| | .. redirect-from:: /devel/documenting_mpl |
| |
|
| | .. _documenting-matplotlib: |
| |
|
| | =================== |
| | Write documentation |
| | =================== |
| |
|
| | Getting started |
| | =============== |
| |
|
| | General file structure |
| | ---------------------- |
| |
|
| | All documentation is built from the :file:`doc/`. The :file:`doc/` |
| | directory contains configuration files for Sphinx and reStructuredText |
| | (ReST_; ``.rst``) files that are rendered to documentation pages. |
| |
|
| | Documentation is created in three ways. First, API documentation |
| | (:file:`doc/api`) is created by Sphinx_ from |
| | the docstrings of the classes in the Matplotlib library. Except for |
| | :file:`doc/api/api_changes/`, ``.rst`` files in :file:`doc/api` are created |
| | when the documentation is built. See :ref:`writing-docstrings` below. |
| |
|
| | Second, our example pages, tutorials, and some of the narrative documentation |
| | are created by `Sphinx Gallery`_. Sphinx Gallery converts example Python files |
| | to ``*.rst`` files with the result of Matplotlib plot calls as embedded images. |
| | See :ref:`writing-examples-and-tutorials` below. |
| |
|
| | Third, Matplotlib has narrative docs written in ReST_ in subdirectories of |
| | :file:`doc/users/`. If you would like to add new documentation that is suited |
| | to an ``.rst`` file rather than a gallery or tutorial example, choose an |
| | appropriate subdirectory to put it in, and add the file to the table of |
| | contents of :file:`index.rst` of the subdirectory. See |
| | :ref:`writing-rest-pages` below. |
| |
|
| | .. note:: |
| |
|
| | Don't directly edit the ``.rst`` files in :file:`doc/plot_types`, |
| | :file:`doc/gallery`, :file:`doc/tutorials`, and :file:`doc/api` |
| | (excepting :file:`doc/api/api_changes/`). Sphinx_ regenerates |
| | files in these directories when building documentation. |
| |
|
| | Set up the build |
| | ---------------- |
| |
|
| | The documentation for Matplotlib is generated from reStructuredText (ReST_) |
| | using the Sphinx_ documentation generation tool. |
| |
|
| | To build the documentation you will need to |
| | :ref:`set up Matplotlib for development <installing_for_devs>`. Note in |
| | particular the :ref:`additional dependencies <doc-dependencies>` required to |
| | build the documentation. |
| |
|
| | Build the docs |
| | -------------- |
| |
|
| | The documentation sources are found in the :file:`doc/` directory. |
| | The configuration file for Sphinx is :file:`doc/conf.py`. It controls which |
| | directories Sphinx parses, how the docs are built, and how the extensions are |
| | used. To build the documentation in html format, cd into :file:`doc/` and run: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: sh |
| |
|
| | make html |
| |
|
| | Other useful invocations include |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: sh |
| |
|
| | # Build the html documentation, but skip generation of the gallery images to |
| | # save time. |
| | make html-noplot |
| |
|
| | # Build the html documentation, but skip specific subdirectories. If a gallery |
| | # directory is skipped, the gallery images are not generated. The first |
| | # time this is run, it creates ``.mpl_skip_subdirs.yaml`` which can be edited |
| | # to add or remove subdirectories |
| | make html-skip-subdirs |
| |
|
| | # Delete built files. May help if you get errors about missing paths or |
| | # broken links. |
| | make clean |
| |
|
| | # Build pdf docs. |
| | make latexpdf |
| |
|
| | The ``SPHINXOPTS`` variable is set to ``-W --keep-going`` by default to build |
| | the complete docs but exit with exit status 1 if there are warnings. To unset |
| | it, use |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: sh |
| |
|
| | make SPHINXOPTS= html |
| |
|
| | You can use the ``O`` variable to set additional options: |
| |
|
| | * ``make O=-j4 html`` runs a parallel build with 4 processes. |
| | * ``make O=-Dplot_formats=png:100 html`` saves figures in low resolution. |
| |
|
| | Multiple options can be combined, e.g. ``make O='-j4 -Dplot_formats=png:100' |
| | html``. |
| | |
| | On Windows, set the options as environment variables, e.g.: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: bat |
| |
|
| | set SPHINXOPTS= & set O=-j4 -Dplot_formats=png:100 & make html |
| |
|
| | Show locally built docs |
| | ----------------------- |
| |
|
| | The built docs are available in the folder :file:`build/html`. A shortcut |
| | for opening them in your default browser is: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: sh |
| |
|
| | make show |
| |
|
| | .. _writing-rest-pages: |
| |
|
| | Write ReST pages |
| | ================ |
| |
|
| | Most documentation is either in the docstrings of individual |
| | classes and methods, in explicit ``.rst`` files, or in examples and tutorials. |
| | All of these use the ReST_ syntax and are processed by Sphinx_. |
| |
|
| | The `Sphinx reStructuredText Primer |
| | <https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/basics.html>`_ is |
| | a good introduction into using ReST. More complete information is available in |
| | the `reStructuredText reference documentation |
| | <https://docutils.sourceforge.io/rst.html#reference-documentation>`_. |
| |
|
