plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.
Aaxis
(arg=None, color=None, dtick=None, exponentformat=None, gridcolor=None, griddash=None, gridwidth=None, hoverformat=None, labelalias=None, layer=None, linecolor=None, linewidth=None, min=None, minexponent=None, nticks=None, separatethousands=None, showexponent=None, showgrid=None, showline=None, showticklabels=None, showtickprefix=None, showticksuffix=None, tick0=None, tickangle=None, tickcolor=None, tickfont=None, tickformat=None, tickformatstops=None, tickformatstopdefaults=None, ticklabelstep=None, ticklen=None, tickmode=None, tickprefix=None, ticks=None, ticksuffix=None, ticktext=None, ticktextsrc=None, tickvals=None, tickvalssrc=None, tickwidth=None, title=None, uirevision=None, **kwargs)¶Bases: plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
color
¶Sets default for all colors associated with this axis all at once: line, font, tick, and grid colors. Grid color is lightened by blending this with the plot background Individual pieces can override this.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
dtick
¶Sets the step in-between ticks on this axis. Use with tick0
.
Must be a positive number, or special strings available to
“log” and “date” axes. If the axis type
is “log”, then ticks
are set every 10^(n*dtick) where n is the tick number. For
example, to set a tick mark at 1, 10, 100, 1000, … set dtick
to 1. To set tick marks at 1, 100, 10000, … set dtick to 2.
To set tick marks at 1, 5, 25, 125, 625, 3125, … set dtick to
log_10(5), or 0.69897000433. “log” has several special values;
“L<f>”, where f
is a positive number, gives ticks linearly
spaced in value (but not position). For example tick0
= 0.1,
dtick
= “L0.5” will put ticks at 0.1, 0.6, 1.1, 1.6 etc. To
show powers of 10 plus small digits between, use “D1” (all
digits) or “D2” (only 2 and 5). tick0
is ignored for “D1” and
“D2”. If the axis type
is “date”, then you must convert the
time to milliseconds. For example, to set the interval between
ticks to one day, set dtick
to 86400000.0. “date” also has
special values “M<n>” gives ticks spaced by a number of months.
n
must be a positive integer. To set ticks on the 15th of
every third month, set tick0
to “2000-01-15” and dtick
to
“M3”. To set ticks every 4 years, set dtick
to “M48”
The ‘dtick’ property accepts values of any type
Any
exponentformat
¶Determines a formatting rule for the tick exponents. For example, consider the number 1,000,000,000. If “none”, it appears as 1,000,000,000. If “e”, 1e+9. If “E”, 1E+9. If “power”, 1x10^9 (with 9 in a super script). If “SI”, 1G. If “B”, 1B.
[‘none’, ‘e’, ‘E’, ‘power’, ‘SI’, ‘B’]
Any
gridcolor
¶Sets the color of the grid lines.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
griddash
¶Sets the dash style of lines. Set to a dash type string (“solid”, “dot”, “dash”, “longdash”, “dashdot”, or “longdashdot”) or a dash length list in px (eg “5px,10px,2px,2px”).
[‘solid’, ‘dot’, ‘dash’, ‘longdash’, ‘dashdot’, ‘longdashdot’]
(e.g. ‘5px 10px 2px 2px’, ‘5, 10, 2, 2’, ‘10% 20% 40%’, etc.)
gridwidth
¶Sets the width (in px) of the grid lines.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
hoverformat
¶Sets the hover text formatting rule using d3 formatting mini- languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display “09~15~23.46”
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
labelalias
¶Replacement text for specific tick or hover labels. For example using {US: ‘USA’, CA: ‘Canada’} changes US to USA and CA to Canada. The labels we would have shown must match the keys exactly, after adding any tickprefix or ticksuffix. For negative numbers the minus sign symbol used (U+2212) is wider than the regular ascii dash. That means you need to use −1 instead of -1. labelalias can be used with any axis type, and both keys (if needed) and values (if desired) can include html- like tags or MathJax.
The ‘labelalias’ property accepts values of any type
Any
layer
¶Sets the layer on which this axis is displayed. If above
traces, this axis is displayed above all the subplot’s traces
If below traces, this axis is displayed below all the
subplot’s traces, but above the grid lines. Useful when used
together with scatter-like traces with cliponaxis
set to
False to show markers and/or text nodes above this axis.
[‘above traces’, ‘below traces’]
Any
linecolor
¶Sets the axis line color.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
linewidth
¶Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
min
¶The minimum value visible on this axis. The maximum is determined by the sum minus the minimum values of the other two axes. The full view corresponds to all the minima set to zero.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
minexponent
¶Hide SI prefix for 10^n if |n| is below this number. This only
has an effect when tickformat
is “SI” or “B”.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
nticks
¶Specifies the maximum number of ticks for the particular axis.
