When I try to input my own ticker...
In an earlier cell...
ticker = FixedTicker(ticks=range(0, 10))
In the following cell...
%%opts HeatMap [colorbar=True colorbar_opts={'ticker': ticker}]
I get...
TypeError [Call holoviews.ipython.show_traceback() for details]
MetaModel object got multiple values for keyword argument 'ticker'
Here's the traceback...
File "/Users/ahuang11/anaconda3/envs/tf/lib/python3.6/site-packages/holoviews/plotting/bokeh/element.py", line 757, in _init_glyphs
renderer, glyph = self._init_glyph(plot, mapping, properties)
File "/Users/ahuang11/anaconda3/envs/tf/lib/python3.6/site-packages/holoviews/plotting/bokeh/element.py", line 1201, in _init_glyph
self._draw_colorbar(plot, self.handles['color_mapper'])
File "/Users/ahuang11/anaconda3/envs/tf/lib/python3.6/site-packages/holoviews/plotting/bokeh/element.py", line 1100, in _draw_colorbar
**dict(opts, **self.colorbar_opts))
TypeError: MetaModel object got multiple values for keyword argument 'ticker'
The color range and all other ranges can be set on the
Dimension
objects of HoloViews Elements. When you declare aHeatMap
three (or more) dimensions are created. The first two are the key dimensions (kdims
) corresponding to the x- and y-axis of the HeatMap. Secondly there are two or more value dimensions (vdims
) the first of which is mapped to the color range. Dimension ranges can be explicitly declared when constructing the object. Here we set the color of the 'z' Dimension, which should be the name of whatever column you are plotting:You can also use the
redim
interface to override the range after the fact. This will also work when you have a collection of objects, as it will set the range recursively on all objects which contain that dimension and return a new object. That looks something like this: