bokeh.models.formatters¶
Models for controlling the text and visual formatting of tick labels on Bokeh plot axes.
-
class
BasicTickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.models.formatters.TickFormatter
Display tick values from continuous ranges as “basic numbers”, using scientific notation when appropriate by default.
-
power_limit_high
¶ property type:
Int
Limit the use of scientific notation to when:
log(x) >= power_limit_high
-
power_limit_low
¶ property type:
Int
Limit the use of scientific notation to when:
log(x) <= power_limit_low
-
-
class
CategoricalTickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.models.formatters.TickFormatter
Display tick values from categorical ranges as string values.
-
class
DatetimeTickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.models.formatters.TickFormatter
A
TickFormatter
for displaying datetime values nicely across a range of scales.DatetimeTickFormatter
has the following properties (listed together with their default values) that can be used to control the formatting of axis ticks at different scales scales:microseconds = ['%fus'] milliseconds = ['%3Nms', '%S.%3Ns'] seconds = ['%Ss'] minsec = [':%M:%S'] minutes = [':%M', '%Mm'] hourmin = ['%H:%M'] hours = ['%Hh', '%H:%M'] days = ['%m/%d', '%a%d'] months = ['%m/%Y', '%b%y'] years = ['%Y']
Each scale property can be set to format or list of formats to use for formatting datetime tick values that fall in in that “time scale”. By default, only the first format string passed for each time scale will be used. By default, all leading zeros are stripped away from the formatted labels.
This list of supported strftime formats is reproduced below.
- %a
- The abbreviated name of the day of the week according to the current locale.
- %A
- The full name of the day of the week according to the current locale.
- %b
- The abbreviated month name according to the current locale.
- %B
- The full month name according to the current locale.
- %c
- The preferred date and time representation for the current locale.
- %C
- The century number (year/100) as a 2-digit integer.
- %d
- The day of the month as a decimal number (range 01 to 31).
- %D
- Equivalent to %m/%d/%y. (Americans should note that in many other countries %d/%m/%y is rather common. This means that in international context this format is ambiguous and should not be used.)
- %e
- Like %d, the day of the month as a decimal number, but a leading zero is replaced by a space.
- %f
- Microsecond as a decimal number, zero-padded on the left (range 000000-999999). This is an extension to the set of directives available to timezone.
- %F
- Equivalent to %Y-%m-%d (the ISO 8601 date format).
- %G
- The ISO 8601 week-based year with century as a decimal number. The 4-digit year corresponding to the ISO week number (see %V). This has the same format and value as %Y, except that if the ISO week number belongs to the previous or next year, that year is used instead.
- %g
- Like %G, but without century, that is, with a 2-digit year (00-99).
- %h
- Equivalent to %b.
- %H
- The hour as a decimal number using a 24-hour clock (range 00 to 23).
- %I
- The hour as a decimal number using a 12-hour clock (range 01 to 12).
- %j
- The day of the year as a decimal number (range 001 to 366).
- %k
- The hour (24-hour clock) as a decimal number (range 0 to 23). Single digits are preceded by a blank. (See also %H.)
- %l
- The hour (12-hour clock) as a decimal number (range 1 to 12). Single digits are preceded by a blank. (See also %I.) (TZ)
- %m
- The month as a decimal number (range 01 to 12).
- %M
- The minute as a decimal number (range 00 to 59).
- %n
- A newline character. Bokeh text does not currently support newline characters.
- %N
- Nanosecond as a decimal number, zero-padded on the left (range 000000000-999999999). Supports a padding width specifier, i.e. %3N displays 3 leftmost digits. However, this is only accurate to the millisecond level of precision due to limitations of timezone.
- %p
- Either “AM” or “PM” according to the given time value, or the corresponding strings for the current locale. Noon is treated as “PM” and midnight as “AM”.
- %P
- Like %p but in lowercase: “am” or “pm” or a corresponding string for the current locale.
- %r
- The time in a.m. or p.m. notation. In the POSIX locale this is equivalent to %I:%M:%S %p.
- %R
- The time in 24-hour notation (%H:%M). For a version including the seconds, see %T below.
- %s
- The number of seconds since the Epoch, 1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 (UTC).
- %S
- The second as a decimal number (range 00 to 60). (The range is up to 60 to allow for occasional leap seconds.)
- %t
- A tab character. Bokeh text does not currently support tab characters.
- %T
- The time in 24-hour notation (%H:%M:%S).
- %u
- The day of the week as a decimal, range 1 to 7, Monday being 1. See also %w.
- %U
- The week number of the current year as a decimal number, range 00 to 53, starting with the first Sunday as the first day of week 01. See also %V and %W.
- %V
- The ISO 8601 week number (see NOTES) of the current year as a decimal number, range 01 to 53, where week 1 is the first week that has at least 4 days in the new year. See also %U and %W.
