""" Matplotlib provides sophisticated date plotting capabilities, standing on the shoulders of python :mod:`datetime` and the add-on module dateutil_. By default, Matplotlib uses the units machinery described in `~matplotlib.units` to convert `datetime.datetime`, and `numpy.datetime64` objects when plotted on an x- or y-axis. The user does not need to do anything for dates to be formatted, but dates often have strict formatting needs, so this module provides many tick locators and formatters. A basic example using `numpy.datetime64` is:: import numpy as np times = np.arange(np.datetime64('2001-01-02'), np.datetime64('2002-02-03'), np.timedelta64(75, 'm')) y = np.random.randn(len(times)) fig, ax = plt.subplots() ax.plot(times, y) .. seealso:: - :doc:`/gallery/text_labels_and_annotations/date` - :doc:`/gallery/ticks/date_concise_formatter` - :doc:`/gallery/ticks/date_demo_convert` .. _date-format: Matplotlib date format ---------------------- Matplotlib represents dates using floating point numbers specifying the number of days since a default epoch of 1970-01-01 UTC; for example, 1970-01-01, 06:00 is the floating point number 0.25. The formatters and locators require the use of `datetime.datetime` objects, so only dates between year 0001 and 9999 can be represented. Microsecond precision is achievable for (approximately) 70 years on either side of the epoch, and 20 microseconds for the rest of the allowable range of dates (year 0001 to 9999). The epoch can be changed at import time via `.dates.set_epoch` or :rc:`dates.epoch` to other dates if necessary; see :doc:`/gallery/ticks/date_precision_and_epochs` for a discussion. .. note:: Before Matplotlib 3.3, the epoch was 0000-12-31 which lost modern microsecond precision and also made the default axis limit of 0 an invalid datetime. In 3.3 the epoch was changed as above. To convert old ordinal floats to the new epoch, users can do:: new_ordinal = old_ordinal + mdates.date2num(np.datetime64('0000-12-31')) There are a number of helper functions to convert between :mod:`datetime` objects and Matplotlib dates: .. currentmodule:: matplotlib.dates .. autosummary:: :nosignatures: datestr2num date2num num2date num2timedelta drange set_epoch get_epoch .. note:: Like Python's `datetime.datetime`, Matplotlib uses the Gregorian calendar for all conversions between dates and floating point numbers. This practice is not universal, and calendar differences can cause confusing differences between what Python and Matplotlib give as the number of days since 0001-01-01 and what other software and databases yield. For example, the US Naval Observatory uses a calendar that switches from Julian to Gregorian in October, 1582. Hence, using their calculator, the number of days between 0001-01-01 and 2006-04-01 is 732403, whereas using the Gregorian calendar via the datetime module we find:: In [1]: date(2006, 4, 1).toordinal() - date(1, 1, 1).toordinal() Out[1]: 732401 All the Matplotlib date converters, locators and formatters are timezone aware. If no explicit timezone is provided, :rc:`timezone` is assumed, provided as a string. If you want to use a different timezone, pass the *tz* keyword argument of `num2date` to any date tick locators or formatters you create. This can be either a `datetime.tzinfo` instance or a string with the timezone name that can be parsed by `~dateutil.tz.gettz`. A wide range of specific and general purpose date tick locators and formatters are provided in this module. See :mod:`matplotlib.ticker` for general information on tick locators and formatters. These are described below. The dateutil_ module provides additional code to handle date ticking, making it easy to place ticks on any kinds of dates. See examples below. .. _dateutil: https://dateutil.readthedocs.io .. _date-locators: Date tick locators ------------------ Most of the date tick locators can locate single or multiple ticks. For example:: # import constants for the days of the week from matplotlib.dates import MO, TU, WE, TH, FR, SA, SU # tick on Mondays every week loc = WeekdayLocator(byweekday=MO, tz=tz) # tick on Mondays and Saturdays loc = WeekdayLocator(byweekday=(MO, SA)) In addition, most of the constructors take an interval argument:: # tick on Mondays every second week loc = WeekdayLocator(byweekday=MO, interval=2) The rrule locator allows completely general date ticking:: # tick every 5th easter rule = rrulewrapper(YEARLY, byeaster=1, interval=5) loc = RRuleLocator(rule) The available date tick locators are: * `MicrosecondLocator`: Locate microseconds. * `SecondLocator`: Locate seconds. * `MinuteLocator`: Locate minutes. * `HourLocator`: Locate hours. * `DayLocator`: Locate specified days of the month. * `WeekdayLocator`: Locate days of the week, e.g., MO, TU. * `MonthLocator`: Locate months, e.g., 7 for July. * `YearLocator`: Locate years that are multiples of base. * `RRuleLocator`: Locate using a `rrulewrapper`. `rrulewrapper` is a simple wrapper around dateutil_'s `dateutil.rrule` which allow almost arbitrary date tick specifications. See :doc:`rrule example `. * `AutoDateLocator`: On autoscale, this class picks the best `DateLocator` (e.g., `RRuleLocator`) to set the view limits and the tick locations. If called with ``interval_multiples=True`` it will make ticks line up with sensible multiples of the tick intervals. For example, if the interval is 4 hours, it will pick hours 0, 4, 8, etc. as ticks. This behaviour is not guaranteed by default. .. _date-formatters: Date formatters --------------- The available date formatters are: * `AutoDateFormatter`: attempts to figure out the best format to use. This is most useful when used with the `AutoDateLocator`. * `ConciseDateFormatter`: also attempts to figure out the best format to use, and to make the format as compact as possible while still having complete date information. This is most useful when used with the `AutoDateLocator`. * `DateFormatter`: use `~datetime.datetime.strftime` format strings. """ import datetime import functools import logging import re from dateutil.rrule import (rrule, MO, TU, WE, TH, FR, SA, SU, YEARLY, MONTHLY, WEEKLY, DAILY, HOURLY, MINUTELY, SECONDLY) from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta import dateutil.parser import dateutil.tz import numpy as np import matplotlib as mpl from matplotlib import _api, cbook, ticker, units __all__ = ('datestr2num', 'date2num', 'num2date', 'num2timedelta', 'drange', 'set_epoch', 'get_epoch', 'DateFormatter', 'ConciseDateFormatter', 'AutoDateFormatter', 'DateLocator', 'RRuleLocator', 'AutoDateLocator', 'YearLocator', 'MonthLocator', 'WeekdayLocator', 'DayLocator', 'HourLocator', 'MinuteLocator', 'SecondLocator', 'MicrosecondLocator', 'rrule', 'MO', 'TU', 'WE', 'TH', 'FR', 'SA', 'SU', 'YEARLY', 'MONTHLY', 'WEEKLY', 'DAILY', 'HOURLY', 'MINUTELY', 'SECONDLY', 'MICROSECONDLY', 