],
))
def _unfold(arr, axis, size, step):
"""
Append an extra dimension containing sliding windows along *axis*.
All windows are of size *size* and begin with every *step* elements.
Parameters
----------
arr : ndarray, shape (N_1, ..., N_k)
The input array
axis : int
Axis along which the windows are extracted
size : int
Size of the windows
step : int
Stride between first elements of subsequent windows.
Returns
-------
ndarray, shape (N_1, ..., 1 + (N_axis-size)/step, ..., N_k, size)
Examples
--------
>>> i, j = np.ogrid[:3, :7]
>>> a = i*10 + j
>>> a
array([[ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6],
[10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16],
[20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26]])
>>> _unfold(a, axis=1, size=3, step=2)
array([[[ 0, 1, 2],
[ 2, 3, 4],
[ 4, 5, 6]],
[[10, 11, 12],
[12, 13, 14],
[14, 15, 16]],
[[20, 21, 22],
[22, 23, 24],
[24, 25, 26]]])
"""
new_shape = [*arr.shape, size]
new_strides = [*arr.strides, arr.strides[axis]]
new_shape[axis] = (new_shape[axis] - size) // step + 1
new_strides[axis] = new_strides[axis] * step
return np.lib.stride_tricks.as_strided(arr,
shape=new_shape,
strides=new_strides,
writeable=False)
def _array_patch_perimeters(x, rstride, cstride):
"""
Extract perimeters of patches from *arr*.
Extracted patches are of size (*rstride* + 1) x (*cstride* + 1) and
share perimeters with their neighbors. The ordering of the vertices matches
that returned by ``_array_perimeter``.
Parameters
----------
x : ndarray, shape (N, M)
Input array
rstride : int
Vertical (row) stride between corresponding elements of each patch
cstride : int
Horizontal (column) stride between corresponding elements of each patch
Returns
-------
ndarray, shape (N/rstride * M/cstride, 2 * (rstride + cstride))
"""
assert rstride > 0 and cstride > 0
assert (x.shape[0] - 1) % rstride == 0
assert (x.shape[1] - 1) % cstride == 0
# We build up each perimeter from four half-open intervals. Here is an
# illustrated explanation for rstride == cstride == 3
#
# T T T R
# L R
# L R
# L B B B
#
# where T means that this element will be in the top array, R for right,
# B for bottom and L for left. Each of the arrays below has a shape of:
#
# (number of perimeters that can be extracted vertically,
# number of perimeters that can be extracted horizontally,
# cstride for top and bottom and rstride for left and right)
#
# Note that _unfold doesn't incur any memory copies, so the only costly
# operation here is the np.concatenate.
top = _unfold(x[:-1:rstride, :-1], 1, cstride, cstride)
bottom = _unfold(x[rstride::rstride, 1:], 1, cstride, cstride)[..., ::-1]
right = _unfold(x[:-1, cstride::cstride], 0, rstride, rstride)
left = _unfold(x[1:, :-1:cstride], 0, rstride, rstride)[..., ::-1]
return (np.concatenate((top, right, bottom, left), axis=2)
.reshape(-1, 2 * (rstride + cstride)))
@contextlib.contextmanager
def _setattr_cm(obj, **kwargs):
"""
Temporarily set some attributes; restore original state at context exit.
"""
sentinel = object()
origs = {}
for attr in kwargs:
orig = getattr(obj, attr, sentinel)
if attr in obj.__dict__ or orig is sentinel:
# if we are pulling from the instance dict or the object
# does not have this attribute we can trust the above
origs[attr] = orig
else:
# if the attribute is not in the instance dict it must be
# from the class level
cls_orig = getattr(type(obj), attr)
# if we are dealing with a property (but not a general descriptor)
# we want to set the original value back.
if isinstance(cls_orig, property):
origs[attr] = orig
# otherwise this is _something_ we are going to shadow at
# the instance dict level from higher up in the MRO. We
# are going to assume we can delattr(obj, attr) to clean
# up after ourselves. It is possible that this code will
# fail if used with a non-property custom descriptor which
# implements __set__ (and __delete__ does not act like a
# stack). However, this is an internal tool and we do not
# currently have any custom descriptors.
else:
origs[attr] = sentinel
try:
for attr, val in kwargs.items():
setattr(obj, attr, val)
yield
finally:
for attr, orig in origs.items():
if orig is sentinel:
delattr(obj, attr)
else:
setattr(obj, attr, orig)
class _OrderedSet(collections.abc.MutableSet):
def __init__(self):
self._od = collections.OrderedDict()
def __contains__(self, key):
return key in self._od
def __iter__(self):
return iter(self._od)
def __len__(self):
return len(self._od)
def add(self, key):
self._od.pop(key, None)
self._od[key] = None
def discard(self, key):
self._od.pop(key, None)
# Agg's buffers are unmultiplied RGBA8888, which neither PyQt<=5.1 nor cairo
# support; however, both do support premultiplied ARGB32.
def _premultiplied_argb32_to_unmultiplied_rgba8888(buf):
"""
Convert a premultiplied ARGB32 buffer to an unmultiplied RGBA8888 buffer.