| | This section contains additional information and conventions how ReST is used |
| | in the Matplotlib documentation. |
| |
|
| | Formatting and style conventions |
| | -------------------------------- |
| |
|
| | It is useful to strive for consistency in the Matplotlib documentation. Here |
| | are some formatting and style conventions that are used. |
| |
|
| | Section formatting |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
|
| | Use `sentence case <https://apastyle.apa.org/style-grammar-guidelines/capitalization/sentence-case>`__ |
| | ``Upper lower`` for section titles, e.g., ``Possible hangups`` rather than |
| | ``Possible Hangups``. |
| |
|
| | We aim to follow the recommendations from the |
| | `Python documentation <https://devguide.python.org/documenting/#sections>`_ |
| | and the `Sphinx reStructuredText documentation <https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/basics.html#sections>`_ |
| | for section markup characters, i.e.: |
| |
|
| | - ``#`` with overline, for parts. This is reserved for the main title in |
| | ``index.rst``. All other pages should start with "chapter" or lower. |
| | - ``*`` with overline, for chapters |
| | - ``=``, for sections |
| | - ``-``, for subsections |
| | - ``^``, for subsubsections |
| | - ``"``, for paragraphs |
| |
|
| | This may not yet be applied consistently in existing docs. |
| |
|
| | Function arguments |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
|
| | Function arguments and keywords within docstrings should be referred to using |
| | the ``*emphasis*`` role. This will keep Matplotlib's documentation consistent |
| | with Python's documentation: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | Here is a description of *argument* |
| |
|
| | Do not use the ```default role```: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | Do not describe `argument` like this. As per the next section, |
| | this syntax will (unsuccessfully) attempt to resolve the argument as a |
| | link to a class or method in the library. |
| |
|
| | nor the ````literal```` role: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | Do not describe ``argument`` like this. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. _internal-section-refs: |
| |
|
| | Refer to other documents and sections |
| | ------------------------------------- |
| |
|
| | Sphinx_ supports internal references_: |
| |
|
| | ========== =============== =========================================== |
| | Role Links target Representation in rendered HTML |
| | ========== =============== =========================================== |
| | |doc-dir|_ document link to a page |
| | |ref-dir|_ reference label link to an anchor associated with a heading |
| | ========== =============== =========================================== |
| |
|
| | .. The following is a hack to have a link with literal formatting |
| | See https://stackoverflow.com/a/4836544 |
| |
|
| | .. |doc-dir| replace:: ``:doc:`` |
| | .. _doc-dir: https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/roles.html#role-doc |
| | .. |ref-dir| replace:: ``:ref:`` |
| | .. _ref-dir: https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/restructuredtext/roles.html#role-ref |
| |
|
| | Examples: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | See the :doc:`/users/installing/index` |
| |
|
| | See the tutorial :ref:`quick_start` |
| |
|
| | See the example :doc:`/gallery/lines_bars_and_markers/simple_plot` |
| |
|
| | will render as: |
| |
|
| | See the :doc:`/users/installing/index` |
| |
|
| | See the tutorial :ref:`quick_start` |
| |
|
| | See the example :doc:`/gallery/lines_bars_and_markers/simple_plot` |
| |
|
| | Sections can also be given reference labels. For instance from the |
| | :doc:`/users/installing/index` link: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | .. _clean-install: |
| |
|
| | How to completely remove Matplotlib |
| | =================================== |
| |
|
| | Occasionally, problems with Matplotlib can be solved with a clean... |
| |
|
| | and refer to it using the standard reference syntax: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | See :ref:`clean-install` |
| |
|
| | will give the following link: :ref:`clean-install` |
| |
|
| | To maximize internal consistency in section labeling and references, |
| | use hyphen separated, descriptive labels for section references. |
| | Keep in mind that contents may be reorganized later, so |
| | avoid top level names in references like ``user`` or ``devel`` |
| | or ``faq`` unless necessary, because for example the FAQ "what is a |
| | backend?" could later become part of the users guide, so the label: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | .. _what-is-a-backend: |
| |
|
| | is better than: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | .. _faq-backend: |
| |
|
| | In addition, since underscores are widely used by Sphinx itself, use |
| | hyphens to separate words. |
| |
|
| | .. _referring-to-other-code: |
| |
|
| | Refer to other code |
| | ------------------- |
| |
|
| | To link to other methods, classes, or modules in Matplotlib you can use |
| | back ticks, for example: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | `matplotlib.collections.LineCollection` |
| |
|