'relativedelta', 'DateConverter', 'ConciseDateConverter', 'rrulewrapper') _log = logging.getLogger(__name__) UTC = datetime.timezone.utc @_api.caching_module_getattr class __getattr__: JULIAN_OFFSET = _api.deprecated("3.7")(property(lambda self: 1721424.5)) # Julian date at 0000-12-31 # note that the Julian day epoch is achievable w/ # np.datetime64('-4713-11-24T12:00:00'); datetime64 is proleptic # Gregorian and BC has a one-year offset. So # np.datetime64('0000-12-31') - np.datetime64('-4713-11-24T12:00') = # 1721424.5 # Ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_day def _get_tzinfo(tz=None): """ Generate `~datetime.tzinfo` from a string or return `~datetime.tzinfo`. If None, retrieve the preferred timezone from the rcParams dictionary. """ tz = mpl._val_or_rc(tz, 'timezone') if tz == 'UTC': return UTC if isinstance(tz, str): tzinfo = dateutil.tz.gettz(tz) if tzinfo is None: raise ValueError(f"{tz} is not a valid timezone as parsed by" " dateutil.tz.gettz.") return tzinfo if isinstance(tz, datetime.tzinfo): return tz raise TypeError(f"tz must be string or tzinfo subclass, not {tz!r}.") # Time-related constants. EPOCH_OFFSET = float(datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1).toordinal()) # EPOCH_OFFSET is not used by matplotlib MICROSECONDLY = SECONDLY + 1 HOURS_PER_DAY = 24. MIN_PER_HOUR = 60. SEC_PER_MIN = 60. MONTHS_PER_YEAR = 12. DAYS_PER_WEEK = 7. DAYS_PER_MONTH = 30. DAYS_PER_YEAR = 365.0 MINUTES_PER_DAY = MIN_PER_HOUR * HOURS_PER_DAY SEC_PER_HOUR = SEC_PER_MIN * MIN_PER_HOUR SEC_PER_DAY = SEC_PER_HOUR * HOURS_PER_DAY SEC_PER_WEEK = SEC_PER_DAY * DAYS_PER_WEEK MUSECONDS_PER_DAY = 1e6 * SEC_PER_DAY MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY = ( MO, TU, WE, TH, FR, SA, SU) WEEKDAYS = (MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY) # default epoch: passed to np.datetime64... _epoch = None def _reset_epoch_test_example(): """ Reset the Matplotlib date epoch so it can be set again. Only for use in tests and examples. """ global _epoch _epoch = None def set_epoch(epoch): """ Set the epoch (origin for dates) for datetime calculations. The default epoch is :rc:`dates.epoch` (by default 1970-01-01T00:00). If microsecond accuracy is desired, the date being plotted needs to be within approximately 70 years of the epoch. Matplotlib internally represents dates as days since the epoch, so floating point dynamic range needs to be within a factor of 2^52. `~.dates.set_epoch` must be called before any dates are converted (i.e. near the import section) or a RuntimeError will be raised. See also :doc:`/gallery/ticks/date_precision_and_epochs`. Parameters ---------- epoch : str valid UTC date parsable by `numpy.datetime64` (do not include timezone). """ global _epoch if _epoch is not None: raise RuntimeError('set_epoch must be called before dates plotted.') _epoch = epoch def get_epoch(): """ Get the epoch used by `.dates`. Returns ------- epoch : str String for the epoch (parsable by `numpy.datetime64`). """ global _epoch _epoch = mpl._val_or_rc(_epoch, 'date.epoch') return _epoch def _dt64_to_ordinalf(d): """ Convert `numpy.datetime64` or an `numpy.ndarray` of those types to Gregorian date as UTC float relative to the epoch (see `.get_epoch`). Roundoff is float64 precision. Practically: microseconds for dates between 290301 BC, 294241 AD, milliseconds for larger dates (see `numpy.datetime64`). """ # the "extra" ensures that we at least allow the dynamic range out to # seconds. That should get out to +/-2e11 years. dseconds = d.astype('datetime64[s]') extra = (d - dseconds).astype('timedelta64[ns]') t0 = np.datetime64(get_epoch(), 's') dt = (dseconds - t0).astype(np.float64) dt += extra.astype(np.float64) / 1.0e9 dt = dt / SEC_PER_DAY NaT_int = np.datetime64('NaT').astype(np.int64) d_int = d.astype(np.int64) dt[d_int == NaT_int] = np.nan return dt def _from_ordinalf(x, tz=None): """ Convert Gregorian float of the date, preserving hours, minutes, seconds and microseconds. Return value is a `.datetime`. The input date *x* is a float in ordinal days at UTC, and the output will be the specified `.datetime` object corresponding to that time in timezone *tz*, or if *tz* is ``None``, in the timezone specified in :rc:`timezone`. """ tz = _get_tzinfo(tz) dt = (np.datetime64(get_epoch()) + np.timedelta64(int(np.round(x * MUSECONDS_PER_DAY)), 'us')) if dt < np.datetime64('0001-01-01') or dt >= np.datetime64('10000-01-01'): raise ValueError(f'Date ordinal {x} converts to {dt} (using ' f'epoch {get_epoch()}), but Matplotlib dates must be ' 'between year 0001 and 9999.') # convert from datetime64 to datetime: dt = dt.tolist() # datetime64 is always UTC: dt = dt.replace(tzinfo=dateutil.tz.gettz('UTC')) # but maybe we are working in a different timezone so move. dt = dt.astimezone(tz) # fix round off errors if np.abs(x) > 70 * 365: # if x is big, round off to nearest twenty microseconds. # This avoids floating point roundoff error ms = round(dt.microsecond / 20) * 20 if ms == 1000000: dt = dt.replace(microsecond=0) + datetime.timedelta(seconds=1) else: dt = dt.replace(microsecond=ms) return dt # a version of _from_ordinalf that can operate on numpy arrays _from_ordinalf_np_vectorized = np.vectorize(_from_ordinalf, otypes="O") # a version of dateutil.parser.parse that can operate on numpy arrays _dateutil_parser_parse_np_vectorized = np.vectorize(dateutil.parser.parse) def datestr2num(d, default=None): """ Convert a date string to a datenum using `dateutil.parser.parse`. Parameters ---------- d : str or sequence of str The dates to convert. default : datetime.datetime, optional The default date to use when fields are missing in *d*. """ if isinstance(d, str): dt = dateutil.parser.parse(d, default=default) return date2num(dt) else: if default is not None: d = [date2num(dateutil.parser.parse(s, default=default)) for s in d] return np.asarray(d) d = np.asarray(d) if not d.size: return d return date2num(_dateutil_parser_parse_np_vectorized(d)) def date2num(d): """ Convert datetime objects to Matplotlib dates. Parameters ---------- d : `datetime.datetime` or `numpy.datetime64` or sequences of these Returns ------- float or sequence of floats Number of days since the epoch. See `.get_epoch` for the epoch, which can be changed by :rc:`date.epoch` or `.set_epoch`. If the epoch is "1970-01-01T00:00:00" (default) then noon Jan 1 1970 ("1970-01-01T12:00:00") returns 0.5. Notes ----- The Gregorian calendar is assumed; this is not universal practice. For details see the module docstring. """ # Unpack in case of e.g. Pandas or xarray object d = cbook._unpack_to_numpy(d) # make an iterable, but save state to unpack later: iterable = np.iterable(d) if not iterable: d = [d] masked = np.ma.is_masked(d) mask = np.ma.getmask(d) d = np.asarray(d) # convert to datetime64 arrays, if not already: if not