The actual number of ticks will be chosen automatically to be
less than or equal to nticks
. Has an effect only if
tickmode
is set to “auto”.
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 9223372036854775807]
separatethousands
¶If “true”, even 4-digit integers are separated
The ‘separatethousands’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showexponent
¶If “all”, all exponents are shown besides their significands. If “first”, only the exponent of the first tick is shown. If “last”, only the exponent of the last tick is shown. If “none”, no exponents appear.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
showgrid
¶Determines whether or not grid lines are drawn. If True, the grid lines are drawn at every tick mark.
The ‘showgrid’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showline
¶Determines whether or not a line bounding this axis is drawn.
The ‘showline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showticklabels
¶Determines whether or not the tick labels are drawn.
The ‘showticklabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showtickprefix
¶If “all”, all tick labels are displayed with a prefix. If “first”, only the first tick is displayed with a prefix. If “last”, only the last tick is displayed with a suffix. If “none”, tick prefixes are hidden.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
showticksuffix
¶Same as showtickprefix
but for tick suffixes.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
tick0
¶Sets the placement of the first tick on this axis. Use with
dtick
. If the axis type
is “log”, then you must take the
log of your starting tick (e.g. to set the starting tick to
100, set the tick0
to 2) except when dtick`=*L<f>* (see
`dtick
for more info). If the axis type
is “date”, it should
be a date string, like date data. If the axis type
is
“category”, it should be a number, using the scale where each
category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it
appears.
The ‘tick0’ property accepts values of any type
Any
tickangle
¶Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the
horizontal. For example, a tickangle
of -90 draws the tick
labels vertically.
The ‘tickangle’ property is a angle (in degrees) that may be specified as a number between -180 and 180. Numeric values outside this range are converted to the equivalent value (e.g. 270 is converted to -90).
int|float
tickcolor
¶Sets the tick color.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
tickfont
¶Sets the tick font.
The ‘tickfont’ property is an instance of Tickfont that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.aaxis.Tickfont
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickfont constructor
Supported dict properties:
color
- family
HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.
- lineposition
Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.
- shadow
Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.
size
- style
Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.
- textcase
Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.
- variant
Sets the variant of the font.
- weight
Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.
tickformat
¶Sets the tick label formatting rule using d3 formatting mini- languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display “09~15~23.46”
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
tickformatstopdefaults
¶When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.ternary.aaxis.tickformatstopdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.ternary.aaxis.tickformatstops
The ‘tickformatstopdefaults’ property is an instance of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.aaxis.Tickformatstop
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
tickformatstops
¶The ‘tickformatstops’ property is a tuple of instances of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
A list or tuple of instances of plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.aaxis.Tickformatstop
A list or tuple of dicts of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
- dtickrange
range [min, max], where “min”, “max” - dtick values which describe some zoom level, it is possible to omit “min” or “max” value by passing “null”
- enabled
Determines whether or not this stop is used. If
false
, this stop is ignored even within itsdtickrange
.- name
When used in a template, named items are created in the output figure in addition to any items the figure already has in this array. You can modify these items in the output figure by making your own item with
templateitemname
matching thisname
alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.- templateitemname
Used to refer to a named item in this array in the template. Named items from the template will be created even without a matching item in the input figure, but you can modify one by making an item with
templateitemname
matching itsname
, alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it withvisible: true
.- value
string - dtickformat for described zoom level, the same as “tickformat”
tuple[plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.aaxis.Tickformatstop]
ticklabelstep
¶Sets the spacing between tick labels as compared to the spacing
between ticks. A value of 1 (default) means each tick gets a
label. A value of 2 means shows every 2nd label. A larger value
n means only every nth tick is labeled. tick0
determines
which labels are shown. Not implemented for axes with type
“log” or “multicategory”, or when tickmode
is “array”.
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 9223372036854775807]
ticklen
¶Sets the tick length (in px).
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
tickmode
¶Sets the tick mode for this axis. If “auto”, the number of
ticks is set via nticks
. If “linear”, the placement of the
ticks is determined by a starting position tick0
and a tick
step dtick
(“linear” is the default value if tick0
and
dtick
are provided). If “array”, the placement of the ticks
is set via tickvals
and the tick text is ticktext
. (“array”
is the default value if tickvals
is provided).
[‘auto’, ‘linear’, ‘array’]
Any
tickprefix
¶Sets a tick label prefix.