| | generates a link like this: `matplotlib.collections.LineCollection`. |
| |
|
| | *Note:* We use the sphinx setting ``default_role = 'obj'`` so that you don't |
| | have to use qualifiers like ``:class:``, ``:func:``, ``:meth:`` and the likes. |
| |
|
| | Often, you don't want to show the full package and module name. As long as the |
| | target is unambiguous you can simply leave them out: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | `.LineCollection` |
| |
|
| | and the link still works: `.LineCollection`. |
| |
|
| | If there are multiple code elements with the same name (e.g. ``plot()`` is a |
| | method in multiple classes), you'll have to extend the definition: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | `.pyplot.plot` or `.Axes.plot` |
| |
|
| | These will show up as `.pyplot.plot` or `.Axes.plot`. To still show only the |
| | last segment you can add a tilde as prefix: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | `~.pyplot.plot` or `~.Axes.plot` |
| |
|
| | will render as `~.pyplot.plot` or `~.Axes.plot`. |
| |
|
| | Other packages can also be linked via |
| | `intersphinx <http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/ext/intersphinx.html>`_: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | `numpy.mean` |
| |
|
| | will return this link: `numpy.mean`. This works for Python, Numpy, Scipy, |
| | and Pandas (full list is in :file:`doc/conf.py`). If external linking fails, |
| | you can check the full list of referenceable objects with the following |
| | commands:: |
| | |
| | python -m sphinx.ext.intersphinx 'https://docs.python.org/3/objects.inv' |
| | python -m sphinx.ext.intersphinx 'https://numpy.org/doc/stable/objects.inv' |
| | python -m sphinx.ext.intersphinx 'https://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/objects.inv' |
| | python -m sphinx.ext.intersphinx 'https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/objects.inv' |
| |
|
| | .. _rst-figures-and-includes: |
| |
|
| | Include figures and files |
| | ------------------------- |
| |
|
| | Image files can directly included in pages with the ``image::`` directive. |
| | e.g., :file:`tutorials/intermediate/constrainedlayout_guide.py` displays |
| | a couple of static images:: |
| | |
| | # .. image:: /_static/constrained_layout_1b.png |
| | # :align: center |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Files can be included verbatim. For instance the ``LICENSE`` file is included |
| | at :ref:`license-agreement` using :: |
| | |
| | .. literalinclude:: ../../LICENSE/LICENSE |
| |
|
| | The examples directory is copied to :file:`doc/gallery` by sphinx-gallery, |
| | so plots from the examples directory can be included using |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | .. plot:: gallery/lines_bars_and_markers/simple_plot.py |
| |
|
| | Note that the python script that generates the plot is referred to, rather than |
| | any plot that is created. Sphinx-gallery will provide the correct reference |
| | when the documentation is built. |
| |
|
| | Tools for writing mathematical expressions |
| | ------------------------------------------ |
| |
|
| | In most cases, you will likely want to use one of `Sphinx's builtin Math |
| | extensions <https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/extensions/math.html>`__. |
| | In rare cases we want the rendering of the mathematical text in the |
| | documentation html to exactly match with the rendering of the mathematical |
| | expression in the Matplotlib figure. In these cases, you can use the |
| | `matplotlib.sphinxext.mathmpl` Sphinx extension (See also the |
| | :doc:`../users/explain/text/mathtext` tutorial.) |
| |
|
| | .. _writing-docstrings: |
| |
|
| | Write docstrings |
| | ================ |
| |
|
| | Most of the API documentation is written in docstrings. These are comment |
| | blocks in source code that explain how the code works. |
| |
|
| | .. note:: |
| |
|
| | Some parts of the documentation do not yet conform to the current |
| | documentation style. If in doubt, follow the rules given here and not what |
| | you may see in the source code. Pull requests updating docstrings to |
| | the current style are very welcome. |
| |
|
| | All new or edited docstrings should conform to the `numpydoc docstring guide`_. |
| | Much of the ReST_ syntax discussed above (:ref:`writing-rest-pages`) can be |
| | used for links and references. These docstrings eventually populate the |
| | :file:`doc/api` directory and form the reference documentation for the |
| | library. |
| |
|
| | Example docstring |
| | ----------------- |
| |
|
| | An example docstring looks like: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | def hlines(self, y, xmin, xmax, colors=None, linestyles='solid', |
| | label='', **kwargs): |
| | """ |
| | Plot horizontal lines at each *y* from *xmin* to *xmax*. |
| |
|
| | Parameters |
| | ---------- |
| | y : float or array-like |
| | y-indexes where to plot the lines. |
| |
|
| | xmin, xmax : float or array-like |
| | Respective beginning and end of each line. If scalars are |
| | provided, all lines will have the same length. |
| |
|
| | colors : list of colors, default: :rc:`lines.color` |
| |
|
| | linestyles : {'solid', 'dashed', 'dashdot', 'dotted'}, optional |
| |
|
| | label : str, default: '' |
| |
|
| | Returns |
