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hvPlot provides one API to explore data of many different types. Previous sections have exclusively worked with tabular data stored in pandas (or pandas-like) DataFrames. The other most common type of data are n-dimensional arrays. hvPlot aims to eventually support different array libraries but for now focuses on xarray. XArray provides a convenient and very powerful wrapper to label the axis and coordinates of multi-dimensional (n-D) arrays. This user guide will cover how to leverage xarray
and hvplot
to visualize and explore data of different dimensionality ranging from simple 1D data, to 2D image-like data, to multi-dimensional cubes of data.
For these examples we’ll use the North American air temperature dataset:
import xarray as xr
import hvplot.xarray # noqa
air_ds = xr.tutorial.open_dataset('air_temperature').load()
air = air_ds.air
air_ds
1D Plots
Selecting the data at a particular lat/lon coordinate we get a 1D dataset of air temperatures over time:
air1d = air.sel(lat=40, lon=285)
air1d.hvplot()
Notice how the axes are already appropriately labeled, because xarray stores the metadata required. We can also further subselect the data and use *
to overlay plots:
air1d_sel = air1d.sel(time='2013-01')
air1d_sel.hvplot(color='purple') * air1d_sel.hvplot.scatter(marker='o', color='blue', size=15)
air.lat
Selecting multiple
If we select multiple coordinates along one axis and plot a chart type, the data will automatically be split by the coordinate:
air.sel(lat=[20, 40, 60], lon=285).hvplot.line()
To plot a different relationship we can explicitly request to display the latitude along the y-axis and use the by
keyword to color each longitude (or 'lon') differently (note that this differs from the hue
keyword xarray uses):
air.sel(time='2013-02-01 00:00', lon=[280, 285]).hvplot.line(y='lat', by='lon', legend='top_right')
2D Plots
By default the DataArray.hvplot()
method generates an image if the data is two-dimensional.
air2d = air.sel(time='2013-06-01 12:00')
air2d.hvplot(width=400)
Alternatively we can also plot the same data using the contour
and contourf
methods, which provide a levels
argument to control the number of iso-contours to draw:
air2d.hvplot.contour(width=400, levels=20) + air2d.hvplot.contourf(width=400, levels=8)
n-D Plots
If the data has more than two dimensions it will default to a histogram without providing it further hints:
air.hvplot()
However we can tell it to apply a groupby
along a particular dimension, allowing us to explore the data as images along that dimension with a slider:
air.hvplot(groupby='time', width=500)
By default, for numeric types you'll get a slider and for non-numeric types you'll get a selector. Use widget_type
and widget_location
to control the look of the widget. To learn more about customizing widget behavior see Widgets.
air.hvplot(groupby='time', width=600, widget_type='scrubber', widget_location='bottom')
If we pick a different, lower dimensional plot type (such as a 'line') it will automatically apply a groupby over the remaining dimensions:
air.hvplot.line(width=600)
Statistical plots
Statistical plots such as histograms, kernel-density estimates, or violin and box-whisker plots aggregate the data across one or more of the coordinate dimensions. For instance, plotting a KDE provides a summary of all the air temperature values but we can, once again, use the by
keyword to view each selected latitude (or 'lat') separately:
air.sel(lat=[25, 50, 75]).hvplot.kde('air', by='lat', alpha=0.5)
Using the by
keyword we can break down the distribution of the air temperature across one or more variables:
air.hvplot.violin('air', by='lat', color='lat', cmap='Category20')
Rasterizing
If you are plotting a large amount of data at once, you can consider using the hvPlot interface to Datashader, which can be enabled simply by setting rasterize=True
.
Note that by declaring that the data should not be grouped by another coordinate variable, i.e. by setting groupby=[]
, we can plot all the datapoints, showing us the spread of air temperatures in the dataset:
air.hvplot.scatter('time', groupby=[], rasterize=True) *\
air.mean(['lat', 'lon']).hvplot.line('time', color='indianred')
Here we also overlaid a non-datashaded line plot of the average temperature at each time. If you enable the appropriate hover tool, the overlaid data supports hovering and zooming even in a static export such as on a web server or in an email, while the raw-data plot has been aggregated spatially before it is sent to the browser, and thus it has only the fixed spatial binning available at that time. If you have a live Python process, the raw data will be aggregated each time you pan or zoom, letting you see the entire dataset regardless of size.