user3125347
user3125347

Reputation:

matplotlib: AttributeError: 'AxesSubplot' object has no attribute 'add_axes'

Not sure exactly sure how to fix the following attribute error:

AttributeError: 'AxesSubplot' object has no attribute 'add_axes'

The offending problem seems to be linked to the way I have set up my plot:

gridspec_layout = gridspec.GridSpec(3,3)
pyplot_2 = fig.add_subplot(gridspec_layout[2])

ax = WCSAxes(fig, [0.1, 0.1, 0.8, 0.8], wcs=wcs)
pyplot_2.add_axes(ax)

Does anybody know how to solve this? Many thanks.

Upvotes: 35

Views: 233964

Answers (5)

coldestlin
coldestlin

Reputation: 73

Just downgrading matplotlib to an old version would help. I downgraded it to 1.4.0 and it fixed the problem.

Upvotes: -6

pyan
pyan

Reputation: 3707

I encountered this same error several days ago on both a Macbook and a Lenovo laptop. I used Anaconda for my python installation on both computers.

This is a problem with the Matplotlib package management. So the solution for me was to remove Matplotlib and reinstall it. Then the error is gone.

Upvotes: 0

alh
alh

Reputation: 71

I did a conda update pandas and the error went away. Nothing else I could find worked.

Mine was a slightly different flavor of this error (not 'add_axes'). It happened when I was trying to use pandas.DataFrame.plot within matplotlib subplots.

I was on pandas 0.25.3 before and after, and a number of packages were upgraded/downgraded.

Upvotes: 1

The Puternerd
The Puternerd

Reputation: 642

You now need to use set_prop_cycle i.e. ax.set_prop_cycle(color=['red', 'green', 'blue'])

Axes.set_color_cycle(clist) was depreciated since, version 1.5.

https://matplotlib.org/3.1.0/api/_as_gen/matplotlib.axes.Axes.set_prop_cycle.html

Upvotes: 6

ljetibo
ljetibo

Reputation: 3094

There's not much details to go on in your question but I'll wager a guess. The error is pretty self-explanatory. You can't add_axes to pyplot_2 because pyplot_2 is a matplotlib.axes.AxesSubplot object and they don't have an add_axes method defined.

Only matplotlib.figure.Figure objects have add_axes method defined on them.

From what I got from a short browse through the WCSAxes official documentation their recommended approach would be:

wcs = astropy.wcs.WCS(....)
fig = matplotlib.pyplot.figure()
pyplot_2 = fig.add_subplot(gridspec_layout[2], projection=wcs)

Upvotes: 5

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