| | ------- |
| | `~matplotlib.collections.LineCollection` |
| |
|
| | Other Parameters |
| | ---------------- |
| | data : indexable object, optional |
| | DATA_PARAMETER_PLACEHOLDER |
| | **kwargs : `~matplotlib.collections.LineCollection` properties. |
| |
|
| | See Also |
| | -------- |
| | vlines : vertical lines |
| | axhline : horizontal line across the Axes |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | See the `~.Axes.hlines` documentation for how this renders. |
| |
|
| | The Sphinx_ website also contains plenty of documentation_ concerning ReST |
| | markup and working with Sphinx in general. |
| |
|
| | Formatting conventions |
| | ---------------------- |
| |
|
| | The basic docstring conventions are covered in the `numpydoc docstring guide`_ |
| | and the Sphinx_ documentation. Some Matplotlib-specific formatting conventions |
| | to keep in mind: |
| |
|
| | Quote positions |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | The quotes for single line docstrings are on the same line (pydocstyle D200):: |
| | |
| | def get_linewidth(self): |
| | """Return the line width in points.""" |
| |
|
| | The quotes for multi-line docstrings are on separate lines (pydocstyle D213):: |
| | |
| | def set_linestyle(self, ls): |
| | """ |
| | Set the linestyle of the line. |
| |
|
| | [...] |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | Function arguments |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | Function arguments and keywords within docstrings should be referred to |
| | using the ``*emphasis*`` role. This will keep Matplotlib's documentation |
| | consistent with Python's documentation: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | If *linestyles* is *None*, the default is 'solid'. |
| |
|
| | Do not use the ```default role``` or the ````literal```` role: |
| | |
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | Neither `argument` nor ``argument`` should be used. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Quotes for strings |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | Matplotlib does not have a convention whether to use single-quotes or |
| | double-quotes. There is a mixture of both in the current code. |
| |
|
| | Use simple single or double quotes when giving string values, e.g. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | If 'tight', try to figure out the tight bbox of the figure. |
| |
|
| | No ``'extra'`` literal quotes. |
| |
|
| | The use of extra literal quotes around the text is discouraged. While they |
| | slightly improve the rendered docs, they are cumbersome to type and difficult |
| | to read in plain-text docs. |
| |
|
| | Parameter type descriptions |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | The main goal for parameter type descriptions is to be readable and |
| | understandable by humans. If the possible types are too complex use a |
| | simplification for the type description and explain the type more |
| | precisely in the text. |
| |
|
| | Generally, the `numpydoc docstring guide`_ conventions apply. The following |
| | rules expand on them where the numpydoc conventions are not specific. |
| |
|
| | Use ``float`` for a type that can be any number. |
| |
|
| | Use ``(float, float)`` to describe a 2D position. The parentheses should be |
| | included to make the tuple-ness more obvious. |
| |
|
| | Use ``array-like`` for homogeneous numeric sequences, which could |
| | typically be a numpy.array. Dimensionality may be specified using ``2D``, |
| | ``3D``, ``n-dimensional``. If you need to have variables denoting the |
| | sizes of the dimensions, use capital letters in brackets |
| | (``(M, N) array-like``). When referring to them in the text they are easier |
| | read and no special formatting is needed. Use ``array`` instead of |
| | ``array-like`` for return types if the returned object is indeed a numpy array. |
| |
|
| | ``float`` is the implicit default dtype for array-likes. For other dtypes |
| | use ``array-like of int``. |
| |
|
| | Some possible uses:: |
| | |
| | 2D array-like |
| | (N,) array-like |
| | (M, N) array-like |
| | (M, N, 3) array-like |
| | array-like of int |
| |
|
| | Non-numeric homogeneous sequences are described as lists, e.g.:: |
| | |
| | list of str |
| | list of `.Artist` |
| |
|
| | Reference types |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | Generally, the rules from referring-to-other-code_ apply. More specifically: |
| |
|
| | Use full references ```~matplotlib.colors.Normalize``` with an |
| | abbreviation tilde in parameter types. While the full name helps the |
| | reader of plain text docstrings, the HTML does not need to show the full |
| | name as it links to it. Hence, the ``~``-shortening keeps it more readable. |
| |
|
| | Use abbreviated links ```.Normalize``` in the text. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | norm : `~matplotlib.colors.Normalize`, optional |
| | A `.Normalize` instance is used to scale luminance data to 0, 1. |
| |
|
| | Default values |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | As opposed to the numpydoc guide, parameters need not be marked as |
| | *optional* if they have a simple default: |
| |
|
| | - use ``{name} : {type}, default: {val}`` when possible. |
| | - use ``{name} : {type}, optional`` and describe the default in the text if |