"""
rgba = np.take( # .take() ensures C-contiguity of the result.
buf,
[2, 1, 0, 3] if sys.byteorder == "little" else [1, 2, 3, 0], axis=2)
rgb = rgba[..., :-1]
alpha = rgba[..., -1]
# Un-premultiply alpha. The formula is the same as in cairo-png.c.
mask = alpha != 0
for channel in np.rollaxis(rgb, -1):
channel[mask] = (
(channel[mask].astype(int) * 255 + alpha[mask] // 2)
// alpha[mask])
return rgba
def _unmultiplied_rgba8888_to_premultiplied_argb32(rgba8888):
"""
Convert an unmultiplied RGBA8888 buffer to a premultiplied ARGB32 buffer.
"""
if sys.byteorder == "little":
argb32 = np.take(rgba8888, [2, 1, 0, 3], axis=2)
rgb24 = argb32[..., :-1]
alpha8 = argb32[..., -1:]
else:
argb32 = np.take(rgba8888, [3, 0, 1, 2], axis=2)
alpha8 = argb32[..., :1]
rgb24 = argb32[..., 1:]
# Only bother premultiplying when the alpha channel is not fully opaque,
# as the cost is not negligible. The unsafe cast is needed to do the
# multiplication in-place in an integer buffer.
if alpha8.min() != 0xff:
np.multiply(rgb24, alpha8 / 0xff, out=rgb24, casting="unsafe")
return argb32
def _get_nonzero_slices(buf):
"""
Return the bounds of the nonzero region of a 2D array as a pair of slices.
``buf[_get_nonzero_slices(buf)]`` is the smallest sub-rectangle in *buf*
that encloses all non-zero entries in *buf*. If *buf* is fully zero, then
``(slice(0, 0), slice(0, 0))`` is returned.
"""
x_nz, = buf.any(axis=0).nonzero()
y_nz, = buf.any(axis=1).nonzero()
if len(x_nz) and len(y_nz):
l, r = x_nz[[0, -1]]
b, t = y_nz[[0, -1]]
return slice(b, t + 1), slice(l, r + 1)
else:
return slice(0, 0), slice(0, 0)
def _pformat_subprocess(command):
"""Pretty-format a subprocess command for printing/logging purposes."""
return (command if isinstance(command, str)
else " ".join(shlex.quote(os.fspath(arg)) for arg in command))
def _check_and_log_subprocess(command, logger, **kwargs):
"""
Run *command*, returning its stdout output if it succeeds.
If it fails (exits with nonzero return code), raise an exception whose text
includes the failed command and captured stdout and stderr output.
Regardless of the return code, the command is logged at DEBUG level on
*logger*. In case of success, the output is likewise logged.
"""
logger.debug('%s', _pformat_subprocess(command))
proc = subprocess.run(command, capture_output=True, **kwargs)
if proc.returncode:
stdout = proc.stdout
if isinstance(stdout, bytes):
stdout = stdout.decode()
stderr = proc.stderr
if isinstance(stderr, bytes):
stderr = stderr.decode()
raise RuntimeError(
f"The command\n"
f" {_pformat_subprocess(command)}\n"
f"failed and generated the following output:\n"
f"{stdout}\n"
f"and the following error:\n"
f"{stderr}")
if proc.stdout:
logger.debug("stdout:\n%s", proc.stdout)
if proc.stderr:
logger.debug("stderr:\n%s", proc.stderr)
return proc.stdout
def _setup_new_guiapp():
"""
Perform OS-dependent setup when Matplotlib creates a new GUI application.
"""
# Windows: If not explicit app user model id has been set yet (so we're not
# already embedded), then set it to "matplotlib", so that taskbar icons are
# correct.
try:
_c_internal_utils.Win32_GetCurrentProcessExplicitAppUserModelID()
except OSError:
_c_internal_utils.Win32_SetCurrentProcessExplicitAppUserModelID(
"matplotlib")
def _format_approx(number, precision):
"""
Format the number with at most the number of decimals given as precision.
Remove trailing zeros and possibly the decimal point.
"""
return f'{number:.{precision}f}'.rstrip('0').rstrip('.') or '0'
def _g_sig_digits(value, delta):
"""
Return the number of significant digits to %g-format *value*, assuming that
it is known with an error of *delta*.
"""
if delta == 0:
if value == 0:
# if both value and delta are 0, np.spacing below returns 5e-324
# which results in rather silly results
return 3
# delta = 0 may occur when trying to format values over a tiny range;
# in that case, replace it by the distance to the closest float.
delta = abs(np.spacing(value))
# If e.g. value = 45.67 and delta = 0.02, then we want to round to 2 digits
# after the decimal point (floor(log10(0.02)) = -2); 45.67 contributes 2
# digits before the decimal point (floor(log10(45.67)) + 1 = 2): the total
# is 4 significant digits. A value of 0 contributes 1 "digit" before the
# decimal point.
# For inf or nan, the precision doesn't matter.
return max(
0,
(math.floor(math.log10(abs(value))) + 1 if value else 1)
- math.floor(math.log10(delta))) if math.isfinite(value) else 0
def _unikey_or_keysym_to_mplkey(unikey, keysym):
"""
Convert a Unicode key or X keysym to a Matplotlib key name.
