The matplotlib.pyplot.tripcolor
example produces this image:
If I change the plotting line from
tpc = ax1.tripcolor(triang, z, shading='flat')
to
tpc = ax1.tripcolor(triang, z, shading='flat', alpha=0.5)
then coloured edges appear:
Adding antialiased=True
makes things a bit better, but edges are still visible:
Nothing else I tried changed the appearance of the edges. They seem unaffected by setting linewidths
or edgecolors
, nor by the methods set_linewidth
or set_edgewidths
on the tpc
object.
How can I plot a transparent tripcolor without edges?
Advertisement
Answer
I think it’s kind of inevitable that there will be some overlap or space between non-rectangularly positionned patches on a discrete grid (the image).
For the example case however, there seems to be little reason to use any alpha. Instead, using alpha blending and creating a new colormap with those blended colors, gives the same result.
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt import matplotlib.tri as tri import numpy as np from matplotlib.colors import ListedColormap n_angles = 36 n_radii = 8 min_radius = 0.25 radii = np.linspace(min_radius, 0.95, n_radii) angles = np.linspace(0, 2 * np.pi, n_angles, endpoint=False) angles = np.repeat(angles[..., np.newaxis], n_radii, axis=1) angles[:, 1::2] += np.pi / n_angles x = (radii * np.cos(angles)).flatten() y = (radii * np.sin(angles)).flatten() z = (np.cos(radii) * np.cos(3 * angles)).flatten() triang = tri.Triangulation(x, y) triang.set_mask(np.hypot(x[triang.triangles].mean(axis=1), y[triang.triangles].mean(axis=1)) < min_radius) alpha = 0.5 fig1, (ax1, ax2) = plt.subplots(nrows=2, figsize=(4.5,8)) ax1.set_aspect('equal') tpc = ax1.tripcolor(triang, z, shading='flat', alpha=alpha, antialiased=True) fig1.colorbar(tpc, ax=ax1) ax1.set_title('alpha=0.5') # Alpha blending cls = plt.get_cmap()(np.linspace(0,1,256)) cls = (1-alpha) + alpha*cls cmap = ListedColormap(cls) ax2.set_aspect("equal") tpc2 = ax2.tripcolor(triang, z, shading='flat', antialiased=True, linewidth=0.72, edgecolors='face', cmap=cmap) fig1.colorbar(tpc2, ax=ax2) ax2.set_title('opaque, alphablending') fig1.tight_layout() fig1.savefig("tripcolor.png") plt.show()
Else, you can of course increase the dpi to insane values to get rid of the spacing. E.g. dpi=1000
(instead of the dpi=72
used in the question) gives a picture with no edges to be observable.