np.issubdtype(d.dtype, np.datetime64): # datetime arrays if not d.size: # deals with an empty array... return d tzi = getattr(d[0], 'tzinfo', None) if tzi is not None: # make datetime naive: d = [dt.astimezone(UTC).replace(tzinfo=None) for dt in d] d = np.asarray(d) d = d.astype('datetime64[us]') d = np.ma.masked_array(d, mask=mask) if masked else d d = _dt64_to_ordinalf(d) return d if iterable else d[0] @_api.deprecated("3.7") def julian2num(j): """ Convert a Julian date (or sequence) to a Matplotlib date (or sequence). Parameters ---------- j : float or sequence of floats Julian dates (days relative to 4713 BC Jan 1, 12:00:00 Julian calendar or 4714 BC Nov 24, 12:00:00, proleptic Gregorian calendar). Returns ------- float or sequence of floats Matplotlib dates (days relative to `.get_epoch`). """ ep = np.datetime64(get_epoch(), 'h').astype(float) / 24. ep0 = np.datetime64('0000-12-31T00:00:00', 'h').astype(float) / 24. # Julian offset defined above is relative to 0000-12-31, but we need # relative to our current epoch: dt = __getattr__("JULIAN_OFFSET") - ep0 + ep return np.subtract(j, dt) # Handles both scalar & nonscalar j. @_api.deprecated("3.7") def num2julian(n): """ Convert a Matplotlib date (or sequence) to a Julian date (or sequence). Parameters ---------- n : float or sequence of floats Matplotlib dates (days relative to `.get_epoch`). Returns ------- float or sequence of floats Julian dates (days relative to 4713 BC Jan 1, 12:00:00). """ ep = np.datetime64(get_epoch(), 'h').astype(float) / 24. ep0 = np.datetime64('0000-12-31T00:00:00', 'h').astype(float) / 24. # Julian offset defined above is relative to 0000-12-31, but we need # relative to our current epoch: dt = __getattr__("JULIAN_OFFSET") - ep0 + ep return np.add(n, dt) # Handles both scalar & nonscalar j. def num2date(x, tz=None): """ Convert Matplotlib dates to `~datetime.datetime` objects. Parameters ---------- x : float or sequence of floats Number of days (fraction part represents hours, minutes, seconds) since the epoch. See `.get_epoch` for the epoch, which can be changed by :rc:`date.epoch` or `.set_epoch`. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Timezone of *x*. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. Returns ------- `~datetime.datetime` or sequence of `~datetime.datetime` Dates are returned in timezone *tz*. If *x* is a sequence, a sequence of `~datetime.datetime` objects will be returned. Notes ----- The Gregorian calendar is assumed; this is not universal practice. For details, see the module docstring. """ tz = _get_tzinfo(tz) return _from_ordinalf_np_vectorized(x, tz).tolist() _ordinalf_to_timedelta_np_vectorized = np.vectorize( lambda x: datetime.timedelta(days=x), otypes="O") def num2timedelta(x): """ Convert number of days to a `~datetime.timedelta` object. If *x* is a sequence, a sequence of `~datetime.timedelta` objects will be returned. Parameters ---------- x : float, sequence of floats Number of days. The fraction part represents hours, minutes, seconds. Returns ------- `datetime.timedelta` or list[`datetime.timedelta`] """ return _ordinalf_to_timedelta_np_vectorized(x).tolist() def drange(dstart, dend, delta): """ Return a sequence of equally spaced Matplotlib dates. The dates start at *dstart* and reach up to, but not including *dend*. They are spaced by *delta*. Parameters ---------- dstart, dend : `~datetime.datetime` The date limits. delta : `datetime.timedelta` Spacing of the dates. Returns ------- `numpy.array` A list floats representing Matplotlib dates. """ f1 = date2num(dstart) f2 = date2num(dend) step = delta.total_seconds() / SEC_PER_DAY # calculate the difference between dend and dstart in times of delta num = int(np.ceil((f2 - f1) / step)) # calculate end of the interval which will be generated dinterval_end = dstart + num * delta # ensure, that an half open interval will be generated [dstart, dend) if dinterval_end >= dend: # if the endpoint is greater than or equal to dend, # just subtract one delta dinterval_end -= delta num -= 1 f2 = date2num(dinterval_end) # new float-endpoint return np.linspace(f1, f2, num + 1) def _wrap_in_tex(text): p = r'([a-zA-Z]+)' ret_text = re.sub(p, r'}$\1$\\mathdefault{', text) # Braces ensure symbols are not spaced like binary operators. ret_text = ret_text.replace('-', '{-}').replace(':', '{:}') # To not concatenate space between numbers. ret_text = ret_text.replace(' ', r'\;') ret_text = '$\\mathdefault{' + ret_text + '}$' ret_text = ret_text.replace('$\\mathdefault{}$', '') return ret_text ## date tick locators and formatters ### class DateFormatter(ticker.Formatter): """ Format a tick (in days since the epoch) with a `~datetime.datetime.strftime` format string. """ def __init__(self, fmt, tz=None, *, usetex=None): """ Parameters ---------- fmt : str `~datetime.datetime.strftime` format string tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. usetex : bool, default: :rc:`text.usetex` To enable/disable the use of TeX's math mode for rendering the results of the formatter. """ self.tz = _get_tzinfo(tz) self.fmt = fmt self._usetex = mpl._val_or_rc(usetex, 'text.usetex') def __call__(self, x, pos=0): result = num2date(x, self.tz).strftime(self.fmt) return _wrap_in_tex(result) if self._usetex else result def set_tzinfo(self, tz): self.tz = _get_tzinfo(tz) class ConciseDateFormatter(ticker.Formatter): """ A `.Formatter` which attempts to figure out the best format to use for the date, and to make it as compact as possible, but still be complete. This is most useful when used with the `AutoDateLocator`:: >>> locator = AutoDateLocator() >>> formatter = ConciseDateFormatter(locator) Parameters ---------- locator : `.ticker.Locator` Locator that this axis is using. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone, passed to `.dates.num2date`. formats : list of 6 strings, optional Format strings for 6 levels of tick labelling: mostly years, months, days, hours, minutes, and seconds. Strings use the same format codes as `~datetime.datetime.strftime`. Default is ``['%Y', '%b', '%d', '%H:%M', '%H:%M', '%S.