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
ticks
¶Determines whether ticks are drawn or not. If “”, this axis’ ticks are not drawn. If “outside” (“inside”), this axis’ are drawn outside (inside) the axis lines.
[‘outside’, ‘inside’, ‘’]
Any
ticksuffix
¶Sets a tick label suffix.
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
ticktext
¶Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via tickvals
.
Only has an effect if tickmode
is set to “array”. Used with
tickvals
.
The ‘ticktext’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
numpy.ndarray
ticktextsrc
¶Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for ticktext
.
The ‘ticktextsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
tickvals
¶Sets the values at which ticks on this axis appear. Only has an
effect if tickmode
is set to “array”. Used with ticktext
.
The ‘tickvals’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
numpy.ndarray
tickvalssrc
¶Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for tickvals
.
The ‘tickvalssrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
tickwidth
¶Sets the tick width (in px).
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
title
¶The ‘title’ property is an instance of Title that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.aaxis.Title
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Title constructor
Supported dict properties:
- font
Sets this axis’ title font.
- text
Sets the title of this axis.
uirevision
¶Controls persistence of user-driven changes in axis min
, and
title
if in editable: true
configuration. Defaults to
ternary<N>.uirevision
.
The ‘uirevision’ property accepts values of any type
Any
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.
Baxis
(arg=None, color=None, dtick=None, exponentformat=None, gridcolor=None, griddash=None, gridwidth=None, hoverformat=None, labelalias=None, layer=None, linecolor=None, linewidth=None, min=None, minexponent=None, nticks=None, separatethousands=None, showexponent=None, showgrid=None, showline=None, showticklabels=None, showtickprefix=None, showticksuffix=None, tick0=None, tickangle=None, tickcolor=None, tickfont=None, tickformat=None, tickformatstops=None, tickformatstopdefaults=None, ticklabelstep=None, ticklen=None, tickmode=None, tickprefix=None, ticks=None, ticksuffix=None, ticktext=None, ticktextsrc=None, tickvals=None, tickvalssrc=None, tickwidth=None, title=None, uirevision=None, **kwargs)¶Bases: plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
color
¶Sets default for all colors associated with this axis all at once: line, font, tick, and grid colors. Grid color is lightened by blending this with the plot background Individual pieces can override this.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
dtick
¶Sets the step in-between ticks on this axis. Use with tick0
.
Must be a positive number, or special strings available to
“log” and “date” axes. If the axis type
is “log”, then ticks
are set every 10^(n*dtick) where n is the tick number. For
example, to set a tick mark at 1, 10, 100, 1000, … set dtick
to 1. To set tick marks at 1, 100, 10000, … set dtick to 2.
To set tick marks at 1, 5, 25, 125, 625, 3125, … set dtick to
log_10(5), or 0.69897000433. “log” has several special values;
“L<f>”, where f
is a positive number, gives ticks linearly
spaced in value (but not position). For example tick0
= 0.1,
dtick
= “L0.5” will put ticks at 0.1, 0.6, 1.1, 1.6 etc. To
show powers of 10 plus small digits between, use “D1” (all
digits) or “D2” (only 2 and 5). tick0
is ignored for “D1” and
“D2”. If the axis type
is “date”, then you must convert the
time to milliseconds. For example, to set the interval between
ticks to one day, set dtick
to 86400000.0. “date” also has
special values “M<n>” gives ticks spaced by a number of months.
n
must be a positive integer. To set ticks on the 15th of
every third month, set tick0
to “2000-01-15” and dtick
to
“M3”. To set ticks every 4 years, set dtick
to “M48”
The ‘dtick’ property accepts values of any type
Any
exponentformat
¶Determines a formatting rule for the tick exponents. For example, consider the number 1,000,000,000. If “none”, it appears as 1,000,000,000. If “e”, 1e+9. If “E”, 1E+9. If “power”, 1x10^9 (with 9 in a super script). If “SI”, 1G. If “B”, 1B.
[‘none’, ‘e’, ‘E’, ‘power’, ‘SI’, ‘B’]
Any
gridcolor
¶Sets the color of the grid lines.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
griddash
¶Sets the dash style of lines. Set to a dash type string (“solid”, “dot”, “dash”, “longdash”, “dashdot”, or “longdashdot”) or a dash length list in px (eg “5px,10px,2px,2px”).
