
.. DO NOT EDIT.
.. THIS FILE WAS AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED BY SPHINX-GALLERY.
.. TO MAKE CHANGES, EDIT THE SOURCE PYTHON FILE:
.. "gallery/misc/transoffset.py"
.. LINE NUMBERS ARE GIVEN BELOW.

.. only:: html

    .. note::
        :class: sphx-glr-download-link-note

        Click :ref:`here <sphx_glr_download_gallery_misc_transoffset.py>`
        to download the full example code

.. rst-class:: sphx-glr-example-title

.. _sphx_glr_gallery_misc_transoffset.py:


======================
transforms.offset_copy
======================

This illustrates the use of `.transforms.offset_copy` to
make a transform that positions a drawing element such as
a text string at a specified offset in screen coordinates
(dots or inches) relative to a location given in any
coordinates.

Every Artist (Text, Line2D, etc.) has a transform that can be
set when the Artist is created, such as by the corresponding
pyplot function.  By default this is usually the Axes.transData
transform, going from data units to screen pixels.  We can
use the `.offset_copy` function to make a modified copy of
this transform, where the modification consists of an
offset.

.. GENERATED FROM PYTHON SOURCE LINES 20-58



.. image:: /gallery/misc/images/sphx_glr_transoffset_001.png
    :alt: transoffset
    :class: sphx-glr-single-img





.. code-block:: default


    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    import matplotlib.transforms as mtransforms
    import numpy as np


    xs = np.arange(7)
    ys = xs**2

    fig = plt.figure(figsize=(5, 10))
    ax = plt.subplot(2, 1, 1)

    # If we want the same offset for each text instance,
    # we only need to make one transform.  To get the
    # transform argument to offset_copy, we need to make the axes
    # first; the subplot function above is one way to do this.
    trans_offset = mtransforms.offset_copy(ax.transData, fig=fig,
                                           x=0.05, y=0.10, units='inches')

    for x, y in zip(xs, ys):
        plt.plot(x, y, 'ro')
        plt.text(x, y, '%d, %d' % (int(x), int(y)), transform=trans_offset)


    # offset_copy works for polar plots also.
    ax = plt.subplot(2, 1, 2, projection='polar')

    trans_offset = mtransforms.offset_copy(ax.transData, fig=fig,
                                           y=6, units='dots')

    for x, y in zip(xs, ys):
        plt.polar(x, y, 'ro')
        plt.text(x, y, '%d, %d' % (int(x), int(y)),
                 transform=trans_offset,
                 horizontalalignment='center',
                 verticalalignment='bottom')

    plt.show()


.. rst-class:: sphx-glr-timing

   **Total running time of the script:** ( 0 minutes  1.221 seconds)


.. _sphx_glr_download_gallery_misc_transoffset.py:


.. only :: html

 .. container:: sphx-glr-footer
    :class: sphx-glr-footer-example



  .. container:: sphx-glr-download sphx-glr-download-python

     :download:`Download Python source code: transoffset.py <transoffset.py>`



  .. container:: sphx-glr-download sphx-glr-download-jupyter

     :download:`Download Jupyter notebook: transoffset.ipynb <transoffset.ipynb>`


.. only:: html

 .. rst-class:: sphx-glr-signature

    Keywords: matplotlib code example, codex, python plot, pyplot
    `Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery
    <https://sphinx-gallery.readthedocs.io>`_