The Unicode key is checked first; this avoids having to list most printable
keysyms such as ``EuroSign``.
"""
# For non-printable characters, gtk3 passes "\0" whereas tk passes an "".
if unikey and unikey.isprintable():
return unikey
key = keysym.lower()
if key.startswith("kp_"): # keypad_x (including kp_enter).
key = key[3:]
if key.startswith("page_"): # page_{up,down}
key = key.replace("page_", "page")
if key.endswith(("_l", "_r")): # alt_l, ctrl_l, shift_l.
key = key[:-2]
if sys.platform == "darwin" and key == "meta":
# meta should be reported as command on mac
key = "cmd"
key = {
"return": "enter",
"prior": "pageup", # Used by tk.
"next": "pagedown", # Used by tk.
}.get(key, key)
return key
@functools.cache
def _make_class_factory(mixin_class, fmt, attr_name=None):
"""
Return a function that creates picklable classes inheriting from a mixin.
After ::
factory = _make_class_factory(FooMixin, fmt, attr_name)
FooAxes = factory(Axes)
``Foo`` is a class that inherits from ``FooMixin`` and ``Axes`` and **is
picklable** (picklability is what differentiates this from a plain call to
`type`). Its ``__name__`` is set to ``fmt.format(Axes.__name__)`` and the
base class is stored in the ``attr_name`` attribute, if not None.
Moreover, the return value of ``factory`` is memoized: calls with the same
``Axes`` class always return the same subclass.
"""
@functools.cache
def class_factory(axes_class):
# if we have already wrapped this class, declare victory!
if issubclass(axes_class, mixin_class):
return axes_class
# The parameter is named "axes_class" for backcompat but is really just
# a base class; no axes semantics are used.
base_class = axes_class
class subcls(mixin_class, base_class):
# Better approximation than __module__ = "matplotlib.cbook".
__module__ = mixin_class.__module__
def __reduce__(self):
return (_picklable_class_constructor,
(mixin_class, fmt, attr_name, base_class),
self.__getstate__())
subcls.__name__ = subcls.__qualname__ = fmt.format(base_class.__name__)
if attr_name is not None:
setattr(subcls, attr_name, base_class)
return subcls
class_factory.__module__ = mixin_class.__module__
return class_factory
def _picklable_class_constructor(mixin_class, fmt, attr_name, base_class):
"""Internal helper for _make_class_factory."""
factory = _make_class_factory(mixin_class, fmt, attr_name)
cls = factory(base_class)
return cls.__new__(cls)
def _is_torch_array(x):
"""Check if 'x' is a PyTorch Tensor."""
try:
# we're intentionally not attempting to import torch. If somebody
# has created a torch array, torch should already be in sys.modules
return isinstance(x, sys.modules['torch'].Tensor)
except Exception: # TypeError, KeyError, AttributeError, maybe others?
# we're attempting to access attributes on imported modules which
# may have arbitrary user code, so we deliberately catch all exceptions
return False
def _is_jax_array(x):
"""Check if 'x' is a JAX Array."""
try:
# we're intentionally not attempting to import jax. If somebody
# has created a jax array, jax should already be in sys.modules
return isinstance(x, sys.modules['jax'].Array)
except Exception: # TypeError, KeyError, AttributeError, maybe others?
# we're attempting to access attributes on imported modules which
# may have arbitrary user code, so we deliberately catch all exceptions
return False
def _unpack_to_numpy(x):
"""Internal helper to extract data from e.g. pandas and xarray objects."""
if isinstance(x, np.ndarray):
# If numpy, return directly
return x
if hasattr(x, 'to_numpy'):
# Assume that any to_numpy() method actually returns a numpy array
return x.to_numpy()
if hasattr(x, 'values'):
xtmp = x.values
# For example a dict has a 'values' attribute, but it is not a property
# so in this case we do not want to return a function
if isinstance(xtmp, np.ndarray):
return xtmp
if _is_torch_array(x) or _is_jax_array(x):
xtmp = x.__array__()
# In case __array__() method does not return a numpy array in future
if isinstance(xtmp, np.ndarray):
return xtmp
return x
def _auto_format_str(fmt, value):
"""
Apply *value* to the format string *fmt*.
This works both with unnamed %-style formatting and
unnamed {}-style formatting. %-style formatting has priority.
If *fmt* is %-style formattable that will be used. Otherwise,
{}-formatting is applied. Strings without formatting placeholders
are passed through as is.
Examples
--------
>>> _auto_format_str('%.2f m', 0.2)
'0.20 m'
>>> _auto_format_str('{} m', 0.2)
'0.2 m'
>>> _auto_format_str('const', 0.2)
'const'
>>> _auto_format_str('%d or {}', 0.2)
'0 or {}'
"""
try:
return fmt % (value,)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
return fmt.format(value)