[‘solid’, ‘dot’, ‘dash’, ‘longdash’, ‘dashdot’, ‘longdashdot’]
(e.g. ‘5px 10px 2px 2px’, ‘5, 10, 2, 2’, ‘10% 20% 40%’, etc.)
gridwidth
¶Sets the width (in px) of the grid lines.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
hoverformat
¶Sets the hover text formatting rule using d3 formatting mini- languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display “09~15~23.46”
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
labelalias
¶Replacement text for specific tick or hover labels. For example using {US: ‘USA’, CA: ‘Canada’} changes US to USA and CA to Canada. The labels we would have shown must match the keys exactly, after adding any tickprefix or ticksuffix. For negative numbers the minus sign symbol used (U+2212) is wider than the regular ascii dash. That means you need to use −1 instead of -1. labelalias can be used with any axis type, and both keys (if needed) and values (if desired) can include html- like tags or MathJax.
The ‘labelalias’ property accepts values of any type
Any
layer
¶Sets the layer on which this axis is displayed. If above
traces, this axis is displayed above all the subplot’s traces
If below traces, this axis is displayed below all the
subplot’s traces, but above the grid lines. Useful when used
together with scatter-like traces with cliponaxis
set to
False to show markers and/or text nodes above this axis.
[‘above traces’, ‘below traces’]
Any
linecolor
¶Sets the axis line color.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
linewidth
¶Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
min
¶The minimum value visible on this axis. The maximum is determined by the sum minus the minimum values of the other two axes. The full view corresponds to all the minima set to zero.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
minexponent
¶Hide SI prefix for 10^n if |n| is below this number. This only
has an effect when tickformat
is “SI” or “B”.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
nticks
¶Specifies the maximum number of ticks for the particular axis.
The actual number of ticks will be chosen automatically to be
less than or equal to nticks
. Has an effect only if
tickmode
is set to “auto”.
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 9223372036854775807]
separatethousands
¶If “true”, even 4-digit integers are separated
The ‘separatethousands’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showexponent
¶If “all”, all exponents are shown besides their significands. If “first”, only the exponent of the first tick is shown. If “last”, only the exponent of the last tick is shown. If “none”, no exponents appear.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
showgrid
¶Determines whether or not grid lines are drawn. If True, the grid lines are drawn at every tick mark.
The ‘showgrid’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showline
¶Determines whether or not a line bounding this axis is drawn.
The ‘showline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showticklabels
¶Determines whether or not the tick labels are drawn.
The ‘showticklabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showtickprefix
¶If “all”, all tick labels are displayed with a prefix. If “first”, only the first tick is displayed with a prefix. If “last”, only the last tick is displayed with a suffix. If “none”, tick prefixes are hidden.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
showticksuffix
¶Same as showtickprefix
but for tick suffixes.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
tick0
¶Sets the placement of the first tick on this axis. Use with
dtick
. If the axis type
is “log”, then you must take the
log of your starting tick (e.g. to set the starting tick to
100, set the tick0
to 2) except when dtick`=*L<f>* (see
`dtick
for more info). If the axis type
is “date”, it should
be a date string, like date data. If the axis type
is
“category”, it should be a number, using the scale where each
category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it
appears.
The ‘tick0’ property accepts values of any type
Any
tickangle
¶Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the
horizontal. For example, a tickangle
of -90 draws the tick
labels vertically.
The ‘tickangle’ property is a angle (in degrees) that may be specified as a number between -180 and 180. Numeric values outside this range are converted to the equivalent value (e.g. 270 is converted to -90).
int|float
tickcolor
¶Sets the tick color.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
tickfont
¶Sets the tick font.
The ‘tickfont’ property is an instance of Tickfont that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.baxis.Tickfont
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickfont constructor
Supported dict properties:
color
- family
HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.
- lineposition
Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.
- shadow
Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.
size
- style
Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.
- textcase
Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.
- variant
Sets the variant of the font.
- weight
Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.
tickformat
¶Sets the tick label formatting rule using d3 formatting mini- languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display “09~15~23.46”
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
tickformatstopdefaults
¶When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.ternary.baxis.tickformatstopdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.ternary.baxis.tickformatstops
The ‘tickformatstopdefaults’ property is an instance of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.baxis.Tickformatstop
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
tickformatstops
¶The ‘tickformatstops’ property is a tuple of instances of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
A list or tuple of instances of plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.baxis.Tickformatstop
A list or tuple of dicts of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
- dtickrange
range [min, max], where “min”, “max” - dtick values which describe some zoom level, it is possible to omit “min” or “max” value by passing “null”
- enabled
Determines whether or not this stop is used. If
false
, this stop is ignored even within itsdtickrange
.- name
When used in a template, named items are created in the output figure in addition to any items the figure already has in this array. You can modify these items in the output figure by making your own item with
templateitemname
matching thisname
alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.- templateitemname
Used to refer to a named item in this array in the template. Named items from the template will be created even without a matching item in the input figure, but you can modify one by making an item with
templateitemname
matching itsname
, alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it withvisible: true
.- value
string - dtickformat for described zoom level, the same as “tickformat”
tuple[plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.baxis.Tickformatstop]
ticklabelstep
¶Sets the spacing between tick labels as compared to the spacing
between ticks. A value of 1 (default) means each tick gets a
label. A value of 2 means shows every 2nd label. A larger value
n means only every nth tick is labeled. tick0
determines
which labels are shown. Not implemented for axes with type
“log” or “multicategory”, or when tickmode
is “array”.
