I strongly prefer using matplotlib
in OOP style:
f, axarr = plt.subplots(2, sharex=True)
axarr[0].plot(...)
axarr[1].plot(...)
This makes it easier to keep track of multiple figures and subplots.
Question: How to use seaborn this way? Or, how to change this example to OOP style? How to tell seaborn
plotting functions like lmplot
which Figure
or Axes
it plots to?
It depends a bit on which seaborn function you are using.
The plotting functions in seaborn are broadly divided into two classes
- \"Axes-level\" functions, including
regplot
, boxplot
, kdeplot
, and many others
- \"Figure-level\" functions, including
lmplot
, factorplot
, jointplot
and one or two others
The first group is identified by taking an explicit ax
argument and returning an Axes
object. As this suggests, you can use them in an \"object oriented\" style by passing your Axes
to them:
f, (ax1, ax2) = plt.subplots(2)
sns.regplot(x, y, ax=ax1)
sns.kdeplot(x, ax=ax2)
Axes-level functions will only draw onto an Axes
and won\'t otherwise mess with the figure, so they can coexist perfectly happily in an object-oriented matplotlib script.
The second group of functions (Figure-level) are distinguished by the fact that the resulting plot can potentially include several Axes which are always organized in a \"meaningful\" way. That means that the functions need to have total control over the figure, so it isn\'t possible to plot, say, an lmplot
onto one that already exists. Calling the function always initializes a figure and sets it up for the specific plot it\'s drawing.
However, once you\'ve called lmplot
, it will return an object of the type FacetGrid
. This object has some methods for operating on the resulting plot that know a bit about the structure of the plot. It also exposes the underlying figure and array of axes at the FacetGrid.fig
and FacetGrid.axes
arguments. The jointplot
function is very similar, but it uses a JointGrid
object. So you can still use these functions in an object-oriented context, but all of your customization has to come after you\'ve called the function.