| .. redirect-from:: /users/explain/backends |
|
|
| .. _backends: |
|
|
| ======== |
| Backends |
| ======== |
|
|
| .. _what-is-a-backend: |
|
|
| What is a backend? |
| |
|
|
| A lot of documentation on the website and in the mailing lists refers |
| to the "backend" and many new users are confused by this term. |
| Matplotlib targets many different use cases and output formats. Some |
| people use Matplotlib interactively from the Python shell and have |
| plotting windows pop up when they type commands. Some people run |
| `Jupyter <https://jupyter.org>`_ notebooks and draw inline plots for |
| quick data analysis. Others embed Matplotlib into graphical user |
| interfaces like PyQt or PyGObject to build rich applications. Some |
| people use Matplotlib in batch scripts to generate postscript images |
| from numerical simulations, and still others run web application |
| servers to dynamically serve up graphs. |
|
|
| To support all of these use cases, Matplotlib can target different |
| outputs, and each of these capabilities is called a backend; the |
| "frontend" is the user facing code, i.e., the plotting code, whereas the |
| "backend" does all the hard work behind-the-scenes to make the figure. |
| There are two types of backends: user interface backends (for use in |
| PyQt/PySide, PyGObject, Tkinter, wxPython, or macOS/Cocoa); also referred to |
| as "interactive backends") and hardcopy backends to make image files |
| (PNG, SVG, PDF, PS; also referred to as "non-interactive backends"). |
|
|
| Selecting a backend |
| |
|
|
| There are three ways to configure your backend: |
|
|
| - The :rc:`backend` parameter in your :file:`matplotlibrc` file |
| - The :envvar:`MPLBACKEND` environment variable |
| - The function :func:`matplotlib.use` |
|
|
| Below is a more detailed description. |
|
|
| If there is more than one configuration present, the last one from the |
| list takes precedence; e.g. calling :func:`matplotlib.use()` will override |
| the setting in your :file:`matplotlibrc`. |
|
|
| Without a backend explicitly set, Matplotlib automatically detects a usable |
| backend based on what is available on your system and on whether a GUI event |
| loop is already running. The first usable backend in the following list is |
| selected: MacOSX, QtAgg, GTK4Agg, Gtk3Agg, TkAgg, WxAgg, Agg. The last, Agg, |
| is a non-interactive backend that can only write to files. It is used on |
| Linux, if Matplotlib cannot connect to either an X display or a Wayland |
| display. |
|
|
| Here is a detailed description of the configuration methods: |
|
|
| #. Setting :rc:`backend` in your :file:`matplotlibrc` file:: |
|
|
| backend : qtagg # use pyqt with antigrain (agg) rendering |
|
|
| See also :ref:`customizing`. |
|
|
| #. Setting the :envvar:`MPLBACKEND` environment variable: |
|
|
| You can set the environment variable either for your current shell or for |
| a single script. |
|
|
| On Unix:: |
|
|
| > export MPLBACKEND=qtagg |
| > python simple_plot.py |
|
|
| > MPLBACKEND=qtagg python simple_plot.py |
|
|
| On Windows, only the former is possible:: |
|
|
| > set MPLBACKEND=qtagg |
| > python simple_plot.py |
|
|
| Setting this environment variable will override the ``backend`` parameter |
| in *any* :file:`matplotlibrc`, even if there is a :file:`matplotlibrc` in |
| your current working directory. Therefore, setting :envvar:`MPLBACKEND` |
| globally, e.g. in your :file:`.bashrc` or :file:`.profile`, is discouraged |
| as it might lead to counter-intuitive behavior. |
|
|
| #. If your script depends on a specific backend you can use the function |
| :func:`matplotlib.use`:: |
|
|
| import matplotlib |
| matplotlib.use('qtagg') |
|
|
| This should be done before any figure is created, otherwise Matplotlib may |
| fail to switch the backend and raise an ImportError. |
|
|
| Using `~matplotlib.use` will require changes in your code if users want to |
| use a different backend. Therefore, you should avoid explicitly calling |
| `~matplotlib.use` unless absolutely necessary. |
|
|
| .. _the-builtin-backends: |
|
|
| The builtin backends |
| |
|
|
| By default, Matplotlib should automatically select a default backend which |
| allows both interactive work and plotting from scripts, with output to the |
| screen and/or to a file, so at least initially, you will not need to worry |
| about the backend. The most common exception is if your Python distribution |
| comes without :mod:`tkinter` and you have no other GUI toolkit installed. |
| This happens with certain Linux distributions, where you need to install a |
| Linux package named ``python-tk`` (or similar). |
|
|
| If, however, you want to write graphical user interfaces, or a web |
| application server |
| (:doc:`/gallery/user_interfaces/web_application_server_sgskip`), or need a |
| better understanding of what is going on, read on. To make things easily |
| more customizable for graphical user interfaces, Matplotlib separates |
| the concept of the renderer (the thing that actually does the drawing) |
| from the canvas (the place where the drawing goes). The canonical |
| renderer for user interfaces is ``Agg`` which uses the `Anti-Grain |
| Geometry`_ C++ library to make a raster (pixel) image of the figure; it |
| is used by the ``QtAgg``, ``GTK4Agg``, ``GTK3Agg``, ``wxAgg``, ``TkAgg``, and |
| ``macosx`` backends. An alternative renderer is based on the Cairo library, |
| used by ``QtCairo``, etc. |
|
|
| For the rendering engines, users can also distinguish between `vector |
