Labeling ticks using engineering notation#

Use of the engineering Formatter.

Full unit ticklabels, w/ default precision & space separator, SI-prefix only ticklabels, 1-digit precision & thin space separator
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np

from matplotlib.ticker import EngFormatter

# Fixing random state for reproducibility
prng = np.random.RandomState(19680801)

# Create artificial data to plot.
# The x data span over several decades to demonstrate several SI prefixes.
xs = np.logspace(1, 9, 100)
ys = (0.8 + 0.4 * prng.uniform(size=100)) * np.log10(xs)**2

# Figure width is doubled (2*6.4) to display nicely 2 subplots side by side.
fig, (ax0, ax1) = plt.subplots(nrows=2, figsize=(7, 9.6))
for ax in (ax0, ax1):
    ax.set_xscale('log')

# Demo of the default settings, with a user-defined unit label.
ax0.set_title('Full unit ticklabels, w/ default precision & space separator')
formatter0 = EngFormatter(unit='Hz')
ax0.xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter0)
ax0.plot(xs, ys)
ax0.set_xlabel('Frequency')

# Demo of the options `places` (number of digit after decimal point) and
# `sep` (separator between the number and the prefix/unit).
ax1.set_title('SI-prefix only ticklabels, 1-digit precision & '
              'thin space separator')
formatter1 = EngFormatter(places=1, sep="\N{THIN SPACE}")  # U+2009
ax1.xaxis.set_major_formatter(formatter1)
ax1.plot(xs, ys)
ax1.set_xlabel('Frequency [Hz]')

plt.tight_layout()
plt.show()

Total running time of the script: (0 minutes 1.423 seconds)

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