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 9223372036854775807]
ticklen
¶Sets the tick length (in px).
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
tickmode
¶Sets the tick mode for this axis. If “auto”, the number of
ticks is set via nticks
. If “linear”, the placement of the
ticks is determined by a starting position tick0
and a tick
step dtick
(“linear” is the default value if tick0
and
dtick
are provided). If “array”, the placement of the ticks
is set via tickvals
and the tick text is ticktext
. (“array”
is the default value if tickvals
is provided).
[‘auto’, ‘linear’, ‘array’]
Any
tickprefix
¶Sets a tick label prefix.
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
ticks
¶Determines whether ticks are drawn or not. If “”, this axis’ ticks are not drawn. If “outside” (“inside”), this axis’ are drawn outside (inside) the axis lines.
[‘outside’, ‘inside’, ‘’]
Any
ticksuffix
¶Sets a tick label suffix.
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
ticktext
¶Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via tickvals
.
Only has an effect if tickmode
is set to “array”. Used with
tickvals
.
The ‘ticktext’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
numpy.ndarray
ticktextsrc
¶Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for ticktext
.
The ‘ticktextsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
tickvals
¶Sets the values at which ticks on this axis appear. Only has an
effect if tickmode
is set to “array”. Used with ticktext
.
The ‘tickvals’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
numpy.ndarray
tickvalssrc
¶Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for tickvals
.
The ‘tickvalssrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
tickwidth
¶Sets the tick width (in px).
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
title
¶The ‘title’ property is an instance of Title that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.baxis.Title
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Title constructor
Supported dict properties:
- font
Sets this axis’ title font.
- text
Sets the title of this axis.
uirevision
¶Controls persistence of user-driven changes in axis min
, and
title
if in editable: true
configuration. Defaults to
ternary<N>.uirevision
.
The ‘uirevision’ property accepts values of any type
Any
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.
Caxis
(arg=None, color=None, dtick=None, exponentformat=None, gridcolor=None, griddash=None, gridwidth=None, hoverformat=None, labelalias=None, layer=None, linecolor=None, linewidth=None, min=None, minexponent=None, nticks=None, separatethousands=None, showexponent=None, showgrid=None, showline=None, showticklabels=None, showtickprefix=None, showticksuffix=None, tick0=None, tickangle=None, tickcolor=None, tickfont=None, tickformat=None, tickformatstops=None, tickformatstopdefaults=None, ticklabelstep=None, ticklen=None, tickmode=None, tickprefix=None, ticks=None, ticksuffix=None, ticktext=None, ticktextsrc=None, tickvals=None, tickvalssrc=None, tickwidth=None, title=None, uirevision=None, **kwargs)¶Bases: plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
color
¶Sets default for all colors associated with this axis all at once: line, font, tick, and grid colors. Grid color is lightened by blending this with the plot background Individual pieces can override this.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
dtick
¶Sets the step in-between ticks on this axis. Use with tick0
.
Must be a positive number, or special strings available to
“log” and “date” axes. If the axis type
is “log”, then ticks
are set every 10^(n*dtick) where n is the tick number. For
example, to set a tick mark at 1, 10, 100, 1000, … set dtick
to 1. To set tick marks at 1, 100, 10000, … set dtick to 2.
To set tick marks at 1, 5, 25, 125, 625, 3125, … set dtick to
log_10(5), or 0.69897000433. “log” has several special values;
“L<f>”, where f
is a positive number, gives ticks linearly
spaced in value (but not position). For example tick0
= 0.1,
dtick
= “L0.5” will put ticks at 0.1, 0.6, 1.1, 1.6 etc. To
show powers of 10 plus small digits between, use “D1” (all
digits) or “D2” (only 2 and 5). tick0
is ignored for “D1” and
“D2”. If the axis type
is “date”, then you must convert the
time to milliseconds. For example, to set the interval between
ticks to one day, set dtick
to 86400000.0. “date” also has
special values “M<n>” gives ticks spaced by a number of months.
n
must be a positive integer. To set ticks on the 15th of
every third month, set tick0
to “2000-01-15” and dtick
to
“M3”. To set ticks every 4 years, set dtick
to “M48”
The ‘dtick’ property accepts values of any type
Any
exponentformat
¶Determines a formatting rule for the tick exponents. For example, consider the number 1,000,000,000. If “none”, it appears as 1,000,000,000. If “e”, 1e+9. If “E”, 1E+9. If “power”, 1x10^9 (with 9 in a super script). If “SI”, 1G. If “B”, 1B.
