Is it possible to have multiple PyPlot windows? Or am I limited to subplots?

Question:

I’m not sure how to word my question more clearly. Basically, is PyPlot limited to one instance/window? Any hack or workaround I try either causes my program to freeze or for the second pyplot window to be queued until the first one is closed.

Asked By: wnewport

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Answers:

Sure, just open a new figure:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

plt.plot(range(10))

plt.figure()
plt.plot(range(10), 'ro-')

plt.figure(), plt.plot(...)

plt.show() # only do this once, at the end

If you’re running this in the default python interpreter, this won’t work, as each figure needs to enter the gui’s mainloop. If you want to run things in an interactive shell, look into IPython. If you just run this normally (i.e. put it into a file and call python filename.py) it will work fine, though.

Answered By: Joe Kington

Use plt.figure() and use a certain number so that the window is fixed:

plt.figure(200)
plt.plot(x)
plt.show()

and for another plot, use a different number:

plt.figure(300)
plt.plot(y)
plt.show()
Answered By: j35t3r

The answer to your question is no. You can have as many windows as you want. Firstly, just type

plt.figure(n) #n must be a different integer for every window

for every new figure you want. Secondly, write

plt.show()

only once (!) at the end of everything you want to plot. Here is an example for two histograms:

plt.figure(1)
plt.hist(dataset1)
plt.figure(2)
plt.hist(dataset2)
plt.show()
Answered By: MiLe

You can do it with the pyplot.show properties

Example:

plt.show(block=False)
Answered By: Mario Zambrano