| | it cannot be explained sufficiently in the recommended manner. |
| |
|
| | The default value should provide semantic information targeted at a human |
| | reader. In simple cases, it restates the value in the function signature. |
| | If applicable, units should be added. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | Prefer: |
| | interval : int, default: 1000ms |
| | over: |
| | interval : int, default: 1000 |
| |
|
| | If *None* is only used as a sentinel value for "parameter not specified", do |
| | not document it as the default. Depending on the context, give the actual |
| | default, or mark the parameter as optional if not specifying has no particular |
| | effect. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | Prefer: |
| | dpi : float, default: :rc:`figure.dpi` |
| | over: |
| | dpi : float, default: None |
| |
|
| | Prefer: |
| | textprops : dict, optional |
| | Dictionary of keyword parameters to be passed to the |
| | `~matplotlib.text.Text` instance contained inside TextArea. |
| | over: |
| | textprops : dict, default: None |
| | Dictionary of keyword parameters to be passed to the |
| | `~matplotlib.text.Text` instance contained inside TextArea. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | ``See also`` sections |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | Sphinx automatically links code elements in the definition blocks of ``See |
| | also`` sections. No need to use backticks there:: |
| |
|
| | See Also |
| | -------- |
| | vlines : vertical lines |
| | axhline : horizontal line across the Axes |
| |
|
| | Wrap parameter lists |
| | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| | Long parameter lists should be wrapped using a ``\`` for continuation and |
| | starting on the new line without any indent (no indent because pydoc will |
| | parse the docstring and strip the line continuation so that indent would |
| | result in a lot of whitespace within the line): |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | def add_axes(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| | """ |
| | ... |
| |
|
| | Parameters |
| | ---------- |
| | projection : {'aitoff', 'hammer', 'lambert', 'mollweide', 'polar', \ |
| | 'rectilinear'}, optional |
| | The projection type of the axes. |
| |
|
| | ... |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | Alternatively, you can describe the valid parameter values in a dedicated |
| | section of the docstring. |
| |
|
| | rcParams |
| | ~~~~~~~~ |
| | rcParams can be referenced with the custom ``:rc:`` role: |
| | :literal:`:rc:\`foo\`` yields ``rcParams["foo"] = 'default'``, which is a link |
| | to the :file:`matplotlibrc` file description. |
| | |
| | Setters and getters |
| | ------------------- |
| |
|
| | Artist properties are implemented using setter and getter methods (because |
| | Matplotlib predates the Python `property` decorator). |
| | By convention, these setters and getters are named ``set_PROPERTYNAME`` and |
| | ``get_PROPERTYNAME``; the list of properties thusly defined on an artist and |
| | their values can be listed by the `~.pyplot.setp` and `~.pyplot.getp` functions. |
| |
|
| | The Parameters block of property setter methods is parsed to document the |
| | accepted values, e.g. the docstring of `.Line2D.set_linestyle` starts with |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | def set_linestyle(self, ls): |
| | """ |
| | Set the linestyle of the line. |
| |
|
| | Parameters |
| | ---------- |
| | ls : {'-', '--', '-.', ':', '', (offset, on-off-seq), ...} |
| | etc. |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | which results in the following line in the output of ``plt.setp(line)`` or |
| | ``plt.setp(line, "linestyle")``:: |
| | |
| | linestyle or ls: {'-', '--', '-.', ':', '', (offset, on-off-seq), ...} |
| | |
| | In some rare cases (mostly, setters which accept both a single tuple and an |
| | unpacked tuple), the accepted values cannot be documented in such a fashion; |
| | in that case, they can be documented as an ``.. ACCEPTS:`` block, e.g. for |
| | `.axes.Axes.set_xlim`: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | def set_xlim(self, ...): |
| | """ |
| | Set the x-axis view limits. |
| |
|
| | Parameters |
| | ---------- |
| | left : float, optional |
| | The left xlim in data coordinates. Passing *None* leaves the |
| | limit unchanged. |
| |
|
| | The left and right xlims may also be passed as the tuple |
| | (*left*, *right*) as the first positional argument (or as |
| | the *left* keyword argument). |
| |
|
| | .. ACCEPTS: (bottom: float, top: float) |
| |
|
| | right : float, optional |
| | etc. |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | Note that the leading ``..`` makes the ``.. ACCEPTS:`` block a reST comment, |
| | hiding it from the rendered docs. |
| |
|
| | Keyword arguments |
| | ----------------- |
| |
|
| | .. note:: |
| |
|
| | The information in this section is being actively discussed by the |
| | development team, so use the docstring interpolation only if necessary. |
| | This section has been left in place for now because this interpolation |
| | is part of the existing documentation. |
| |
|
| | Since Matplotlib uses a lot of pass-through ``kwargs``, e.g., in every function |
