# Copyright (c) Streamlit Inc. (2018-2022) Snowflake Inc. (2022-2025) # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. """Streamlit support for Matplotlib PyPlot charts.""" from __future__ import annotations import io from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, Any, cast from streamlit.deprecation_util import show_deprecation_warning from streamlit.elements.lib.image_utils import WidthBehavior, marshall_images from streamlit.proto.Image_pb2 import ImageList as ImageListProto from streamlit.runtime.metrics_util import gather_metrics if TYPE_CHECKING: from matplotlib.figure import Figure from streamlit.delta_generator import DeltaGenerator class PyplotMixin: @gather_metrics("pyplot") def pyplot( self, fig: Figure | None = None, clear_figure: bool | None = None, use_container_width: bool = True, **kwargs: Any, ) -> DeltaGenerator: """Display a matplotlib.pyplot figure. .. Important:: You must install ``matplotlib`` to use this command. Parameters ---------- fig : Matplotlib Figure The Matplotlib ``Figure`` object to render. See https://matplotlib.org/stable/gallery/index.html for examples. .. note:: When this argument isn't specified, this function will render the global Matplotlib figure object. However, this feature is deprecated and will be removed in a later version. clear_figure : bool If True, the figure will be cleared after being rendered. If False, the figure will not be cleared after being rendered. If left unspecified, we pick a default based on the value of ``fig``. - If ``fig`` is set, defaults to ``False``. - If ``fig`` is not set, defaults to ``True``. This simulates Jupyter's approach to matplotlib rendering. use_container_width : bool Whether to override the figure's native width with the width of the parent container. If ``use_container_width`` is ``True`` (default), Streamlit sets the width of the figure to match the width of the parent container. If ``use_container_width`` is ``False``, Streamlit sets the width of the chart to fit its contents according to the plotting library, up to the width of the parent container. **kwargs : any Arguments to pass to Matplotlib's savefig function. Example ------- >>> import streamlit as st >>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> import numpy as np >>> >>> arr = np.random.normal(1, 1, size=100) >>> fig, ax = plt.subplots() >>> ax.hist(arr, bins=20) >>> >>> st.pyplot(fig) .. output:: https://doc-pyplot.streamlit.app/ height: 630px Matplotlib supports several types of "backends". If you're getting an error using Matplotlib with Streamlit, try setting your backend to "TkAgg":: echo "backend: TkAgg" >> ~/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc For more information, see https://matplotlib.org/faq/usage_faq.html. """ if not fig: show_deprecation_warning(""" Calling `st.pyplot()` without providing a figure argument has been deprecated and will be removed in a later version as it requires the use of Matplotlib's global figure object, which is not thread-safe. To future-proof this code, you should pass in a figure as shown below: ```python fig, ax = plt.subplots() ax.scatter([1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 3]) # other plotting actions... st.pyplot(fig) ``` If you have a specific use case that requires this functionality, please let us know via [issue on Github](https://github.com/streamlit/streamlit/issues). """) image_list_proto = ImageListProto() marshall( self.dg._get_delta_path_str(), image_list_proto, fig, clear_figure, use_container_width, **kwargs, ) return self.dg._enqueue("imgs", image_list_proto) @property def dg(self) -> DeltaGenerator: """Get our DeltaGenerator.""" return cast("DeltaGenerator", self) def marshall( coordinates: str, image_list_proto: ImageListProto, fig: Figure | None = None, clear_figure: bool | None = True, use_container_width: bool = True, **kwargs: Any, ) -> None: try: import matplotlib.pyplot as plt plt.ioff() except ImportError: raise ImportError("pyplot() command requires matplotlib") # You can call .savefig() on a Figure object or directly on the pyplot # module, in which case you're doing it to the latest Figure. if not fig: if clear_figure is None: clear_figure = True fig = cast("Figure", plt) # Normally, dpi is set to 'figure', and the figure's dpi is set to 100. # So here we pick double of that to make things look good in a high # DPI display. options = {"bbox_inches": "tight", "dpi": 200, "format": "png"} # If some options are passed in from kwargs then replace the values in # options with the ones from kwargs options = {a: kwargs.get(a, b) for a, b in options.items()} # Merge options back into kwargs. kwargs.update(options) image = io.BytesIO() fig.savefig(image, **kwargs) image_width = ( WidthBehavior.COLUMN if use_container_width else WidthBehavior.ORIGINAL ) marshall_images( coordinates=coordinates, image=image, caption=None, width=image_width, proto_imgs=image_list_proto, clamp=False, channels="RGB", output_format="PNG", ) # Clear the figure after rendering it. This means that subsequent # plt calls will be starting fresh. if clear_figure: fig.clf()