%f']`` zero_formats : list of 6 strings, optional Format strings for tick labels that are "zeros" for a given tick level. For instance, if most ticks are months, ticks around 1 Jan 2005 will be labeled "Dec", "2005", "Feb". The default is ``['', '%Y', '%b', '%b-%d', '%H:%M', '%H:%M']`` offset_formats : list of 6 strings, optional Format strings for the 6 levels that is applied to the "offset" string found on the right side of an x-axis, or top of a y-axis. Combined with the tick labels this should completely specify the date. The default is:: ['', '%Y', '%Y-%b', '%Y-%b-%d', '%Y-%b-%d', '%Y-%b-%d %H:%M'] show_offset : bool, default: True Whether to show the offset or not. usetex : bool, default: :rc:`text.usetex` To enable/disable the use of TeX's math mode for rendering the results of the formatter. Examples -------- See :doc:`/gallery/ticks/date_concise_formatter` .. plot:: import datetime import matplotlib.dates as mdates base = datetime.datetime(2005, 2, 1) dates = np.array([base + datetime.timedelta(hours=(2 * i)) for i in range(732)]) N = len(dates) np.random.seed(19680801) y = np.cumsum(np.random.randn(N)) fig, ax = plt.subplots(constrained_layout=True) locator = mdates.AutoDateLocator() formatter = mdates.ConciseDateFormatter(locator) ax.xaxis.set_major_locator(locator) ax.xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter) ax.plot(dates, y) ax.set_title('Concise Date Formatter') """ def __init__(self, locator, tz=None, formats=None, offset_formats=None, zero_formats=None, show_offset=True, *, usetex=None): """ Autoformat the date labels. The default format is used to form an initial string, and then redundant elements are removed. """ self._locator = locator self._tz = tz self.defaultfmt = '%Y' # there are 6 levels with each level getting a specific format # 0: mostly years, 1: months, 2: days, # 3: hours, 4: minutes, 5: seconds if formats: if len(formats) != 6: raise ValueError('formats argument must be a list of ' '6 format strings (or None)') self.formats = formats else: self.formats = ['%Y', # ticks are mostly years '%b', # ticks are mostly months '%d', # ticks are mostly days '%H:%M', # hrs '%H:%M', # min '%S.%f', # secs ] # fmt for zeros ticks at this level. These are # ticks that should be labeled w/ info the level above. # like 1 Jan can just be labelled "Jan". 02:02:00 can # just be labeled 02:02. if zero_formats: if len(zero_formats) != 6: raise ValueError('zero_formats argument must be a list of ' '6 format strings (or None)') self.zero_formats = zero_formats elif formats: # use the users formats for the zero tick formats self.zero_formats = [''] + self.formats[:-1] else: # make the defaults a bit nicer: self.zero_formats = [''] + self.formats[:-1] self.zero_formats[3] = '%b-%d' if offset_formats: if len(offset_formats) != 6: raise ValueError('offset_formats argument must be a list of ' '6 format strings (or None)') self.offset_formats = offset_formats else: self.offset_formats = ['', '%Y', '%Y-%b', '%Y-%b-%d', '%Y-%b-%d', '%Y-%b-%d %H:%M'] self.offset_string = '' self.show_offset = show_offset self._usetex = mpl._val_or_rc(usetex, 'text.usetex') def __call__(self, x, pos=None): formatter = DateFormatter(self.defaultfmt, self._tz, usetex=self._usetex) return formatter(x, pos=pos) def format_ticks(self, values): tickdatetime = [num2date(value, tz=self._tz) for value in values] tickdate = np.array([tdt.timetuple()[:6] for tdt in tickdatetime]) # basic algorithm: # 1) only display a part of the date if it changes over the ticks. # 2) don't display the smaller part of the date if: # it is always the same or if it is the start of the # year, month, day etc. # fmt for most ticks at this level fmts = self.formats # format beginnings of days, months, years, etc. zerofmts = self.zero_formats # offset fmt are for the offset in the upper left of the # or lower right of the axis. offsetfmts = self.offset_formats show_offset = self.show_offset # determine the level we will label at: # mostly 0: years, 1: months, 2: days, # 3: hours, 4: minutes, 5: seconds, 6: microseconds for level in range(5, -1, -1): unique = np.unique(tickdate[:, level]) if len(unique) > 1: # if 1 is included in unique, the year is shown in ticks if level < 2 and np.any(unique == 1): show_offset = False break elif level == 0: # all tickdate are the same, so only micros might be different # set to the most precise (6: microseconds doesn't exist...) level = 5 # level is the basic level we will label at. # now loop through and decide the actual ticklabels zerovals = [0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0] labels = [''] * len(tickdate) for nn in range(len(tickdate)): if level < 5: if tickdate[nn][level] == zerovals[level]: fmt = zerofmts[level] else: fmt = fmts[level] else: # special handling for seconds + microseconds if (tickdatetime[nn].second == tickdatetime[nn].microsecond == 0): fmt = zerofmts[level] else: fmt = fmts[level] labels[nn] = tickdatetime[nn].strftime(fmt) # special handling of seconds and microseconds: # strip extra zeros and decimal if possible. # this is complicated by two factors. 1) we have some level-4 strings # here (i.e. 03:00, '0.50000', '1.000') 2) we would like to have the # same number of decimals for each string (i.e. 0.5 and 1.0). if level >= 5: trailing_zeros = min( (len(s) - len(s.rstrip('0')) for s in labels if '.' in s), default=None) if trailing_zeros: for nn in range(len(labels)): if '.' in labels[nn]: labels[nn] = labels[nn][:-trailing_zeros].rstrip('.') if show_offset: # set the offset string: self.offset_string = tickdatetime[-1].strftime(offsetfmts[level]) if self._usetex: self.offset_string = _wrap_in_tex(self.offset_string) else: self.offset_string = '' if self._usetex: return [_wrap_in_tex(l) for l in labels] else: return labels def get_offset(self): return self.offset_string def format_data_short(self, value): return num2date(value, tz=self._tz).strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S') class AutoDateFormatter(ticker.Formatter): """ A `.Formatter` which attempts to figure out the best format to use. This is most useful when used with the `AutoDateLocator`. `.AutoDateFormatter` has a ``.scale`` dictionary that maps tick scales (the interval in days between one major tick) to format strings; this dictionary defaults to :: self.scaled = { DAYS_PER_YEAR: rcParams['date.autoformatter.year'], DAYS_PER_MONTH: rcParams['date.autoformatter.month'], 1: rcParams['date.autoformatter.day'], 1 / HOURS_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.hour'], 1 / MINUTES_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.minute'], 1 / SEC_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.second'], 1 / MUSECONDS_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.microsecond'], } The formatter uses the format string corresponding to the lowest key in the dictionary that is greater or equal to the current scale. Dictionary entries can be customized:: locator = AutoDateLocator() formatter = AutoDateFormatter(locator) formatter.scaled[1/(24*60)] = '%M:%S' # only show min and sec Custom callables can also be used instead of format strings. The following example shows how to use a custom format function to strip trailing zeros from decimal seconds and adds the date to the first ticklabel:: def my_format_function(x, pos=None): x = matplotlib.dates.num2date(x) if pos == 0: fmt = '%D %H:%M:%S.%f' else: fmt = '%H:%M:%S.