import matplotlib.pyplot as plt # Import the matplotlib modulefrom matplotlib import style # Optionally you dont need to use style
style.use('ggplot')# Just for style
x =[10,20,30,40,50]# Get points to plot on graph
plt.plot(x)# We want to plot x on our graph
plt.show()
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
# Simple data to display in various forms
x = np.linspace(0,2* np.pi,400)
y = np.sin(x **2)
fig, axarr = plt.subplots(2,2)
fig.suptitle("This Main Title is Nicely Formatted", fontsize=16)
axarr[0,0].plot(x, y)
axarr[0,0].set_title('Axis [0,0] Subtitle')
axarr[0,1].scatter(x, y)
axarr[0,1].set_title('Axis [0,1] Subtitle')
axarr[1,0].plot(x, y **2)
axarr[1,0].set_title('Axis [1,0] Subtitle')
axarr[1,1].scatter(x, y **2)
axarr[1,1].set_title('Axis [1,1] Subtitle')# Fine-tune figure;# hide x ticks for top plots and y ticks for right plots
plt.setp([a.get_xticklabels()for a in axarr[0,:]], visible=False)
plt.setp([a.get_yticklabels()for a in axarr[:,1]], visible=False)# Tight layout often produces nice results# but requires the title to be spaced accordingly
fig.tight_layout()
fig.subplots_adjust(top=0.88)
plt.show()
# importing matplotlib modulefrom matplotlib import pyplot as plt
# Plotting to our canvas
plt.plot([1,2,3],[4,5,1])# Showing what we plotted
plt.show()