Installation#

Install an official release#

Matplotlib releases are available as wheel packages for macOS, Windows and Linux on PyPI. Install it using pip:

python -m pip install -U pip
python -m pip install -U matplotlib

If this command results in Matplotlib being compiled from source and there's trouble with the compilation, you can add --prefer-binary to select the newest version of Matplotlib for which there is a precompiled wheel for your OS and Python.

Note

The following backends work out of the box: Agg, ps, pdf, svg

Python is typically shipped with tk bindings which are used by TkAgg.

For support of other GUI frameworks, LaTeX rendering, saving animations and a larger selection of file formats, you can install Optional dependencies.

Third-party distributions#

Various third-parties provide Matplotlib for their environments.

Conda packages#

Matplotlib is available both via the anaconda main channel

conda install matplotlib

as well as via the conda-forge community channel

conda install -c conda-forge matplotlib

Python distributions#

Matplotlib is part of major Python distributions:

Linux package manager#

If you are using the Python version that comes with your Linux distribution, you can install Matplotlib via your package manager, e.g.:

  • Debian / Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install python3-matplotlib

  • Fedora: sudo dnf install python3-matplotlib

  • Red Hat: sudo yum install python3-matplotlib

  • Arch: sudo pacman -S python-matplotlib

Install a nightly build#

Matplotlib makes nightly development build wheels available on the scientific-python-nightly-wheels Anaconda Cloud organization. These wheels can be installed with pip by specifying scientific-python-nightly-wheels as the package index to query:

python -m pip install \
  --upgrade \
  --pre \
  --index-url https://pypi.anaconda.org/scientific-python-nightly-wheels/simple \
  --extra-index-url https://pypi.org/simple \
  matplotlib

Install from source#

Installing for Development

If you would like to contribute to Matplotlib or otherwise need to install the latest development code, please follow the instructions in Setting up Matplotlib for development.

The following instructions are for installing from source for production use. This is generally not recommended; please use prebuilt packages when possible. Proceed with caution because these instructions may result in your build producing unexpected behavior and/or causing local testing to fail.

Before trying to install Matplotlib, please install the Dependencies.

To build from a tarball, download the latest tar.gz release file from the PyPI files page.

We provide a mplsetup.cfg file which you can use to customize the build process. For example, which default backend to use, whether some of the optional libraries that Matplotlib ships with are installed, and so on. This file will be particularly useful to those packaging Matplotlib.

If you are building your own Matplotlib wheels (or sdists) on Windows, note that any DLLs that you copy into the source tree will be packaged too.

Configure build and behavior defaults#

Aspects of the build and install process and some behaviorial defaults of the library can be configured via:

Default plotting appearance and behavior can be configured via the rcParams file

Dependencies#

Mandatory dependencies should be installed automatically if you install Matplotlib using a package manager such as pip or conda; therefore this list is primarily for reference and troubleshooting.

Frequently asked questions#

Report a compilation problem#

See Get help.

Matplotlib compiled fine, but nothing shows up when I use it#

The first thing to try is a clean install and see if that helps. If not, the best way to test your install is by running a script, rather than working interactively from a python shell or an integrated development environment such as IDLE which add additional complexities. Open up a UNIX shell or a DOS command prompt and run, for example:

python -c "from pylab import *; set_loglevel('debug'); plot(); show()"

This will give you additional information about which backends Matplotlib is loading, version information, and more. At this point you might want to make sure you understand Matplotlib's configuration process, governed by the matplotlibrc configuration file which contains instructions within and the concept of the Matplotlib backend.

If you are still having trouble, see Get help.