%f' label = x.strftime(fmt) label = label.rstrip("0") label = label.rstrip(".") return label formatter.scaled[1/(24*60)] = my_format_function """ # This can be improved by providing some user-level direction on # how to choose the best format (precedence, etc.). # Perhaps a 'struct' that has a field for each time-type where a # zero would indicate "don't show" and a number would indicate # "show" with some sort of priority. Same priorities could mean # show all with the same priority. # Or more simply, perhaps just a format string for each # possibility... def __init__(self, locator, tz=None, defaultfmt='%Y-%m-%d', *, usetex=None): """ Autoformat the date labels. Parameters ---------- locator : `.ticker.Locator` Locator that this axis is using. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. defaultfmt : str The default format to use if none of the values in ``self.scaled`` are greater than the unit returned by ``locator._get_unit()``. usetex : bool, default: :rc:`text.usetex` To enable/disable the use of TeX's math mode for rendering the results of the formatter. If any entries in ``self.scaled`` are set as functions, then it is up to the customized function to enable or disable TeX's math mode itself. """ self._locator = locator self._tz = tz self.defaultfmt = defaultfmt self._formatter = DateFormatter(self.defaultfmt, tz) rcParams = mpl.rcParams self._usetex = mpl._val_or_rc(usetex, 'text.usetex') self.scaled = { DAYS_PER_YEAR: rcParams['date.autoformatter.year'], DAYS_PER_MONTH: rcParams['date.autoformatter.month'], 1: rcParams['date.autoformatter.day'], 1 / HOURS_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.hour'], 1 / MINUTES_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.minute'], 1 / SEC_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.second'], 1 / MUSECONDS_PER_DAY: rcParams['date.autoformatter.microsecond'] } def _set_locator(self, locator): self._locator = locator def __call__(self, x, pos=None): try: locator_unit_scale = float(self._locator._get_unit()) except AttributeError: locator_unit_scale = 1 # Pick the first scale which is greater than the locator unit. fmt = next((fmt for scale, fmt in sorted(self.scaled.items()) if scale >= locator_unit_scale), self.defaultfmt) if isinstance(fmt, str): self._formatter = DateFormatter(fmt, self._tz, usetex=self._usetex) result = self._formatter(x, pos) elif callable(fmt): result = fmt(x, pos) else: raise TypeError(f'Unexpected type passed to {self!r}.') return result class rrulewrapper: """ A simple wrapper around a `dateutil.rrule` allowing flexible date tick specifications. """ def __init__(self, freq, tzinfo=None, **kwargs): """ Parameters ---------- freq : {YEARLY, MONTHLY, WEEKLY, DAILY, HOURLY, MINUTELY, SECONDLY} Tick frequency. These constants are defined in `dateutil.rrule`, but they are accessible from `matplotlib.dates` as well. tzinfo : `datetime.tzinfo`, optional Time zone information. The default is None. **kwargs Additional keyword arguments are passed to the `dateutil.rrule`. """ kwargs['freq'] = freq self._base_tzinfo = tzinfo self._update_rrule(**kwargs) def set(self, **kwargs): """Set parameters for an existing wrapper.""" self._construct.update(kwargs) self._update_rrule(**self._construct) def _update_rrule(self, **kwargs): tzinfo = self._base_tzinfo # rrule does not play nicely with timezones - especially pytz time # zones, it's best to use naive zones and attach timezones once the # datetimes are returned if 'dtstart' in kwargs: dtstart = kwargs['dtstart'] if dtstart.tzinfo is not None: if tzinfo is None: tzinfo = dtstart.tzinfo else: dtstart = dtstart.astimezone(tzinfo) kwargs['dtstart'] = dtstart.replace(tzinfo=None) if 'until' in kwargs: until = kwargs['until'] if until.tzinfo is not None: if tzinfo is not None: until = until.astimezone(tzinfo) else: raise ValueError('until cannot be aware if dtstart ' 'is naive and tzinfo is None') kwargs['until'] = until.replace(tzinfo=None) self._construct = kwargs.copy() self._tzinfo = tzinfo self._rrule = rrule(**self._construct) def _attach_tzinfo(self, dt, tzinfo): # pytz zones are attached by "localizing" the datetime if hasattr(tzinfo, 'localize'): return tzinfo.localize(dt, is_dst=True) return dt.replace(tzinfo=tzinfo) def _aware_return_wrapper(self, f, returns_list=False): """Decorator function that allows rrule methods to handle tzinfo.""" # This is only necessary if we're actually attaching a tzinfo if self._tzinfo is None: return f # All datetime arguments must be naive. If they are not naive, they are # converted to the _tzinfo zone before dropping the zone. def normalize_arg(arg): if isinstance(arg, datetime.datetime) and arg.tzinfo is not None: if arg.tzinfo is not self._tzinfo: arg = arg.astimezone(self._tzinfo) return arg.replace(tzinfo=None) return arg def normalize_args(args, kwargs): args = tuple(normalize_arg(arg) for arg in args) kwargs = {kw: normalize_arg(arg) for kw, arg in kwargs.items()} return args, kwargs # There are two kinds of functions we care about - ones that return # dates and ones that return lists of dates. if not returns_list: def inner_func(*args, **kwargs): args, kwargs = normalize_args(args, kwargs) dt = f(*args, **kwargs) return self._attach_tzinfo(dt, self._tzinfo) else: def inner_func(*args, **kwargs): args, kwargs = normalize_args(args, kwargs) dts = f(*args, **kwargs) return [self._attach_tzinfo(dt, self._tzinfo) for dt in dts] return functools.wraps(f)(inner_func) def __getattr__(self, name): if name in self.__dict__: return self.__dict__[name] f = getattr(self._rrule, name) if name in {'after', 'before'}: return self._aware_return_wrapper(f) elif name in {'xafter', 'xbefore', 'between'}: return self._aware_return_wrapper(f, returns_list=True) else: return f def __setstate__(self, state): self.__dict__.update(state) class DateLocator(ticker.Locator): """ Determines the tick locations when plotting dates. This class is subclassed by other Locators and is not meant to be used on its own. """ hms0d = {'byhour': 0, 'byminute': 0, 'bysecond': 0} def __init__(self, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ self.tz = _get_tzinfo(tz) def set_tzinfo(self, tz): """ Set timezone info. Parameters ---------- tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ self.tz = _get_tzinfo(tz) def datalim_to_dt(self): """Convert axis data interval to datetime objects.""" dmin, dmax = self.axis.get_data_interval() if dmin > dmax: dmin, dmax = dmax, dmin return num2date(dmin, self.tz), num2date(dmax, self.tz) def viewlim_to_dt(self): """Convert the view interval to datetime objects.""" vmin, vmax = self.axis.get_view_interval() if vmin > vmax: vmin, vmax = vmax, vmin return num2date(vmin, self.tz), num2date(vmax, self.tz) def _get_unit(self): """ Return how many days a unit of the locator is; used for intelligent autoscaling. """ return 1 def _get_interval(self): """ Return the number of units for each tick. """ return 1 def nonsingular(self, vmin, vmax): """ Given the proposed upper and lower extent, adjust the range if it is too close to being singular (i.e. a range of ~0). """ if not np.isfinite(vmin) or not np.isfinite(vmax): # Except if there is no data, then use 1970 as default. return (date2num(datetime.date(1970, 1, 1)), date2num(datetime.date(1970, 1, 2))) if vmax < vmin: vmin, vmax = vmax, vmin unit = self._get_unit() interval = self._get_interval() if abs(vmax - vmin) < 1e-6: vmin -= 2 * unit * interval vmax += 2 * unit * interval return vmin, vmax class RRuleLocator(DateLocator): # use the dateutil rrule instance def __init__(self, o, tz=None): super().