I have made my plots inline on my Ipython Notebook with "%matplotlib inline."
Now, the plot appears. However, it is very small. Is there a way to make it appear larger using either notebook settings or plot settings?
I have made my plots inline on my Ipython Notebook with "%matplotlib inline."
Now, the plot appears. However, it is very small. Is there a way to make it appear larger using either notebook settings or plot settings?
The default figure size (in inches) is controlled by
matplotlib.rcParams['figure.figsize'] = [width, height]
For example:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.rcParams['figure.figsize'] = [10, 5]
creates a figure with 10 (width) x 5 (height) inches
 
    
     
    
    Yes, play with figuresize and dpi like so (before you call your subplot):
fig=plt.figure(figsize=(12,8), dpi= 100, facecolor='w', edgecolor='k')
As @tacaswell and @Hagne pointed out, you can also change the defaults if it's not a one-off:
plt.rcParams['figure.figsize'] = [12, 8]
plt.rcParams['figure.dpi'] = 100 # 200 e.g. is really fine, but slower
 
    
    I have found that %matplotlib notebook works better for me than inline with Jupyter notebooks.
Note that you may need to restart the kernel if you were using %matplotlib inline before.
Update 2019:
If you are running Jupyter Lab you might want to use
%matplotlib widget
 
    
    If you only want the image of your figure to appear larger without changing the general appearance of your figure increase the figure resolution. Changing the figure size as suggested in most other answers will change the appearance since font sizes do not scale accordingly.
import matplotlib.pylab as plt
plt.rcParams['figure.dpi'] = 200
 
    
    The question is about matplotlib, but for the sake of any R users that end up here given the language-agnostic title:
If you're using an R kernel, just use:
options(repr.plot.width=4, repr.plot.height=3)
 
    
    To adjust the size of one figure:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
fig=plt.figure(figsize=(15, 15))
To change the default settings, and therefore all your plots:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
plt.rcParams['figure.figsize'] = [15, 15]
 
    
    It is possible to scale the plot to full cell width.
svg format instead of bitmap when mainly plotting line charts:%config InlineBackend.figure_format = 'svg'
%%html
<style>
.output_svg div{
  width: 100% !important;
  height: 100% !important;
}
</style>
 
    
    using something like:
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
%matplotlib inline
plt.subplots(figsize=(18,8 ))
plt.subplot(1,3,1)
plt.subplot(1,3,2)
plt.subplot(1,3,3)
The output of the command
 
    
     
    
    A small but important detail for adjusting figure size on a one-off basis (as several commenters above reported "this doesn't work for me"):
You should do plt.figure(figsize=(,)) PRIOR to defining your actual plot. For example:
This should correctly size the plot according to your specified figsize:
values = [1,1,1,2,2,3]
_ = plt.figure(figsize=(10,6))
_ = plt.hist(values,bins=3)
plt.show()
Whereas this will show the plot with the default settings, seeming to "ignore" figsize:
values = [1,1,1,2,2,3]
_ = plt.hist(values,bins=3)
_ = plt.figure(figsize=(10,6))
plt.show()
 
    
    A quick fix to "plot overlap" is to use plt.tight_layout():
for i,var in enumerate(categorical_variables):
    plt.title(var)
    plt.xticks(rotation=45)
    df[var].hist()
    plt.subplot(len(categorical_variables)/2, 2, i+1)
plt.tight_layout()