[‘none’, ‘e’, ‘E’, ‘power’, ‘SI’, ‘B’]
Any
gridcolor
¶Sets the color of the grid lines.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
griddash
¶Sets the dash style of lines. Set to a dash type string (“solid”, “dot”, “dash”, “longdash”, “dashdot”, or “longdashdot”) or a dash length list in px (eg “5px,10px,2px,2px”).
[‘solid’, ‘dot’, ‘dash’, ‘longdash’, ‘dashdot’, ‘longdashdot’]
(e.g. ‘5px 10px 2px 2px’, ‘5, 10, 2, 2’, ‘10% 20% 40%’, etc.)
gridwidth
¶Sets the width (in px) of the grid lines.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
hoverformat
¶Sets the hover text formatting rule using d3 formatting mini- languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display “09~15~23.46”
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
labelalias
¶Replacement text for specific tick or hover labels. For example using {US: ‘USA’, CA: ‘Canada’} changes US to USA and CA to Canada. The labels we would have shown must match the keys exactly, after adding any tickprefix or ticksuffix. For negative numbers the minus sign symbol used (U+2212) is wider than the regular ascii dash. That means you need to use −1 instead of -1. labelalias can be used with any axis type, and both keys (if needed) and values (if desired) can include html- like tags or MathJax.
The ‘labelalias’ property accepts values of any type
Any
layer
¶Sets the layer on which this axis is displayed. If above
traces, this axis is displayed above all the subplot’s traces
If below traces, this axis is displayed below all the
subplot’s traces, but above the grid lines. Useful when used
together with scatter-like traces with cliponaxis
set to
False to show markers and/or text nodes above this axis.
[‘above traces’, ‘below traces’]
Any
linecolor
¶Sets the axis line color.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
linewidth
¶Sets the width (in px) of the axis line.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
min
¶The minimum value visible on this axis. The maximum is determined by the sum minus the minimum values of the other two axes. The full view corresponds to all the minima set to zero.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
minexponent
¶Hide SI prefix for 10^n if |n| is below this number. This only
has an effect when tickformat
is “SI” or “B”.
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
nticks
¶Specifies the maximum number of ticks for the particular axis.
The actual number of ticks will be chosen automatically to be
less than or equal to nticks
. Has an effect only if
tickmode
is set to “auto”.
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 9223372036854775807]
separatethousands
¶If “true”, even 4-digit integers are separated
The ‘separatethousands’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showexponent
¶If “all”, all exponents are shown besides their significands. If “first”, only the exponent of the first tick is shown. If “last”, only the exponent of the last tick is shown. If “none”, no exponents appear.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
showgrid
¶Determines whether or not grid lines are drawn. If True, the grid lines are drawn at every tick mark.
The ‘showgrid’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showline
¶Determines whether or not a line bounding this axis is drawn.
The ‘showline’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showticklabels
¶Determines whether or not the tick labels are drawn.
The ‘showticklabels’ property must be specified as a bool (either True, or False)
showtickprefix
¶If “all”, all tick labels are displayed with a prefix. If “first”, only the first tick is displayed with a prefix. If “last”, only the last tick is displayed with a suffix. If “none”, tick prefixes are hidden.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
showticksuffix
¶Same as showtickprefix
but for tick suffixes.
[‘all’, ‘first’, ‘last’, ‘none’]
Any
tick0
¶Sets the placement of the first tick on this axis. Use with
dtick
. If the axis type
is “log”, then you must take the
log of your starting tick (e.g. to set the starting tick to
100, set the tick0
to 2) except when dtick`=*L<f>* (see
`dtick
for more info). If the axis type
is “date”, it should
be a date string, like date data. If the axis type
is
“category”, it should be a number, using the scale where each
category is assigned a serial number from zero in the order it
appears.
The ‘tick0’ property accepts values of any type
Any
tickangle
¶Sets the angle of the tick labels with respect to the
horizontal. For example, a tickangle
of -90 draws the tick
labels vertically.
