| | """ |
| | .. _custom_scale: |
| | |
| | ============ |
| | Custom scale |
| | ============ |
| | |
| | Create a custom scale, by implementing the scaling use for latitude data in a |
| | Mercator Projection. |
| | |
| | Unless you are making special use of the `.Transform` class, you probably |
| | don't need to use this verbose method, and instead can use `~.scale.FuncScale` |
| | and the ``'function'`` option of `~.Axes.set_xscale` and `~.Axes.set_yscale`. |
| | See the last example in :doc:`/gallery/scales/scales`. |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | import numpy as np |
| | from numpy import ma |
| |
|
| | from matplotlib import scale as mscale |
| | from matplotlib import transforms as mtransforms |
| | from matplotlib.ticker import FixedLocator, FuncFormatter |
| |
|
| |
|
| | class MercatorLatitudeScale(mscale.ScaleBase): |
| | """ |
| | Scales data in range -pi/2 to pi/2 (-90 to 90 degrees) using |
| | the system used to scale latitudes in a Mercator__ projection. |
| | |
| | The scale function: |
| | ln(tan(y) + sec(y)) |
| | |
| | The inverse scale function: |
| | atan(sinh(y)) |
| | |
| | Since the Mercator scale tends to infinity at +/- 90 degrees, |
| | there is user-defined threshold, above and below which nothing |
| | will be plotted. This defaults to +/- 85 degrees. |
| | |
| | __ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercator_projection |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | name = 'mercator' |
| |
|
| | def __init__(self, axis, *, thresh=np.deg2rad(85), **kwargs): |
| | """ |
| | Any keyword arguments passed to ``set_xscale`` and ``set_yscale`` will |
| | be passed along to the scale's constructor. |
| | |
| | thresh: The degree above which to crop the data. |
| | """ |
| | super().__init__(axis) |
| | if thresh >= np.pi / 2: |
| | raise ValueError("thresh must be less than pi/2") |
| | self.thresh = thresh |
| |
|
| | def get_transform(self): |
| | """ |
| | Override this method to return a new instance that does the |
| | actual transformation of the data. |
| | |
| | The MercatorLatitudeTransform class is defined below as a |
| | nested class of this one. |
| | """ |
| | return self.MercatorLatitudeTransform(self.thresh) |
| |
|
| | def set_default_locators_and_formatters(self, axis): |
| | """ |
| | Override to set up the locators and formatters to use with the |
| | scale. This is only required if the scale requires custom |
| | locators and formatters. Writing custom locators and |
| | formatters is rather outside the scope of this example, but |
| | there are many helpful examples in :mod:`.ticker`. |
| | |
| | In our case, the Mercator example uses a fixed locator from -90 to 90 |
| | degrees and a custom formatter to convert the radians to degrees and |
| | put a degree symbol after the value. |
| | """ |
| | fmt = FuncFormatter( |
| | lambda x, pos=None: f"{np.degrees(x):.0f}\N{DEGREE SIGN}") |
| | axis.set(major_locator=FixedLocator(np.radians(range(-90, 90, 10))), |
| | major_formatter=fmt, minor_formatter=fmt) |
| |
|
| | def limit_range_for_scale(self, vmin, vmax, minpos): |
| | """ |
| | Override to limit the bounds of the axis to the domain of the |
| | transform. In the case of Mercator, the bounds should be |
| | limited to the threshold that was passed in. Unlike the |
| | autoscaling provided by the tick locators, this range limiting |
| | will always be adhered to, whether the axis range is set |
| | manually, determined automatically or changed through panning |
| | and zooming. |
| | """ |
| | return max(vmin, -self.thresh), min(vmax, self.thresh) |
| |
|
| | class MercatorLatitudeTransform(mtransforms.Transform): |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | |
| | input_dims = output_dims = 1 |
| |
|
| | def __init__(self, thresh): |
| | mtransforms.Transform.__init__(self) |
| | self.thresh = thresh |
| |
|
| | def transform_non_affine(self, a): |
| | """ |
| | This transform takes a numpy array and returns a transformed copy. |
| | Since the range of the Mercator scale is limited by the |
| | user-specified threshold, the input array must be masked to |
| | contain only valid values. Matplotlib will handle masked arrays |
| | and remove the out-of-range data from the plot. However, the |
| | returned array *must* have the same shape as the input array, since |
| | these values need to remain synchronized with values in the other |
| | dimension. |
| | """ |
| | masked = ma.masked_where((a < -self.thresh) | (a > self.thresh), a) |
| | if masked.mask.any(): |
| | return ma.log(np.abs(ma.tan(masked) + 1 / ma.cos(masked))) |
| | else: |
| | return np.log(np.abs(np.tan(a) + 1 / np.cos(a))) |
| |
|
| | def inverted(self): |
| | """ |
| | Override this method so Matplotlib knows how to get the |
| | inverse transform for this transform. |
| | """ |
| | return MercatorLatitudeScale.InvertedMercatorLatitudeTransform( |
| | self.thresh) |
| |
|
| | class InvertedMercatorLatitudeTransform(mtransforms.Transform): |
| | input_dims = output_dims = 1 |
| |
|
| | def __init__(self, thresh): |
| | mtransforms.Transform.__init__(self) |
| | self.thresh = thresh |
| |
|
| | def transform_non_affine(self, a): |
| | return np.arctan(np.sinh(a)) |
| |
|
| | def inverted(self): |
| | return MercatorLatitudeScale.MercatorLatitudeTransform(self.thresh) |
| |
|
| |
|
| | |
| | |
| | mscale.register_scale(MercatorLatitudeScale) |
| |
|
| |
|
| | if __name__ == '__main__': |
| | import matplotlib.pyplot as plt |
| |
|
| | t = np.arange(-180.0, 180.0, 0.1) |
| | s = np.radians(t)/2. |
| |
|
| | plt.plot(t, s, '-', lw=2) |
| | plt.yscale('mercator') |
| |
|
| | plt.xlabel('Longitude') |
| | plt.ylabel('Latitude') |
| | plt.title('Mercator projection') |
| | plt.grid(True) |
| |
|
| | plt.show() |
| |
|