75👍
✅
Edit:
Having seen actual data from the OP, all of the values are at the same date/time. So matplotlib is automatically zooming the x-axis out. You can still manually set the x-axis limits with datetime
objects
If I do something like this on matplotlib v1.3.1:
import datetime
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
x = [datetime.date(2014, 1, 29)] * 3
y = [2, 4, 1]
fig, ax = plt.subplots()
ax.plot_date(x, y, markerfacecolor='CornflowerBlue', markeredgecolor='white')
fig.autofmt_xdate()
ax.set_xlim([datetime.date(2014, 1, 26), datetime.date(2014, 2, 1)])
ax.set_ylim([0, 5])
I get:
And the axes limits match the dates that I specified.
11👍
With help from Paul H’s solution, I was able to change the range of my time-based x-axis.
Here is a more general solution for other beginners.
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import datetime as dt
import matplotlib.dates as mdates
# Set X range. Using left and right variables makes it easy to change the range.
#
left = dt.date(2020, 3, 15)
right = dt.date(2020, 7, 15)
# Create scatter plot of Positive Cases
#
plt.scatter(
x, y, c="blue", edgecolor="black",
linewidths=1, marker = "o", alpha = 0.8, label="Total Positive Tested"
)
# Format the date into months & days
plt.gca().xaxis.set_major_formatter(mdates.DateFormatter('%m-%d'))
# Change the tick interval
plt.gca().xaxis.set_major_locator(mdates.DayLocator(interval=30))
# Puts x-axis labels on an angle
plt.gca().xaxis.set_tick_params(rotation = 30)
# Changes x-axis range
plt.gca().set_xbound(left, right)
plt.show()
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Source:stackexchange.com