How to completely remove Matplotlib#

Occasionally, problems with Matplotlib can be solved with a clean installation of the package. In order to fully remove an installed Matplotlib:

  1. Delete the caches from your Matplotlib configuration directory.

  2. Delete any Matplotlib directories or eggs from your installation directory.

OSX Notes#

Which python for OSX?#

Apple ships OSX with its own Python, in /usr/bin/python, and its own copy of Matplotlib. Unfortunately, the way Apple currently installs its own copies of NumPy, Scipy and Matplotlib means that these packages are difficult to upgrade (see system python packages). For that reason we strongly suggest that you install a fresh version of Python and use that as the basis for installing libraries such as NumPy and Matplotlib. One convenient way to install Matplotlib with other useful Python software is to use the Anaconda Python scientific software collection, which includes Python itself and a wide range of libraries; if you need a library that is not available from the collection, you can install it yourself using standard methods such as pip. See the Anaconda web page for installation support.

Other options for a fresh Python install are the standard installer from python.org, or installing Python using a general OSX package management system such as homebrew or macports. Power users on OSX will likely want one of homebrew or macports on their system to install open source software packages, but it is perfectly possible to use these systems with another source for your Python binary, such as Anaconda or Python.org Python.

Installing OSX binary wheels#

If you are using Python from https://www.python.org, Homebrew, or Macports, then you can use the standard pip installer to install Matplotlib binaries in the form of wheels.

pip is installed by default with python.org and Homebrew Python, but needs to be manually installed on Macports with

sudo port install py38-pip

Once pip is installed, you can install Matplotlib and all its dependencies with from the Terminal.app command line:

python3 -m pip install matplotlib

You might also want to install IPython or the Jupyter notebook (python3 -m pip install ipython notebook).

Checking your installation#

The new version of Matplotlib should now be on your Python "path". Check this at the Terminal.app command line:

python3 -c 'import matplotlib; print(matplotlib.__version__, matplotlib.__file__)'

You should see something like

3.6.0 /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.9/lib/python3.9/site-packages/matplotlib/__init__.py

where 3.6.0 is the Matplotlib version you just installed, and the path following depends on whether you are using Python.org Python, Homebrew or Macports. If you see another version, or you get an error like

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: No module named matplotlib

then check that the Python binary is the one you expected by running

which python3

If you get a result like /usr/bin/python..., then you are getting the Python installed with OSX, which is probably not what you want. Try closing and restarting Terminal.app before running the check again. If that doesn't fix the problem, depending on which Python you wanted to use, consider reinstalling Python.org Python, or check your homebrew or macports setup. Remember that the disk image installer only works for Python.org Python, and will not get picked up by other Pythons. If all these fail, please let us know.

Troubleshooting#

Obtaining Matplotlib version#

To find out your Matplotlib version number, import it and print the __version__ attribute:

>>> import matplotlib
>>> matplotlib.__version__
'0.98.0'

matplotlib install location#

You can find what directory Matplotlib is installed in by importing it and printing the __file__ attribute:

>>> import matplotlib
>>> matplotlib.__file__
'/home/jdhunter/dev/lib64/python2.5/site-packages/matplotlib/__init__.pyc'

matplotlib configuration and cache directory locations#

Each user has a Matplotlib configuration directory which may contain a matplotlibrc file. To locate your matplotlib/ configuration directory, use matplotlib.get_configdir():

>>> import matplotlib as mpl
>>> mpl.get_configdir()
'/home/darren/.config/matplotlib'

On Unix-like systems, this directory is generally located in your HOME directory under the .config/ directory.

In addition, users have a cache directory. On Unix-like systems, this is separate from the configuration directory by default. To locate your .cache/ directory, use matplotlib.get_cachedir():

>>> import matplotlib as mpl
>>> mpl.get_cachedir()
'/home/darren/.cache/matplotlib'

On Windows, both the config directory and the cache directory are the same and are in your Documents and Settings or Users directory by default:

>>> import matplotlib as mpl
>>> mpl.get_configdir()
'C:\\Documents and Settings\\jdhunter\\.matplotlib'
>>> mpl.get_cachedir()
'C:\\Documents and Settings\\jdhunter\\.matplotlib'

If you would like to use a different configuration directory, you can do so by specifying the location in your MPLCONFIGDIR environment variable -- see Setting environment variables in Linux and macOS. Note that MPLCONFIGDIR sets the location of both the configuration directory and the cache directory.