| <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_graphics>`_ or `raster |
| <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raster_graphics>`_ renderers. Vector |
| graphics languages issue drawing commands like "draw a line from this |
| point to this point" and hence are scale free. Raster backends |
| generate a pixel representation of the line whose accuracy depends on a |
| DPI setting. |
|
|
| Static backends |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
| Here is a summary of the Matplotlib renderers (there is an eponymous |
| backend for each; these are *non-interactive backends*, capable of |
| writing to a file): |
|
|
| ======== ========= ======================================================= |
| Renderer Filetypes Description |
| ======== ========= ======================================================= |
| AGG png raster_ graphics |
| `Anti-Grain Geometry`_ engine. |
| PDF pdf vector_ graphics |
| PS ps, eps vector_ graphics |
| SVG svg vector_ graphics |
| PGF pgf, pdf vector_ graphics |
| Cairo png, ps, raster_ or vector_ graphics |
| pdf, svg (requires pycairo_ or cairocffi_). |
| ======== ========= ======================================================= |
|
|
| To save plots using the non-interactive backends, use the |
| ``matplotlib.pyplot.savefig('filename')`` method. |
|
|
|
|
| Interactive backends |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
| These are the user interfaces and renderer combinations supported; |
| these are *interactive backends*, capable of displaying to the screen |
| and using appropriate renderers from the table above to write to |
| a file: |
|
|
| ========= ================================================================ |
| Backend Description |
| ========= ================================================================ |
| QtAgg Agg rendering in a Qt_ canvas (requires PyQt_ or `Qt for Python`_, |
| a.k.a. PySide). This backend can be activated in IPython with |
| ``%matplotlib qt``. The Qt binding can be selected via the |
| :envvar:`QT_API` environment variable; see :ref:`QT_bindings` for |
| more details. |
| ipympl Agg rendering embedded in a Jupyter widget (requires ipympl_). |
| This backend can be enabled in a Jupyter notebook with |
| ``%matplotlib ipympl``. |
| GTK3Agg Agg rendering to a GTK_ 3.x canvas (requires PyGObject_ and |
| pycairo_). This backend can be activated in IPython with |
| ``%matplotlib gtk3``. |
| GTK4Agg Agg rendering to a GTK_ 4.x canvas (requires PyGObject_ and |
| pycairo_). This backend can be activated in IPython with |
| ``%matplotlib gtk4``. |
| macosx Agg rendering into a Cocoa canvas in OSX. This backend can be |
| activated in IPython with ``%matplotlib osx``. |
| TkAgg Agg rendering to a Tk_ canvas (requires TkInter_). This |
| backend can be activated in IPython with ``%matplotlib tk``. |
| nbAgg Embed an interactive figure in a Jupyter classic notebook. This |
| backend can be enabled in Jupyter notebooks via |
| ``%matplotlib notebook``. |
| WebAgg On ``show()`` will start a tornado server with an interactive |
| figure. |
| GTK3Cairo Cairo rendering to a GTK_ 3.x canvas (requires PyGObject_ and |
| pycairo_). |
| GTK4Cairo Cairo rendering to a GTK_ 4.x canvas (requires PyGObject_ and |
| pycairo_). |
| wxAgg Agg rendering to a wxWidgets_ canvas (requires wxPython_ 4). |
| This backend can be activated in IPython with ``%matplotlib wx``. |
| ========= ================================================================ |
|
|
| .. note:: |
| The names of builtin backends case-insensitive; e.g., 'QtAgg' and |
| 'qtagg' are equivalent. |
|
|
| .. _`Anti-Grain Geometry`: http://agg.sourceforge.net/antigrain.com/ |
| .. _`Portable Document Format`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portable_Document_Format |
| .. _Postscript: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PostScript |
| .. _`Scalable Vector Graphics`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalable_Vector_Graphics |
| .. _pgf: https://ctan.org/pkg/pgf |
| .. _Cairo: https://www.cairographics.org |
| .. _PyGObject: https://wiki.gnome.org/action/show/Projects/PyGObject |
| .. _pycairo: https://www.cairographics.org/pycairo/ |
| .. _cairocffi: https://pythonhosted.org/cairocffi/ |
| .. _wxPython: https://www.wxpython.org/ |
| .. _TkInter: https://docs.python.org/3/library/tk.html |
| .. _PyQt: https://riverbankcomputing.com/software/pyqt/intro |
| .. _`Qt for Python`: https://doc.qt.io/qtforpython/ |
| .. _Qt: https://qt.io/ |
| .. _GTK: https://www.gtk.org/ |
| .. _Tk: https://www.tcl.tk/ |
| .. _wxWidgets: https://www.wxwidgets.org/ |
| .. _ipympl: https://www.matplotlib.org/ipympl |
|
|
| ipympl |
| ^^^^^^ |
|
|
| The Jupyter widget ecosystem is moving too fast to support directly in |
| Matplotlib. To install ipympl: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: bash |
|
|
| pip install ipympl |
|
|
| or |
|
|
| .. code-block:: bash |
|
|
| conda install ipympl -c conda-forge |
|
|
| See `installing ipympl <https://matplotlib.org/ipympl/installing.html>`__ for more details. |
|
|
| Using non-builtin backends |
| |
| More generally, any importable backend can be selected by using any of the |
| methods above. If ``name.of.the.backend`` is the module containing the |
| backend, use ``module://name.of.the.backend`` as the backend name, e.g. |
| ``matplotlib.use('module://name.of.the.backend')``. |
|
|
| Information for backend implementers is available at :ref:`writing_backend_interface`. |
|
|