| .. _toolkit_mplot3d-view-angles: | |
| ******************* | |
| mplot3d View Angles | |
| ******************* | |
| How to define the view angle | |
| ============================ | |
| The position of the viewport "camera" in a 3D plot is defined by three angles: | |
| *elevation*, *azimuth*, and *roll*. From the resulting position, it always | |
| points towards the center of the plot box volume. The angle direction is a | |
| common convention, and is shared with | |
| `PyVista <https://docs.pyvista.org/api/core/camera.html>`_ and | |
| `MATLAB <https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/view.html>`_ | |
| (though MATLAB lacks a roll angle). Note that a positive roll angle rotates the | |
| viewing plane clockwise, so the 3d axes will appear to rotate | |
| counter-clockwise. | |
| .. image:: /_static/mplot3d_view_angles.png | |
| :align: center | |
| :scale: 50 | |
| Rotating the plot using the mouse will control only the azimuth and elevation, | |
| but all three angles can be set programmatically:: | |
| import matplotlib.pyplot as plt | |
| ax = plt.figure().add_subplot(projection='3d') | |
| ax.view_init(elev=30, azim=45, roll=15) | |
| Primary view planes | |
| =================== | |
| To look directly at the primary view planes, the required elevation, azimuth, | |
| and roll angles are shown in the diagram of an "unfolded" plot below. These are | |
| further documented in the `.mplot3d.axes3d.Axes3D.view_init` API. | |
| .. plot:: gallery/mplot3d/view_planes_3d.py | |
| :align: center | |