""" ============= Inverted axis ============= This example demonstrates two ways to invert the direction of an axis: - If you want to set *explicit axis limits* anyway, e.g. via `~.Axes.set_xlim`, you can swap the limit values: ``set_xlim(4, 0)`` instead of ``set_xlim(0, 4)``. - Use `.Axis.set_inverted` if you only want to invert the axis *without modifying the limits*, i.e. keep existing limits or existing autoscaling behavior. """ import matplotlib.pyplot as plt import numpy as np x = np.arange(0.01, 4.0, 0.01) y = np.exp(-x) fig, (ax1, ax2) = plt.subplots(1, 2, figsize=(6.4, 4), layout="constrained") fig.suptitle('Inverted axis with ...') ax1.plot(x, y) ax1.set_xlim(4, 0) # inverted fixed limits ax1.set_title('fixed limits: set_xlim(4, 0)') ax1.set_xlabel('decreasing x ⟶') ax1.grid(True) ax2.plot(x, y) ax2.xaxis.set_inverted(True) # inverted axis with autoscaling ax2.set_title('autoscaling: set_inverted(True)') ax2.set_xlabel('decreasing x ⟶') ax2.grid(True) plt.show() # %% # .. tags:: # # component: axis # plot-type: line # level: beginner