The ‘tickangle’ property is a angle (in degrees) that may be specified as a number between -180 and 180. Numeric values outside this range are converted to the equivalent value (e.g. 270 is converted to -90).
int|float
tickcolor
¶Sets the tick color.
A hex string (e.g. ‘#ff0000’)
An rgb/rgba string (e.g. ‘rgb(255,0,0)’)
An hsl/hsla string (e.g. ‘hsl(0,100%,50%)’)
An hsv/hsva string (e.g. ‘hsv(0,100%,100%)’)
aliceblue, antiquewhite, aqua, aquamarine, azure, beige, bisque, black, blanchedalmond, blue, blueviolet, brown, burlywood, cadetblue, chartreuse, chocolate, coral, cornflowerblue, cornsilk, crimson, cyan, darkblue, darkcyan, darkgoldenrod, darkgray, darkgrey, darkgreen, darkkhaki, darkmagenta, darkolivegreen, darkorange, darkorchid, darkred, darksalmon, darkseagreen, darkslateblue, darkslategray, darkslategrey, darkturquoise, darkviolet, deeppink, deepskyblue, dimgray, dimgrey, dodgerblue, firebrick, floralwhite, forestgreen, fuchsia, gainsboro, ghostwhite, gold, goldenrod, gray, grey, green, greenyellow, honeydew, hotpink, indianred, indigo, ivory, khaki, lavender, lavenderblush, lawngreen, lemonchiffon, lightblue, lightcoral, lightcyan, lightgoldenrodyellow, lightgray, lightgrey, lightgreen, lightpink, lightsalmon, lightseagreen, lightskyblue, lightslategray, lightslategrey, lightsteelblue, lightyellow, lime, limegreen, linen, magenta, maroon, mediumaquamarine, mediumblue, mediumorchid, mediumpurple, mediumseagreen, mediumslateblue, mediumspringgreen, mediumturquoise, mediumvioletred, midnightblue, mintcream, mistyrose, moccasin, navajowhite, navy, oldlace, olive, olivedrab, orange, orangered, orchid, palegoldenrod, palegreen, paleturquoise, palevioletred, papayawhip, peachpuff, peru, pink, plum, powderblue, purple, red, rosybrown, royalblue, rebeccapurple, saddlebrown, salmon, sandybrown, seagreen, seashell, sienna, silver, skyblue, slateblue, slategray, slategrey, snow, springgreen, steelblue, tan, teal, thistle, tomato, turquoise, violet, wheat, white, whitesmoke, yellow, yellowgreen
tickfont
¶Sets the tick font.
The ‘tickfont’ property is an instance of Tickfont that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.caxis.Tickfont
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickfont constructor
Supported dict properties:
color
- family
HTML font family - the typeface that will be applied by the web browser. The web browser will only be able to apply a font if it is available on the system which it operates. Provide multiple font families, separated by commas, to indicate the preference in which to apply fonts if they aren’t available on the system. The Chart Studio Cloud (at https://chart-studio.plotly.com or on-premise) generates images on a server, where only a select number of fonts are installed and supported. These include “Arial”, “Balto”, “Courier New”, “Droid Sans”, “Droid Serif”, “Droid Sans Mono”, “Gravitas One”, “Old Standard TT”, “Open Sans”, “Overpass”, “PT Sans Narrow”, “Raleway”, “Times New Roman”.
- lineposition
Sets the kind of decoration line(s) with text, such as an “under”, “over” or “through” as well as combinations e.g. “under+over”, etc.
- shadow
Sets the shape and color of the shadow behind text. “auto” places minimal shadow and applies contrast text font color. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en- US/docs/Web/CSS/text-shadow for additional options.
size
- style
Sets whether a font should be styled with a normal or italic face from its family.
- textcase
Sets capitalization of text. It can be used to make text appear in all-uppercase or all- lowercase, or with each word capitalized.
- variant
Sets the variant of the font.
- weight
Sets the weight (or boldness) of the font.