| | that creates a line (`~.pyplot.plot`, `~.pyplot.semilogx`, `~.pyplot.semilogy`, |
| | etc.), it can be difficult for the new user to know which ``kwargs`` are |
| | supported. Matplotlib uses a docstring interpolation scheme to support |
| | documentation of every function that takes a ``**kwargs``. The requirements |
| | are: |
| |
|
| | 1. single point of configuration so changes to the properties don't |
| | require multiple docstring edits. |
| |
|
| | 2. as automated as possible so that as properties change, the docs |
| | are updated automatically. |
| |
|
| | The ``@_docstring.interpd`` decorator implements this. Any function accepting |
| | `.Line2D` pass-through ``kwargs``, e.g., `matplotlib.axes.Axes.plot`, can list |
| | a summary of the `.Line2D` properties, as follows: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | # in axes.py |
| | @_docstring.interpd |
| | def plot(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| | """ |
| | Some stuff omitted |
| |
|
| | Other Parameters |
| | ---------------- |
| | scalex, scaley : bool, default: True |
| | These parameters determine if the view limits are adapted to the |
| | data limits. The values are passed on to `autoscale_view`. |
| |
|
| | **kwargs : `.Line2D` properties, optional |
| | *kwargs* are used to specify properties like a line label (for |
| | auto legends), linewidth, antialiasing, marker face color. |
| | Example:: |
| | |
| | >>> plot([1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 3], 'go-', label='line 1', linewidth=2) |
| | >>> plot([1, 2, 3], [1, 4, 9], 'rs', label='line 2') |
| |
|
| | If you specify multiple lines with one plot call, the kwargs apply |
| | to all those lines. In case the label object is iterable, each |
| | element is used as labels for each set of data. |
| |
|
| | Here is a list of available `.Line2D` properties: |
| |
|
| | %(Line2D:kwdoc)s |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | The ``%(Line2D:kwdoc)`` syntax makes ``interpd`` lookup an `.Artist` subclass |
| | named ``Line2D``, and call `.artist.kwdoc` on that class. `.artist.kwdoc` |
| | introspects the subclass and summarizes its properties as a substring, which |
| | gets interpolated into the docstring. |
| |
|
| | Note that this scheme does not work for decorating an Artist's ``__init__``, as |
| | the subclass and its properties are not defined yet at that point. Instead, |
| | ``@_docstring.interpd`` can be used to decorate the class itself -- at that |
| | point, `.kwdoc` can list the properties and interpolate them into |
| | ``__init__.__doc__``. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Inherit docstrings |
| | ------------------ |
| |
|
| | If a subclass overrides a method but does not change the semantics, we can |
| | reuse the parent docstring for the method of the child class. Python does this |
| | automatically, if the subclass method does not have a docstring. |
| |
|
| | Use a plain comment ``# docstring inherited`` to denote the intention to reuse |
| | the parent docstring. That way we do not accidentally create a docstring in |
| | the future:: |
| | |
| | class A: |
| | def foo(): |
| | """The parent docstring.""" |
| | pass |
| |
|
| | class B(A): |
| | def foo(): |
| | # docstring inherited |
| | pass |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. _docstring-adding-figures: |
| |
|
| | Add figures |
| | ----------- |
| |
|
| | As above (see :ref:`rst-figures-and-includes`), figures in the examples gallery |
| | can be referenced with a ``.. plot::`` directive pointing to the python script |
| | that created the figure. For instance the `~.Axes.legend` docstring references |
| | the file :file:`examples/text_labels_and_annotations/legend.py`: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | """ |
| | ... |
| |
|
| | Examples |
| | -------- |
| |
|
| | .. plot:: gallery/text_labels_and_annotations/legend.py |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | Note that ``examples/text_labels_and_annotations/legend.py`` has been mapped to |
| | ``gallery/text_labels_and_annotations/legend.py``, a redirection that may be |
| | fixed in future re-organization of the docs. |
| |
|
| | Plots can also be directly placed inside docstrings. Details are in |
| | :doc:`/api/sphinxext_plot_directive_api`. A short example is: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | """ |
| | ... |
| |
|
| | Examples |
| | -------- |
| |
|
| | .. plot:: |
| | import matplotlib.image as mpimg |
| | img = mpimg.imread('_static/stinkbug.png') |
| | imgplot = plt.imshow(img) |
| | """ |
| |
|
| | An advantage of this style over referencing an example script is that the |
| | code will also appear in interactive docstrings. |
| |
|
| | .. _writing-examples-and-tutorials: |
| |
|
| | Write examples and tutorials |
| | ============================ |
| |
|
| | Examples and tutorials are Python scripts that are run by `Sphinx Gallery`_. |
| | Sphinx Gallery finds ``*.py`` files in source directories and runs the files to |
| | create images and narrative that are embedded in ``*.rst`` files in a build |
| | location of the :file:`doc/` directory. Files in the build location should not |
| | be directly edited as they will be overwritten by Sphinx gallery. Currently |
| | Matplotlib has four galleries as follows: |
| |
