Visualizing Tabular Data
Last updated on 2024-06-24 | Edit this page
Overview
Questions
- How can I visualize tabular data in Python?
- How can I group several plots together?
Objectives
- Plot simple graphs from data.
- Plot multiple graphs in a single figure.
Visualizing data
The mathematician Richard Hamming once said, “The purpose of
computing is insight, not numbers,” and the best way to develop insight
is often to visualize data. Visualization deserves an entire lecture of
its own, but we can explore a few features of Python’s
matplotlib
library here. While there is no official
plotting library, matplotlib
is the de facto
standard. First, we will import the pyplot
module from
matplotlib
and use two of its functions to create and
display a heat map of our
data:
Episode Prerequisites
If you are continuing in the same notebook from the previous episode,
you already have a data
variable and have imported
numpy
. If you are starting a new notebook at this point,
you need the following lines:
Each row in the heat map corresponds to a patient in the clinical trial dataset, and each column corresponds to a day in the dataset. Blue pixels in this heat map represent low values, while yellow pixels represent high values. As we can see, the general number of inflammation flare-ups for the patients rises and falls over a 40-day period.
So far so good as this is in line with our knowledge of the clinical trial and Dr. Maverick’s claims:
- the patients take their medication once their inflammation flare-ups begin
- it takes around 3 weeks for the medication to take effect and begin reducing flare-ups
- and flare-ups appear to drop to zero by the end of the clinical trial.
Now let’s take a look at the average inflammation over time:
PYTHON
ave_inflammation = numpy.mean(data, axis=0)
ave_plot = matplotlib.pyplot.plot(ave_inflammation)
matplotlib.pyplot.show()
Here, we have put the average inflammation per day across all
patients in the variable ave_inflammation
, then asked
matplotlib.pyplot
to create and display a line graph of
those values. The result is a reasonably linear rise and fall, in line
with Dr. Maverick’s claim that the medication takes 3 weeks to take
effect. But a good data scientist doesn’t just consider the average of a
dataset, so let’s have a look at two other statistics:
The maximum value rises and falls linearly, while the minimum seems to be a step function. Neither trend seems particularly likely, so either there’s a mistake in our calculations or something is wrong with our data. This insight would have been difficult to reach by examining the numbers themselves without visualization tools.
Grouping plots
You can group similar plots in a single figure using subplots. This
script below uses a number of new commands. The function
matplotlib.pyplot.figure()
creates a space into which we
will place all of our plots. The parameter figsize
tells
Python how big to make this space. Each subplot is placed into the
figure using its add_subplot
method. The add_subplot
method takes 3 parameters. The first denotes how many total rows of
subplots there are, the second parameter refers to the total number of
subplot columns, and the final parameter denotes which subplot your
variable is referencing (left-to-right, top-to-bottom). Each subplot is
stored in a different variable (axes1
, axes2
,
axes3
). Once a subplot is created, the axes can be titled
using the set_xlabel()
command (or
set_ylabel()
). Here are our three plots side by side:
PYTHON
import numpy
import matplotlib.pyplot
data = numpy.loadtxt(fname=file_path + 'inflammation-01.csv', delimiter=',')
fig = matplotlib.pyplot.figure(figsize=(10.0, 3.0))
axes1 = fig.add_subplot(1, 3, 1)
axes2 = fig.add_subplot(1, 3, 2)
axes3 = fig.add_subplot(1, 3, 3)
axes1.set_ylabel('average')
axes1.plot(numpy.mean(data, axis=0))
axes2.set_ylabel('max')
axes2.plot(numpy.amax(data, axis=0))
axes3.set_ylabel('min')
axes3.plot(numpy.amin(data, axis=0))
matplotlib.pyplot.savefig('inflammation.png')
matplotlib.pyplot.show()
The call to
loadtxt
reads our data, and the rest of the program tells
the plotting library how large we want the figure to be, that we’re
creating three subplots, what to draw for each one.
The call to savefig
stores the plot as a graphics file.
This can be a convenient way to store your plots for use in other
documents, web pages etc. The graphics format is automatically
determined by Matplotlib from the file name ending we specify; here PNG
from ‘inflammation.png’. Matplotlib supports many different graphics
formats, including SVG, PDF, and JPEG.
Importing libraries with shortcuts
In this lesson we use the import matplotlib.pyplot
syntax to import the
pyplot
module of matplotlib
. However,
shortcuts such as import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
are
frequently used. Importing pyplot
this way means that after
the initial import, rather than writing
matplotlib.pyplot.plot(...)
, you can now write
plt.plot(...)
. Another common convention is to use the
shortcut import numpy as np
when importing the NumPy
library. We then can write np.loadtxt(...)
instead of
numpy.loadtxt(...)
, for example.
Some people prefer these shortcuts as it is quicker to type and
results in shorter lines of code - especially for libraries with long
names! You will frequently see Python code online using a
pyplot
function with plt
, or a NumPy function
with np
, and it’s because they’ve used this shortcut. It
makes no difference which approach you choose to take, but you must be
consistent as if you use import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
then matplotlib.pyplot.plot(...)
will not work, and you
must use plt.plot(...)
instead. Because of this, when
working with other people it is important you agree on how libraries are
imported.
Plot Scaling
Why do all of our plots stop just short of the upper end of our graph?
Because matplotlib normally sets x and y axes limits to the min and max of our data (depending on data range)
Drawing Straight Lines
In the center and right subplots above, we expect all lines to look like step functions because non-integer value are not realistic for the minimum and maximum values. However, you can see that the lines are not always vertical or horizontal, and in particular the step function in the subplot on the right looks slanted. Why is this?
Because matplotlib interpolates (draws a straight line) between the
points. One way to do avoid this is to use the Matplotlib
drawstyle
option:
PYTHON
import numpy
import matplotlib.pyplot
data = numpy.loadtxt(fname=file_path + 'inflammation-01.csv', delimiter=',')
fig = matplotlib.pyplot.figure(figsize=(10.0, 3.0))
axes1 = fig.add_subplot(1, 3, 1)
axes2 = fig.add_subplot(1, 3, 2)
axes3 = fig.add_subplot(1, 3, 3)
axes1.set_ylabel('average')
axes1.plot(numpy.mean(data, axis=0), drawstyle='steps-mid')
axes2.set_ylabel('max')
axes2.plot(numpy.amax(data, axis=0), drawstyle='steps-mid')
axes3.set_ylabel('min')
axes3.plot(numpy.amin(data, axis=0), drawstyle='steps-mid')
fig.tight_layout()
matplotlib.pyplot.show()
Make Your Own Plot
Create a plot showing the standard deviation (numpy.std
)
of the inflammation data for each day across all patients.
Modify the program to display the three plots on top of one another instead of side by side.
PYTHON
import numpy
import matplotlib.pyplot
data = numpy.loadtxt(fname='inflammation-01.csv', delimiter=',')
# change figsize (swap width and height)
fig = matplotlib.pyplot.figure(figsize=(3.0, 10.0))
# change add_subplot (swap first two parameters)
axes1 = fig.add_subplot(3, 1, 1)
axes2 = fig.add_subplot(3, 1, 2)
axes3 = fig.add_subplot(3, 1, 3)
axes1.set_ylabel('average')
axes1.plot(numpy.mean(data, axis=0))
axes2.set_ylabel('max')
axes2.plot(numpy.amax(data, axis=0))
axes3.set_ylabel('min')
axes3.plot(numpy.amin(data, axis=0))
fig.tight_layout()
matplotlib.pyplot.show()
Key Points
- Use the
pyplot
module from thematplotlib
library for creating simple visualizations.