__init__(tz) self.rule = o def __call__(self): # if no data have been set, this will tank with a ValueError try: dmin, dmax = self.viewlim_to_dt() except ValueError: return [] return self.tick_values(dmin, dmax) def tick_values(self, vmin, vmax): start, stop = self._create_rrule(vmin, vmax) dates = self.rule.between(start, stop, True) if len(dates) == 0: return date2num([vmin, vmax]) return self.raise_if_exceeds(date2num(dates)) def _create_rrule(self, vmin, vmax): # set appropriate rrule dtstart and until and return # start and end delta = relativedelta(vmax, vmin) # We need to cap at the endpoints of valid datetime try: start = vmin - delta except (ValueError, OverflowError): # cap start = datetime.datetime(1, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc) try: stop = vmax + delta except (ValueError, OverflowError): # cap stop = datetime.datetime(9999, 12, 31, 23, 59, 59, tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc) self.rule.set(dtstart=start, until=stop) return vmin, vmax def _get_unit(self): # docstring inherited freq = self.rule._rrule._freq return self.get_unit_generic(freq) @staticmethod def get_unit_generic(freq): if freq == YEARLY: return DAYS_PER_YEAR elif freq == MONTHLY: return DAYS_PER_MONTH elif freq == WEEKLY: return DAYS_PER_WEEK elif freq == DAILY: return 1.0 elif freq == HOURLY: return 1.0 / HOURS_PER_DAY elif freq == MINUTELY: return 1.0 / MINUTES_PER_DAY elif freq == SECONDLY: return 1.0 / SEC_PER_DAY else: # error return -1 # or should this just return '1'? def _get_interval(self): return self.rule._rrule._interval class AutoDateLocator(DateLocator): """ On autoscale, this class picks the best `DateLocator` to set the view limits and the tick locations. Attributes ---------- intervald : dict Mapping of tick frequencies to multiples allowed for that ticking. The default is :: self.intervald = { YEARLY : [1, 2, 4, 5, 10, 20, 40, 50, 100, 200, 400, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000, 5000, 10000], MONTHLY : [1, 2, 3, 4, 6], DAILY : [1, 2, 3, 7, 14, 21], HOURLY : [1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12], MINUTELY: [1, 5, 10, 15, 30], SECONDLY: [1, 5, 10, 15, 30], MICROSECONDLY: [1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1000, 2000, 5000, 10000, 20000, 50000, 100000, 200000, 500000, 1000000], } where the keys are defined in `dateutil.rrule`. The interval is used to specify multiples that are appropriate for the frequency of ticking. For instance, every 7 days is sensible for daily ticks, but for minutes/seconds, 15 or 30 make sense. When customizing, you should only modify the values for the existing keys. You should not add or delete entries. Example for forcing ticks every 3 hours:: locator = AutoDateLocator() locator.intervald[HOURLY] = [3] # only show every 3 hours """ def __init__(self, tz=None, minticks=5, maxticks=None, interval_multiples=True): """ Parameters ---------- tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. minticks : int The minimum number of ticks desired; controls whether ticks occur yearly, monthly, etc. maxticks : int The maximum number of ticks desired; controls the interval between ticks (ticking every other, every 3, etc.). For fine-grained control, this can be a dictionary mapping individual rrule frequency constants (YEARLY, MONTHLY, etc.) to their own maximum number of ticks. This can be used to keep the number of ticks appropriate to the format chosen in `AutoDateFormatter`. Any frequency not specified in this dictionary is given a default value. interval_multiples : bool, default: True Whether ticks should be chosen to be multiple of the interval, locking them to 'nicer' locations. For example, this will force the ticks to be at hours 0, 6, 12, 18 when hourly ticking is done at 6 hour intervals. """ super().__init__(tz=tz) self._freq = YEARLY self._freqs = [YEARLY, MONTHLY, DAILY, HOURLY, MINUTELY, SECONDLY, MICROSECONDLY] self.minticks = minticks self.maxticks = {YEARLY: 11, MONTHLY: 12, DAILY: 11, HOURLY: 12, MINUTELY: 11, SECONDLY: 11, MICROSECONDLY: 8} if maxticks is not None: try: self.maxticks.update(maxticks) except TypeError: # Assume we were given an integer. Use this as the maximum # number of ticks for every frequency and create a # dictionary for this self.maxticks = dict.fromkeys(self._freqs, maxticks) self.interval_multiples = interval_multiples self.intervald = { YEARLY: [1, 2, 4, 5, 10, 20, 40, 50, 100, 200, 400, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000, 5000, 10000], MONTHLY: [1, 2, 3, 4, 6], DAILY: [1, 2, 3, 7, 14, 21], HOURLY: [1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12], MINUTELY: [1, 5, 10, 15, 30], SECONDLY: [1, 5, 10, 15, 30], MICROSECONDLY: [1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1000, 2000, 5000, 10000, 20000, 50000, 100000, 200000, 500000, 1000000], } if interval_multiples: # Swap "3" for "4" in the DAILY list; If we use 3 we get bad # tick loc for months w/ 31 days: 1, 4, ..., 28, 31, 1 # If we use 4 then we get: 1, 5, ... 25, 29, 1 self.intervald[DAILY] = [1, 2, 4, 7, 14] self._byranges = [None, range(1, 13), range(1, 32), range(0, 24), range(0, 60), range(0, 60), None] def __call__(self): # docstring inherited dmin, dmax = self.viewlim_to_dt() locator = self.get_locator(dmin, dmax) return locator() def tick_values(self, vmin, vmax): return self.get_locator(vmin, vmax).tick_values(vmin, vmax) def nonsingular(self, vmin, vmax): # whatever is thrown at us, we can scale the unit. # But default nonsingular date plots at an ~4 year period. if not np.isfinite(vmin) or not np.isfinite(vmax): # Except if there is no data, then use 1970 as default. return (date2num(datetime.date(1970, 1, 1)), date2num(datetime.date(1970, 1, 2))) if vmax < vmin: vmin, vmax = vmax, vmin if vmin == vmax: vmin = vmin - DAYS_PER_YEAR * 2 vmax = vmax + DAYS_PER_YEAR * 2 return vmin, vmax def _get_unit(self): if self._freq in [MICROSECONDLY]: return 1. / MUSECONDS_PER_DAY else: return RRuleLocator.get_unit_generic(self._freq) def get_locator(self, dmin, dmax): """Pick the best locator based on a distance.""" delta = relativedelta(dmax, dmin) tdelta = dmax - dmin # take absolute difference if dmin > dmax: delta = -delta tdelta = -tdelta # The following uses a mix of calls to relativedelta and timedelta # methods because there is incomplete overlap in the functionality of # these similar functions, and