|
| | =============================== ========================== |
| | Source location Build location |
| | =============================== ========================== |
| | :file:`galleries/plot_types` :file:`doc/plot_types` |
| | :file:`galleries/examples` :file:`doc/gallery` |
| | :file:`galleries/tutorials` :file:`doc/tutorials` |
| | :file:`galleries/users_explain` :file:`doc/users/explain` |
| | =============================== ========================== |
| |
|
| | The first three are traditional galleries. The last, |
| | :file:`galleries/users_explain`, is a mixed gallery where some of the files are |
| | raw ``*.rst`` files and some are ``*.py`` files; Sphinx Gallery just copies |
| | these ``*.rst`` files from the source location to the build location (see |
| | :ref:`raw_restructured_gallery`, below). |
| |
|
| | In the Python files, to exclude an example from having a plot generated, insert |
| | "sgskip" somewhere in the filename. |
| |
|
| | Format examples |
| | --------------- |
| |
|
| | The format of these files is relatively straightforward. Properly |
| | formatted comment blocks are treated as ReST_ text, the code is |
| | displayed, and figures are put into the built page. Matplotlib uses the |
| | ``# %%`` section separator so that IDEs will identify "code cells" to make |
| | it easy to re-run sub-sections of the example. |
| |
|
| | For instance the example :doc:`/gallery/lines_bars_and_markers/simple_plot` |
| | example is generated from |
| | :file:`/galleries/examples/lines_bars_and_markers/simple_plot.py`, which looks |
| | like: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | """ |
| | =========== |
| | Simple Plot |
| | =========== |
| |
|
| | Create a simple plot. |
| | """ |
| | import matplotlib.pyplot as plt |
| | import numpy as np |
| |
|
| | # Data for plotting |
| | t = np.arange(0.0, 2.0, 0.01) |
| | s = 1 + np.sin(2 * np.pi * t) |
| |
|
| | # Note that using plt.subplots below is equivalent to using |
| | # fig = plt.figure and then ax = fig.add_subplot(111) |
| | fig, ax = plt.subplots() |
| | ax.plot(t, s) |
| |
|
| | ax.set(xlabel='time (s)', ylabel='voltage (mV)', |
| | title='About as simple as it gets, folks') |
| | ax.grid() |
| | plt.show() |
| |
|
| | The first comment block is treated as ReST_ text. The other comment blocks |
| | render as comments in :doc:`/gallery/lines_bars_and_markers/simple_plot`. |
| |
|
| | Tutorials are made with the exact same mechanism, except they are longer, and |
| | typically have more than one comment block (i.e. :ref:`quick_start`). The |
| | first comment block can be the same as the example above. Subsequent blocks of |
| | ReST text are delimited by the line ``# %%`` : |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | """ |
| | =========== |
| | Simple Plot |
| | =========== |
| |
|
| | Create a simple plot. |
| | """ |
| | ... |
| | ax.grid() |
| | plt.show() |
| |
|
| | # %% |
| | # Second plot |
| | # =========== |
| | # |
| | # This is a second plot that is very nice |
| |
|
| | fig, ax = plt.subplots() |
| | ax.plot(np.sin(range(50))) |
| |
|
| | In this way text, code, and figures are output in a "notebook" style. |
| |
|
| | .. _sample-data: |
| |
|
| | Sample data |
| | ----------- |
| |
|
| | When sample data comes from a public dataset, please cite the source of the |
| | data. Sample data should be written out in the code. When this is not |
| | feasible, the data can be loaded using `.cbook.get_sample_data`. |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | import matplotlib.cbook as cbook |
| | fh = cbook.get_sample_data('mydata.dat') |
| |
|
| |
|
| | If the data is too large to be included in the code, it should be added to |
| | :file:`lib/matplotlib/mpl-data/sample_data/` |
| |
|
| | Create mini-gallery |
| | ------------------- |
| |
|
| | The showcased Matplotlib functions should be listed in an admonition at the |
| | bottom as follows |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: python |
| |
|
| | # %% |
| | # |
| | # .. admonition:: References |
| | # |
| | # The use of the following functions, methods, classes and modules is shown |
| | # in this example: |
| | # |
| | # - `matplotlib.axes.Axes.fill` / `matplotlib.pyplot.fill` |
| | # - `matplotlib.axes.Axes.axis` / `matplotlib.pyplot.axis` |
| |
|
| | This allows sphinx-gallery to place an entry to the example in the |
| | mini-gallery of the mentioned functions. Whether or not a function is mentioned |
| | here should be decided depending on if a mini-gallery link prominently helps |
| | to illustrate that function; e.g. mention ``matplotlib.pyplot.subplots`` only |
| | in examples that are about laying out subplots, not in every example that uses |
| | it. |
| |
|
| | Functions that exist in ``pyplot`` as well as in Axes or Figure should mention |
| | both references no matter which one is used in the example code. The ``pyplot`` |
| | reference should always be the second to mention; see the example above. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Order examples |
| | -------------- |
| |
|
| | The order of the sections of the :ref:`tutorials` and the :ref:`gallery`, as |
| | well as the order of the examples within each section are determined in a |
| | two step process from within the :file:`/doc/sphinxext/gallery_order.py`: |
