How to make savefig() save image for 'maximized' window instead of default size

I am using pylab in matplotlib to create a plot and save the plot to an image file. However, when I save the image using pylab.savefig( image_name ), I find that the SIZE image saved is the same as the image that is shown when I use pylab.show().

As it happens, I have a lot of data in the plot and when I am using pylab.show(), I have to maximize the window before I can see all of the plot correctly, and the xlabel tickers don't superimpose on each other.

Is there anyway that I can programmatically 'maximize' the window before saving the image to file? - at the moment, I am only getting the 'default' window size image, which results in the x axis labels being superimposed on one another.


There are two major options in matplotlib (pylab) to control the image size:

  1. You can set the size of the resulting image in inches
  2. You can define the DPI (dots per inch) for output file (basically, it is a resolution)

Normally, you would like to do both, because this way you will have full control over the resulting image size in pixels. For example, if you want to render exactly 800x600 image, you can use DPI=100, and set the size as 8 x 6 in inches:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
# plot whatever you need...
# now, before saving to file:
figure = plt.gcf() # get current figure
figure.set_size_inches(8, 6)
# when saving, specify the DPI
plt.savefig("myplot.png", dpi = 100)

One can use any DPI. In fact, you might want to play with various DPI and size values to get the result you like the most. Beware, however, that using very small DPI is not a good idea, because matplotlib may not find a good font to render legend and other text. For example, you cannot set the DPI=1, because there are no fonts with characters rendered with 1 pixel :)

From other comments I understood that other issue you have is proper text rendering. For this, you can also change the font size. For example, you may use 6 pixels per character, instead of 12 pixels per character used by default (effectively, making all text twice smaller).

import matplotlib
#...
matplotlib.rc('font', size=6)

Finally, some references to the original documentation: http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/api/pyplot_api.html#matplotlib.pyplot.savefig, http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/api/pyplot_api.html#matplotlib.pyplot.gcf, http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/api/figure_api.html#matplotlib.figure.Figure.set_size_inches, http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/users/customizing.html#dynamic-rc-settings

P.S. Sorry, I didn't use pylab, but as far as I'm aware, all the code above will work same way in pylab - just replace plt in my code with the pylab (or whatever name you assigned when importing pylab). Same for matplotlib - use pylab instead.


You set the size on initialization:

fig2 = matplotlib.pyplot.figure(figsize=(8.0, 5.0)) # in inches!

Edit:

If the problem is with x-axis ticks - You can set them "manually":

fig2.add_subplot(111).set_xticks(arange(1,3,0.5)) # You can actually compute the interval You need - and substitute here

And so on with other aspects of Your plot. You can configure it all. Here's an example:

from numpy import arange
import matplotlib
# import matplotlib as mpl
import matplotlib.pyplot
# import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

x1 = [1,2,3]
y1 = [4,5,6]
x2 = [1,2,3]
y2 = [5,5,5]

# initialization
fig2 = matplotlib.pyplot.figure(figsize=(8.0, 5.0)) # The size of the figure is specified as (width, height) in inches

# lines:
l1 = fig2.add_subplot(111).plot(x1,y1, label=r"Text $formula$", "r-", lw=2)
l2 = fig2.add_subplot(111).plot(x2,y2, label=r"$legend2$" ,"g--", lw=3)
fig2.add_subplot(111).legend((l1,l2), loc=0)

# axes:
fig2.add_subplot(111).grid(True)
fig2.add_subplot(111).set_xticks(arange(1,3,0.5))
fig2.add_subplot(111).axis(xmin=3, xmax=6) # there're also ymin, ymax
fig2.add_subplot(111).axis([0,4,3,6]) # all!
fig2.add_subplot(111).set_xlim([0,4])
fig2.add_subplot(111).set_ylim([3,6])

# labels:
fig2.add_subplot(111).set_xlabel(r"x $2^2$", fontsize=15, color = "r")
fig2.add_subplot(111).set_ylabel(r"y $2^2$")
fig2.add_subplot(111).set_title(r"title $6^4$")
fig2.add_subplot(111).text(2, 5.5, r"an equation: $E=mc^2$", fontsize=15, color = "y")
fig2.add_subplot(111).text(3, 2, unicode('f\374r', 'latin-1'))

# saving:
fig2.savefig("fig2.png")

So - what exactly do You want to be configured?


I think you need to specify a different resolution when saving the figure to a file:

fig = matplotlib.pyplot.figure()
# generate your plot
fig.savefig("myfig.png",dpi=600)

Specifying a large dpi value should have a similar effect as maximizing the GUI window.


Check this: How to maximize a plt.show() window using Python

The command is different depending on which backend you use. I find that this is the best way to make sure the saved pictures have the same scaling as what I view on my screen.

Since I use Canopy with the QT backend:

pylab.get_current_fig_manager().window.showMaximized()

I then call savefig() as required with an increased DPI per silvado's answer.


You can look in a saved figure it's size, like 1920x983 px (size when i saved a maximized window), then I set the dpi as 100 and the size as 19.20x9.83 and it worked fine. Saved exactly equal to the maximized figure.

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
x, y = np.genfromtxt('fname.dat', usecols=(0,1), unpack=True)
a = plt.figure(figsize=(19.20,9.83))
a = plt.plot(x, y, '-')
plt.savefig('file.png',format='png',dpi=100)