it's best to avoid doing our own math # whenever possible. numYears = float(delta.years) numMonths = numYears * MONTHS_PER_YEAR + delta.months numDays = tdelta.days # Avoids estimates of days/month, days/year. numHours = numDays * HOURS_PER_DAY + delta.hours numMinutes = numHours * MIN_PER_HOUR + delta.minutes numSeconds = np.floor(tdelta.total_seconds()) numMicroseconds = np.floor(tdelta.total_seconds() * 1e6) nums = [numYears, numMonths, numDays, numHours, numMinutes, numSeconds, numMicroseconds] use_rrule_locator = [True] * 6 + [False] # Default setting of bymonth, etc. to pass to rrule # [unused (for year), bymonth, bymonthday, byhour, byminute, # bysecond, unused (for microseconds)] byranges = [None, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, None] # Loop over all the frequencies and try to find one that gives at # least a minticks tick positions. Once this is found, look for # an interval from a list specific to that frequency that gives no # more than maxticks tick positions. Also, set up some ranges # (bymonth, etc.) as appropriate to be passed to rrulewrapper. for i, (freq, num) in enumerate(zip(self._freqs, nums)): # If this particular frequency doesn't give enough ticks, continue if num < self.minticks: # Since we're not using this particular frequency, set # the corresponding by_ to None so the rrule can act as # appropriate byranges[i] = None continue # Find the first available interval that doesn't give too many # ticks for interval in self.intervald[freq]: if num <= interval * (self.maxticks[freq] - 1): break else: if not (self.interval_multiples and freq == DAILY): _api.warn_external( f"AutoDateLocator was unable to pick an appropriate " f"interval for this date range. It may be necessary " f"to add an interval value to the AutoDateLocator's " f"intervald dictionary. Defaulting to {interval}.") # Set some parameters as appropriate self._freq = freq if self._byranges[i] and self.interval_multiples: byranges[i] = self._byranges[i][::interval] if i in (DAILY, WEEKLY): if interval == 14: # just make first and 15th. Avoids 30th. byranges[i] = [1, 15] elif interval == 7: byranges[i] = [1, 8, 15, 22] interval = 1 else: byranges[i] = self._byranges[i] break else: interval = 1 if (freq == YEARLY) and self.interval_multiples: locator = YearLocator(interval, tz=self.tz) elif use_rrule_locator[i]: _, bymonth, bymonthday, byhour, byminute, bysecond, _ = byranges rrule = rrulewrapper(self._freq, interval=interval, dtstart=dmin, until=dmax, bymonth=bymonth, bymonthday=bymonthday, byhour=byhour, byminute=byminute, bysecond=bysecond) locator = RRuleLocator(rrule, tz=self.tz) else: locator = MicrosecondLocator(interval, tz=self.tz) if date2num(dmin) > 70 * 365 and interval < 1000: _api.warn_external( 'Plotting microsecond time intervals for dates far from ' f'the epoch (time origin: {get_epoch()}) is not well-' 'supported. See matplotlib.dates.set_epoch to change the ' 'epoch.') locator.set_axis(self.axis) return locator class YearLocator(RRuleLocator): """ Make ticks on a given day of each year that is a multiple of base. Examples:: # Tick every year on Jan 1st locator = YearLocator() # Tick every 5 years on July 4th locator = YearLocator(5, month=7, day=4) """ def __init__(self, base=1, month=1, day=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- base : int, default: 1 Mark ticks every *base* years. month : int, default: 1 The month on which to place the ticks, starting from 1. Default is January. day : int, default: 1 The day on which to place the ticks. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ rule = rrulewrapper(YEARLY, interval=base, bymonth=month, bymonthday=day, **self.hms0d) super().__init__(rule, tz=tz) self.base = ticker._Edge_integer(base, 0) def _create_rrule(self, vmin, vmax): # 'start' needs to be a multiple of the interval to create ticks on # interval multiples when the tick frequency is YEARLY ymin = max(self.base.le(vmin.year) * self.base.step, 1) ymax = min(self.base.ge(vmax.year) * self.base.step, 9999) c = self.rule._construct replace = {'year': ymin, 'month': c.get('bymonth', 1), 'day': c.get('bymonthday', 1), 'hour': 0, 'minute': 0, 'second': 0} start = vmin.replace(**replace) stop = start.replace(year=ymax) self.rule.set(dtstart=start, until=stop) return start, stop class MonthLocator(RRuleLocator): """ Make ticks on occurrences of each month, e.g., 1, 3, 12. """ def __init__(self, bymonth=None, bymonthday=1, interval=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- bymonth : int or list of int, default: all months Ticks will be placed on every month in *bymonth*. Default is ``range(1, 13)``, i.e. every month. bymonthday : int, default: 1 The day on which to place the ticks. interval : int, default: 1 The interval between each iteration. For example, if ``interval=2``, mark every second occurrence. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ if bymonth is None: bymonth = range(1, 13) rule = rrulewrapper(MONTHLY, bymonth=bymonth, bymonthday=bymonthday, interval=interval, **self.hms0d) super().__init__(rule, tz=tz) class WeekdayLocator(RRuleLocator): """ Make ticks on occurrences of each weekday. """ def __init__(self, byweekday=1, interval=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- byweekday : int or list of int, default: all days Ticks will be placed on every weekday in *byweekday*. Default is every day. Elements of *byweekday* must be one of MO, TU, WE, TH, FR, SA, SU, the constants from :mod:`dateutil.rrule`, which have been imported into the :mod:`matplotlib.dates` namespace. interval : int, default: 1 The interval between each iteration. For example, if ``interval=2``, mark every second occurrence. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ rule = rrulewrapper(DAILY, byweekday=byweekday, interval=interval, **self.hms0d) super().__init__(rule, tz=tz) class DayLocator(RRuleLocator): """ Make ticks on occurrences of each day of the month. For example, 1, 15, 30. """ def __init__(self, bymonthday=None, interval=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- bymonthday : int or list of int, default: all days Ticks will be placed on every day in *bymonthday*. Default is ``bymonthday=range(1, 32)``, i.e., every day of the month. interval : int, default: 1 The interval between each iteration. For example, if ``interval=2``, mark every second occurrence. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ if interval != int(interval) or interval < 1: raise ValueError("interval must be an integer greater than 0") if bymonthday is None: bymonthday = range(1, 32) rule = rrulewrapper(DAILY, bymonthday=bymonthday, interval=interval, **self.hms0d) super().