tickformat
¶Sets the tick label formatting rule using d3 formatting mini- languages which are very similar to those in Python. For numbers, see: https://github.com/d3/d3-format/tree/v1.4.5#d3-format. And for dates see: https://github.com/d3/d3-time- format/tree/v2.2.3#locale_format. We add two items to d3’s date formatter: “%h” for half of the year as a decimal number as well as “%{n}f” for fractional seconds with n digits. For example, 2016-10-13 09:15:23.456 with tickformat “%H~%M~%S.%2f” would display “09~15~23.46”
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
tickformatstopdefaults
¶When used in a template (as layout.template.layout.ternary.caxis.tickformatstopdefaults), sets the default property values to use for elements of layout.ternary.caxis.tickformatstops
The ‘tickformatstopdefaults’ property is an instance of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.caxis.Tickformatstop
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
tickformatstops
¶The ‘tickformatstops’ property is a tuple of instances of Tickformatstop that may be specified as:
A list or tuple of instances of plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.caxis.Tickformatstop
A list or tuple of dicts of string/value properties that will be passed to the Tickformatstop constructor
Supported dict properties:
- dtickrange
range [min, max], where “min”, “max” - dtick values which describe some zoom level, it is possible to omit “min” or “max” value by passing “null”
- enabled
Determines whether or not this stop is used. If
false
, this stop is ignored even within itsdtickrange
.- name
When used in a template, named items are created in the output figure in addition to any items the figure already has in this array. You can modify these items in the output figure by making your own item with
templateitemname
matching thisname
alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). Has no effect outside of a template.- templateitemname
Used to refer to a named item in this array in the template. Named items from the template will be created even without a matching item in the input figure, but you can modify one by making an item with
templateitemname
matching itsname
, alongside your modifications (includingvisible: false
orenabled: false
to hide it). If there is no template or no matching item, this item will be hidden unless you explicitly show it withvisible: true
.- value
string - dtickformat for described zoom level, the same as “tickformat”
tuple[plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.caxis.Tickformatstop]
ticklabelstep
¶Sets the spacing between tick labels as compared to the spacing
between ticks. A value of 1 (default) means each tick gets a
label. A value of 2 means shows every 2nd label. A larger value
n means only every nth tick is labeled. tick0
determines
which labels are shown. Not implemented for axes with type
“log” or “multicategory”, or when tickmode
is “array”.
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [1, 9223372036854775807]
ticklen
¶Sets the tick length (in px).
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
tickmode
¶Sets the tick mode for this axis. If “auto”, the number of
ticks is set via nticks
. If “linear”, the placement of the
ticks is determined by a starting position tick0
and a tick
step dtick
(“linear” is the default value if tick0
and
dtick
are provided). If “array”, the placement of the ticks
is set via tickvals
and the tick text is ticktext
. (“array”
is the default value if tickvals
is provided).
[‘auto’, ‘linear’, ‘array’]
Any
tickprefix
¶Sets a tick label prefix.
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
ticks
¶Determines whether ticks are drawn or not. If “”, this axis’ ticks are not drawn. If “outside” (“inside”), this axis’ are drawn outside (inside) the axis lines.
[‘outside’, ‘inside’, ‘’]
Any
ticksuffix
¶Sets a tick label suffix.
A string
A number that will be converted to a string
ticktext
¶Sets the text displayed at the ticks position via tickvals
.
Only has an effect if tickmode
is set to “array”. Used with
tickvals
.
The ‘ticktext’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
numpy.ndarray
ticktextsrc
¶Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for ticktext
.
The ‘ticktextsrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
tickvals
¶Sets the values at which ticks on this axis appear. Only has an
effect if tickmode
is set to “array”. Used with ticktext
.
The ‘tickvals’ property is an array that may be specified as a tuple, list, numpy array, or pandas Series
numpy.ndarray
tickvalssrc
¶Sets the source reference on Chart Studio Cloud for tickvals
.
The ‘tickvalssrc’ property must be specified as a string or as a plotly.grid_objs.Column object
tickwidth
¶Sets the tick width (in px).
An int or float in the interval [0, inf]
int|float
title
¶The ‘title’ property is an instance of Title that may be specified as:
An instance of
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.caxis.Title
A dict of string/value properties that will be passed to the Title constructor
Supported dict properties:
- font
Sets this axis’ title font.
- text
Sets the title of this axis.
uirevision
¶Controls persistence of user-driven changes in axis min
, and
title
if in editable: true
configuration. Defaults to
ternary<N>.uirevision
.
The ‘uirevision’ property accepts values of any type
Any
plotly.graph_objects.layout.ternary.
Domain
(arg=None, column=None, row=None, x=None, y=None, **kwargs)¶Bases: plotly.basedatatypes.BaseLayoutHierarchyType
column
¶If there is a layout grid, use the domain for this column in the grid for this ternary subplot .
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [0, 9223372036854775807]
row
¶If there is a layout grid, use the domain for this row in the grid for this ternary subplot .
An int (or float that will be cast to an int) in the interval [0, 9223372036854775807]
x
¶fraction).
The ‘x’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
list
y
¶fraction).
The ‘y’ property is an info array that may be specified as:
a list or tuple of 2 elements where:
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
An int or float in the interval [0, 1]
list