matplotlib.image
¶The image module supports basic image loading, rescaling and display operations.
matplotlib.image.
AxesImage
(ax, cmap=None, norm=None, interpolation=None, origin=None, extent=None, filternorm=1, filterrad=4.0, resample=False, **kwargs)¶Bases: matplotlib.image._ImageBase
interpolation and cmap default to their rc settings
cmap is a colors.Colormap instance norm is a colors.Normalize instance to map luminance to 0-1
extent is data axes (left, right, bottom, top) for making image plots registered with data plots. Default is to label the pixel centers with the zero-based row and column indices.
Additional kwargs are matplotlib.artist properties
get_cursor_data
(event)¶Get the cursor data for a given event
get_extent
()¶Get the image extent: left, right, bottom, top
get_window_extent
(renderer=None)¶make_image
(renderer, magnification=1.0, unsampled=False)¶set_extent
(extent)¶extent is data axes (left, right, bottom, top) for making image plots
This updates ax.dataLim, and, if autoscaling, sets viewLim to tightly fit the image, regardless of dataLim. Autoscaling state is not changed, so following this with ax.autoscale_view will redo the autoscaling in accord with dataLim.
matplotlib.image.
BboxImage
(bbox, cmap=None, norm=None, interpolation=None, origin=None, filternorm=1, filterrad=4.0, resample=False, interp_at_native=True, **kwargs)¶Bases: matplotlib.image._ImageBase
The Image class whose size is determined by the given bbox.
cmap is a colors.Colormap instance norm is a colors.Normalize instance to map luminance to 0-1
interp_at_native is a flag that determines whether or not interpolation should still be applied when the image is displayed at its native resolution. A common use case for this is when displaying an image for annotational purposes; it is treated similarly to Photoshop (interpolation is only used when displaying the image at non-native resolutions).
kwargs are an optional list of Artist keyword args
contains
(mouseevent)¶Test whether the mouse event occured within the image.
get_transform
()¶get_window_extent
(renderer=None)¶make_image
(renderer, magnification=1.0, unsampled=False)¶matplotlib.image.
FigureImage
(fig, cmap=None, norm=None, offsetx=0, offsety=0, origin=None, **kwargs)¶Bases: matplotlib.image._ImageBase
cmap is a colors.Colormap instance norm is a colors.Normalize instance to map luminance to 0-1
kwargs are an optional list of Artist keyword args
get_extent
()¶Get the image extent: left, right, bottom, top
make_image
(renderer, magnification=1.0, unsampled=False)¶set_data
(A)¶Set the image array.
zorder
= 0¶matplotlib.image.
NonUniformImage
(ax, **kwargs)¶Bases: matplotlib.image.AxesImage
kwargs are identical to those for AxesImage, except that ‘nearest’ and ‘bilinear’ are the only supported ‘interpolation’ options.
get_extent
()¶make_image
(renderer, magnification=1.0, unsampled=False)¶set_array
(*args)¶set_cmap
(cmap)¶set_data
(x, y, A)¶Set the grid for the pixel centers, and the pixel values.
- x and y are monotonic 1-D ndarrays of lengths N and M,
- respectively, specifying pixel centers
- A is an (M,N) ndarray or masked array of values to be
- colormapped, or a (M,N,3) RGB array, or a (M,N,4) RGBA array.
set_filternorm
(s)¶set_filterrad
(s)¶set_interpolation
(s)¶set_norm
(norm)¶matplotlib.image.
PcolorImage
(ax, x=None, y=None, A=None, cmap=None, norm=None, **kwargs)¶Bases: matplotlib.image.AxesImage
Make a pcolor-style plot with an irregular rectangular grid.
This uses a variation of the original irregular image code, and it is used by pcolorfast for the corresponding grid type.
cmap defaults to its rc setting
cmap is a colors.Colormap instance norm is a colors.Normalize instance to map luminance to 0-1
Additional kwargs are matplotlib.artist properties
get_cursor_data
(event)¶Get the cursor data for a given event
make_image
(renderer, magnification=1.0, unsampled=False)¶set_array
(*args)¶set_data
(x, y, A)¶Set the grid for the rectangle boundaries, and the data values.
- x and y are monotonic 1-D ndarrays of lengths N+1 and M+1,
- respectively, specifying rectangle boundaries. If None, they will be created as uniform arrays from 0 through N and 0 through M, respectively.
- A is an (M,N) ndarray or masked array of values to be
- colormapped, or a (M,N,3) RGB array, or a (M,N,4) RGBA array.
matplotlib.image.
composite_images
(images, renderer, magnification=1.0)¶Composite a number of RGBA images into one. The images are
composited in the order in which they appear in the images
list.
Parameters: | images : list of Images
renderer : RendererBase instance magnification : float
|
---|---|
Returns: | tuple : image, offset_x, offset_y
|
matplotlib.image.
imread
(fname, format=None)¶Read an image from a file into an array.
fname may be a string path, a valid URL, or a Python file-like object. If using a file object, it must be opened in binary mode.
If format is provided, will try to read file of that type, otherwise the format is deduced from the filename. If nothing can be deduced, PNG is tried.
Return value is a numpy.array
. For grayscale images, the
return array is MxN. For RGB images, the return value is MxNx3.
For RGBA images the return value is MxNx4.
matplotlib can only read PNGs natively, but if PIL is installed, it will
use it to load the image and return an array (if possible) which
can be used with imshow()
. Note, URL strings
may not be compatible with PIL. Check the PIL documentation for more
information.
matplotlib.image.
imsave
(fname, arr, vmin=None, vmax=None, cmap=None, format=None, origin=None, dpi=100)¶Save an array as in image file.
The output formats available depend on the backend being used.
matplotlib.image.
pil_to_array
(pilImage)¶Load a PIL image and return it as a numpy array. For grayscale images, the return array is MxN. For RGB images, the return value is MxNx3. For RGBA images the return value is MxNx4
matplotlib.image.
thumbnail
(infile, thumbfile, scale=0.1, interpolation='bilinear', preview=False)¶make a thumbnail of image in infile with output filename thumbfile.
- infile the image file – must be PNG or Pillow-readable if you
- have Pillow installed
- thumbfile
- the thumbnail filename
- scale
- the scale factor for the thumbnail
- interpolation
- the interpolation scheme used in the resampling
- preview
- if True, the default backend (presumably a user interface backend) will be used which will cause a figure to be raised if
show()
is called. If it is False, a pure image backend will be used depending on the extension, ‘png’->FigureCanvasAgg, ‘pdf’->FigureCanvasPdf, ‘svg’->FigureCanvasSVG
See examples/misc/image_thumbnail.py.
misc example code: image_thumbnail.pyReturn value is the figure instance containing the thumbnail