| |
|
| | * *Explicit order*: This file contains a list of folders for the section order |
| | and a list of examples for the subsection order. The order of the items |
| | shown in the doc pages is the order those items appear in those lists. |
| | * *Implicit order*: If a folder or example is not in those lists, it will be |
| | appended after the explicitly ordered items and all of those additional |
| | items will be ordered by pathname (for the sections) or by filename |
| | (for the subsections). |
| |
|
| | As a consequence, if you want to let your example appear in a certain |
| | position in the gallery, extend those lists with your example. |
| | In case no explicit order is desired or necessary, still make sure |
| | to name your example consistently, i.e. use the main function or subject |
| | of the example as first word in the filename; e.g. an image example |
| | should ideally be named similar to :file:`imshow_mynewexample.py`. |
| |
|
| | .. _raw_restructured_gallery: |
| |
|
| | Raw restructured text files in the gallery |
| | ------------------------------------------ |
| |
|
| | `Sphinx Gallery`_ folders usually consist of a ``README.txt`` and a series of |
| | Python source files that are then translated to an ``index.rst`` file and a |
| | series of ``example_name.rst`` files in the :file:`doc/` subdirectories. |
| | However, Sphinx Gallery also allows raw ``*.rst`` files to be passed through a |
| | gallery (see `Manually passing files`_ in the Sphinx Gallery documentation). We |
| | use this feature in :file:`galleries/users_explain`, where, for instance, |
| | :file:`galleries/users_explain/colors` is a regular Sphinx Gallery |
| | subdirectory, but :file:`galleries/users_explain/artists` has a mix of |
| | ``*.rst`` and ``*py`` files. For mixed subdirectories like this, we must add |
| | any ``*.rst`` files to a ``:toctree:``, either in the ``README.txt`` or in a |
| | manual ``index.rst``. |
| |
|
| | Miscellaneous |
| | ============= |
| |
|
| | Move documentation |
| | ------------------ |
| |
|
| | Sometimes it is desirable to move or consolidate documentation. With no |
| | action this will lead to links either going dead (404) or pointing to old |
| | versions of the documentation. Preferable is to replace the old page |
| | with an html refresh that immediately redirects the viewer to the new |
| | page. So, for example we move ``/doc/topic/old_info.rst`` to |
| | ``/doc/topic/new_info.rst``. We remove ``/doc/topic/old_info.rst`` and |
| | in ``/doc/topic/new_info.rst`` we insert a ``redirect-from`` directive that |
| | tells sphinx to still make the old file with the html refresh/redirect in it |
| | (probably near the top of the file to make it noticeable) |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | .. redirect-from:: /topic/old_info |
| |
|
| | In the built docs this will yield an html file |
| | ``/build/html/topic/old_info.html`` that has a refresh to ``new_info.html``. |
| | If the two files are in different subdirectories: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | .. redirect-from:: /old_topic/old_info2 |
| |
|
| | will yield an html file ``/build/html/old_topic/old_info2.html`` that has a |
| | (relative) refresh to ``../topic/new_info.html``. |
| |
|
| | Use the full path for this directive, relative to the doc root at |
| | ``https://matplotlib.org/stable/``. So ``/old_topic/old_info2`` would be |
| | found by users at ``http://matplotlib.org/stable/old_topic/old_info2``. |
| | For clarity, do not use relative links. |
| |
|
| |
|
| | .. _inheritance-diagrams: |
| |
|
| | Generate inheritance diagrams |
| | ----------------------------- |
| |
|
| | Class inheritance diagrams can be generated with the Sphinx |
| | `inheritance-diagram`_ directive. |
| |
|
| | .. _inheritance-diagram: https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/extensions/inheritance.html |
| |
|
| | Example: |
| |
|
| | .. code-block:: rst |
| |
|
| | .. inheritance-diagram:: matplotlib.patches matplotlib.lines matplotlib.text |
| | :parts: 2 |
| |
|
| | .. inheritance-diagram:: matplotlib.patches matplotlib.lines matplotlib.text |
| | :parts: 2 |
| |
|
| |
|
| | Navbar and style |
| | ---------------- |
| |
|
| | Matplotlib has a few subprojects that share the same navbar and style, so these |
| | are centralized as a sphinx theme at |
| | `mpl_sphinx_theme <https://github.com/matplotlib/mpl-sphinx-theme>`_. Changes to the |
| | style or topbar should be made there to propagate across all subprojects. |
| |
|
| | .. TODO: Add section about uploading docs |
| |
|
| | .. _ReST: https://docutils.sourceforge.io/rst.html |
| | .. _Sphinx: http://www.sphinx-doc.org |
| | .. _documentation: https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/contents.html |
| | .. _index: http://www.sphinx-doc.org/markup/para.html#index-generating-markup |
| | .. _`Sphinx Gallery`: https://sphinx-gallery.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ |
| | .. _references: https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/usage/restructuredtext/roles.html |
| | .. _`numpydoc docstring guide`: https://numpydoc.readthedocs.io/en/latest/format.html |
| | .. _`Manually passing files`: https://sphinx-gallery.github.io/stable/configuration.html#manually-passing-files |
| |
|