__init__(rule, tz=tz) class HourLocator(RRuleLocator): """ Make ticks on occurrences of each hour. """ def __init__(self, byhour=None, interval=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- byhour : int or list of int, default: all hours Ticks will be placed on every hour in *byhour*. Default is ``byhour=range(24)``, i.e., every hour. interval : int, default: 1 The interval between each iteration. For example, if ``interval=2``, mark every second occurrence. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ if byhour is None: byhour = range(24) rule = rrulewrapper(HOURLY, byhour=byhour, interval=interval, byminute=0, bysecond=0) super().__init__(rule, tz=tz) class MinuteLocator(RRuleLocator): """ Make ticks on occurrences of each minute. """ def __init__(self, byminute=None, interval=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- byminute : int or list of int, default: all minutes Ticks will be placed on every minute in *byminute*. Default is ``byminute=range(60)``, i.e., every minute. interval : int, default: 1 The interval between each iteration. For example, if ``interval=2``, mark every second occurrence. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ if byminute is None: byminute = range(60) rule = rrulewrapper(MINUTELY, byminute=byminute, interval=interval, bysecond=0) super().__init__(rule, tz=tz) class SecondLocator(RRuleLocator): """ Make ticks on occurrences of each second. """ def __init__(self, bysecond=None, interval=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- bysecond : int or list of int, default: all seconds Ticks will be placed on every second in *bysecond*. Default is ``bysecond = range(60)``, i.e., every second. interval : int, default: 1 The interval between each iteration. For example, if ``interval=2``, mark every second occurrence. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ if bysecond is None: bysecond = range(60) rule = rrulewrapper(SECONDLY, bysecond=bysecond, interval=interval) super().__init__(rule, tz=tz) class MicrosecondLocator(DateLocator): """ Make ticks on regular intervals of one or more microsecond(s). .. note:: By default, Matplotlib uses a floating point representation of time in days since the epoch, so plotting data with microsecond time resolution does not work well for dates that are far (about 70 years) from the epoch (check with `~.dates.get_epoch`). If you want sub-microsecond resolution time plots, it is strongly recommended to use floating point seconds, not datetime-like time representation. If you really must use datetime.datetime() or similar and still need microsecond precision, change the time origin via `.dates.set_epoch` to something closer to the dates being plotted. See :doc:`/gallery/ticks/date_precision_and_epochs`. """ def __init__(self, interval=1, tz=None): """ Parameters ---------- interval : int, default: 1 The interval between each iteration. For example, if ``interval=2``, mark every second occurrence. tz : str or `~datetime.tzinfo`, default: :rc:`timezone` Ticks timezone. If a string, *tz* is passed to `dateutil.tz`. """ super().__init__(tz=tz) self._interval = interval self._wrapped_locator = ticker.MultipleLocator(interval) def set_axis(self, axis): self._wrapped_locator.set_axis(axis) return super().set_axis(axis) def __call__(self): # if no data have been set, this will tank with a ValueError try: dmin, dmax = self.viewlim_to_dt() except ValueError: return [] return self.tick_values(dmin, dmax) def tick_values(self, vmin, vmax): nmin, nmax = date2num((vmin, vmax)) t0 = np.floor(nmin) nmax = nmax - t0 nmin = nmin - t0 nmin *= MUSECONDS_PER_DAY nmax *= MUSECONDS_PER_DAY ticks = self._wrapped_locator.tick_values(nmin, nmax) ticks = ticks / MUSECONDS_PER_DAY + t0 return ticks def _get_unit(self): # docstring inherited return 1. / MUSECONDS_PER_DAY def _get_interval(self): # docstring inherited return self._interval class DateConverter(units.ConversionInterface): """ Converter for `datetime.date` and `datetime.datetime` data, or for date/time data represented as it would be converted by `date2num`. The 'unit' tag for such data is None or a `~datetime.tzinfo` instance. """ def __init__(self, *, interval_multiples=True): self._interval_multiples = interval_multiples super().__init__() def axisinfo(self, unit, axis): """ Return the `~matplotlib.units.AxisInfo` for *unit*. *unit* is a `~datetime.tzinfo` instance or None. The *axis* argument is required but not used. """ tz = unit majloc = AutoDateLocator(tz=tz, interval_multiples=self._interval_multiples) majfmt = AutoDateFormatter(majloc, tz=tz) datemin = datetime.date(1970, 1, 1) datemax = datetime.date(1970, 1, 2) return units.AxisInfo(majloc=majloc, majfmt=majfmt, label='', default_limits=(datemin, datemax)) @staticmethod def convert(value, unit, axis): """ If *value* is not already a number or sequence of numbers, convert it with `date2num`. The *unit* and *axis* arguments are not used. """ return date2num(value) @staticmethod def default_units(x, axis): """ Return the `~datetime.tzinfo` instance of *x* or of its first element, or None """ if isinstance(x, np.ndarray): x = x.ravel() try: x = cbook._safe_first_finite(x) except (TypeError, StopIteration): pass try: return x.tzinfo except AttributeError: pass return None class ConciseDateConverter(DateConverter): # docstring inherited def __init__(self, formats=None, zero_formats=None, offset_formats=None, show_offset=True, *, interval_multiples=True): self._formats = formats self._zero_formats = zero_formats self._offset_formats = offset_formats self._show_offset = show_offset self._interval_multiples = interval_multiples super().__init__() def axisinfo(self, unit, axis): # docstring inherited tz = unit majloc = AutoDateLocator(tz=tz, interval_multiples=self._interval_multiples) majfmt = ConciseDateFormatter(majloc, tz=tz, formats=self._formats, zero_formats=self._zero_formats, offset_formats=self._offset_formats, show_offset=self._show_offset) datemin = datetime.date(1970, 1, 1) datemax = datetime.date(1970, 1, 2) return units.AxisInfo(majloc=majloc, majfmt=majfmt, label='', default_limits=(datemin, datemax)) class _SwitchableDateConverter: """ Helper converter-like object that generates and dispatches to temporary ConciseDateConverter or DateConverter instances based on :rc:`date.converter` and :rc:`date.interval_multiples`. """ @staticmethod def _get_converter(): converter_cls = { "concise": ConciseDateConverter, "auto": DateConverter}[ mpl.rcParams["date.converter"]] interval_multiples = mpl.rcParams["date.interval_multiples"] return converter_cls(interval_multiples=interval_multiples) def axisinfo(self, *args, **kwargs): return self._get_converter().axisinfo(*args, **kwargs) def default_units(self, *args, **kwargs): return self._get_converter().default_units(*args, **kwargs) def convert(self, *args, **kwargs): return self._get_converter().convert(*args, **kwargs) units.registry[np.datetime64] = \ units.registry[datetime.date] = \ units.registry[datetime.datetime] = \ _SwitchableDateConverter()