How to plot a pie chart with the first wedge on top, in Python? [matplotlib]

Question:

How can a pie chart be drawn with Matplotlib with a first wedge that starts at noon (i.e. on the top of the pie)? The default is for pyplot.pie() to place the first edge at three o’clock, and it would be great to be able to customize this.

Asked By: Eric O Lebigot

||

Answers:

It’s a bit of a hack, but you can do something like this…

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
from matplotlib.transforms import Affine2D
import numpy as np

x = [5, 20, 10, 10]
labels=['cliffs', 'frogs', 'stumps', 'old men on tractors']

plt.figure()
plt.suptitle("Things I narrowly missed while learning to drive")
wedges, labels = plt.pie(x, labels=labels)
plt.axis('equal')

starting_angle = 90
rotation = Affine2D().rotate(np.radians(starting_angle))

for wedge, label in zip(wedges, labels):
    label.set_position(rotation.transform(label.get_position()))
    if label._x > 0:
        label.set_horizontalalignment('left')
    else:
        label.set_horizontalalignment('right')

    wedge._path = wedge._path.transformed(rotation)

plt.show()

Example Pie Plot

Answered By: Joe Kington

Just because this came up in a Google search for me, I’ll add that in the meantime, matplotlib has included just this as an additional argument to the pie function.

Now, one can call plt.pie(data, startangle=90) to have the first wedge start at noon.

PyPlot documentation on this

Answered By: Nils Gudat
Categories: questions Tags: , ,
Answers are sorted by their score. The answer accepted by the question owner as the best is marked with
at the top-right corner.