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matplotlib.axes.Axes.set_aspect
- Axes.set_aspect(aspect, adjustable=None, anchor=None, share=False)[source]
-
Set the aspect ratio of the axes scaling, i.e. y/x-scale.
- Parameters
-
- aspect{'auto', 'equal'} or float
-
Possible values:
- 'auto': fill the position rectangle with data.
- 'equal': same as
aspect=1
, i.e. same scaling for x and y. - float: The displayed size of 1 unit in y-data coordinates will be aspect times the displayed size of 1 unit in x-data coordinates; e.g. for
aspect=2
a square in data coordinates will be rendered with a height of twice its width.
- adjustableNone or {'box', 'datalim'}, optional
-
If not
None
, this defines which parameter will be adjusted to meet the required aspect. Seeset_adjustable
for further details. - anchorNone or str or (float, float), optional
-
If not
None
, this defines where the Axes will be drawn if there is extra space due to aspect constraints. The most common way to to specify the anchor are abbreviations of cardinal directions:value
description
'C'
centered
'SW'
lower left corner
'S'
middle of bottom edge
'SE'
lower right corner
etc.
See
set_anchor
for further details. - sharebool, default: False
-
If
True
, apply the settings to all shared Axes.
See also
-
matplotlib.axes.Axes.set_adjustable
-
Set how the Axes adjusts to achieve the required aspect ratio.
-
matplotlib.axes.Axes.set_anchor
-
Set the position in case of extra space.
Examples using matplotlib.axes.Axes.set_aspect
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https://matplotlib.org/3.5.1/api/_as_gen/matplotlib.axes.Axes.set_aspect.html