Reputation: 73
Example array:
a=np.array([1,2,3,4,4,4,2,1,1,1,1])
I want to create a histogram from the array, and if I use matplotlib.pyplot's histogram:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.hist(a,bins=[1,2,3,4,5])
I get this:
How do I get the columns in different colors? and how do i get labels, like if a green column the legend shows number 1 is green.
I suspect I might create four different datasets, but that I can't get to work..
Upvotes: 3
Views: 29353
Reputation: 90889
Instead of directly calling plt.hist
, try using subplot
and plot a histogram inside that , like this -
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
# define window size, output and axes
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=[8,6])
# set plot title
ax.set_title("Some title")
# set x-axis name
ax.set_xlabel("X-Label")
# set y-axis name
ax.set_ylabel("Y-Label")
# create histogram within output
N, bins, patches = ax.hist(data, bins=50, color="#777777") #initial color of all bins
# Iterate through all histogram elements
# each element in this interation is one patch on the histogram, where:
# - bin_size - number of records in current bin
# - bin - value of current bin (x-axis)
# - patch - a rectangle, object of class matplotlib.patches.Patch
# more details on patch properties: [visit this link][1]
for bin_size, bin, patch in zip(N, bins, patches):
if bin_size == <some number>:
patch.set_facecolor("<some color like #FF000>")
patch.set_label("something")
plt.show()
Upvotes: 3