- %w
- The day of the week as a decimal, range 0 to 6, Sunday being 0. See also %u.
- %W
- The week number of the current year as a decimal number, range 00 to 53, starting with the first Monday as the first day of week 01.
- %x
- The preferred date representation for the current locale without the time.
- %X
- The preferred time representation for the current locale without the date.
- %y
- The year as a decimal number without a century (range 00 to 99).
- %Y
- The year as a decimal number including the century.
- %z
- The +hhmm or -hhmm numeric timezone (that is, the hour and minute offset from UTC).
- %Z
- The timezone name or abbreviation.
- %%
- A literal ‘%’ character.
Warning
The client library BokehJS uses the timezone library to format datetimes. The inclusion of the list below is based on the claim that timezone makes to support “the full compliment of GNU date format specifiers.” However, this claim has not been tested exhaustively against this list. If you find formats that do not function as expected, please submit a github issue, so that the documentation can be updated appropriately.
-
days
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
days
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
hourmin
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
hourmin
(for combined hours and minutes) range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
hours
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
hours
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
microseconds
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
microseconds
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
milliseconds
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
milliseconds
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
minsec
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
minsec
(for combined minutes and seconds) range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
minutes
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
minutes
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
months
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
months
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
seconds
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
seconds
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
years
¶ property type:
List
(String
)Formats for displaying datetime values in the
years
range.See the
DatetimeTickFormatter
help for a list of all supported formats.
-
formats
¶ A dictionary containing formats for all scales.
THIS PROPERTY IS DEPRECTATED. Use individual DatetimeTickFormatter fields instead.
-
class
FuncTickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.models.formatters.TickFormatter
Display tick values that are formatted by a user-defined function.
-
args
¶ property type:
Dict
(String
,Instance
(Model
) )A mapping of names to Bokeh plot objects. These objects are made available to the formatter code snippet as the values of named parameters to the callback.
-
code
¶ property type:
String
A snippet of JavaScript code that reformats a single tick to the desired format. The variable
tick
will contain the unformatted tick value and can be expected to be present in the code snippet namespace at render time.Example:
code = ''' return Math.floor(tick) + " + " + (tick % 1).toFixed(2) '''
-
classmethod
from_coffeescript
(code, args={})[source]¶ Create a FuncTickFormatter instance from a CoffeeScript snippet. The function body is translated to JavaScript using node. The variable
tick
will contain the unformatted tick value and can be expected to be present in the code snippet namespace at render time.Example:
code = ''' return Math.floor(tick) + " + " + (tick % 1).toFixed(2) '''
-
classmethod
from_py_func
(func)[source]¶ Create a FuncTickFormatter instance from a Python function. The function is translated to JavaScript using PyScript. The variable
tick
will contain the unformatted tick value and can be expected to be present in the function namespace at render time.Example:
code = ''' def ticker(): return "{:.0f} + {:.2f}".format(tick, tick % 1) '''
The python function must have no positional arguments. It’s possible to pass Bokeh models (e.g. a ColumnDataSource) as keyword arguments to the function.
-
-
class
LogTickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.models.formatters.TickFormatter
Display tick values from continuous ranges as powers of some base.
Most often useful in conjunction with a
LogTicker
.
-
class
NumeralTickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.models.formatters.TickFormatter
Tick formatter based on a human-readable format string.
-
format
¶ property type:
String
The number format, as defined in the following tables:
NUMBERS:
Number Format String 10000 ‘0,0.0000’ 10,000.0000 10000.23 ‘0,0’ 10,000 10000.23 ‘+0,0’ +10,000 -10000 ‘0,0.0’ -10,000.0 10000.1234 ‘0.000’ 10000.123 10000.1234 ‘0[.]00000’ 10000.12340 -10000 ‘(0,0.0000)’ (10,000.0000) -0.23 ‘.00’ -.23 -0.23 ‘(.00)’ (.23) 0.23 ‘0.00000’ 0.23000 0.23 ‘0.0[0000]’ 0.23 1230974 ‘0.0a’ 1.2m 1460 ‘0 a’ 1 k -104000 ‘0a’ -104k 1 ‘0o’ 1st 52 ‘0o’ 52nd 23 ‘0o’ 23rd 100 ‘0o’ 100th CURRENCY:
Number Format String 1000.234 ‘$0,0.00’ $1,000.23 1000.2 ‘0,0[.]00 $’ 1,000.20 $ 1001 ‘$ 0,0[.]00’ $ 1,001 -1000.234 ‘($0,0)’ ($1,000) -1000.234 ‘$0.00’ -$1000.23 1230974 ‘($ 0.00 a)’ $ 1.23 m BYTES:
Number Format String 100 ‘0b’ 100B 2048 ‘0 b’ 2 KB 7884486213 ‘0.0b’ 7.3GB 3467479682787 ‘0.000 b’ 3.154 TB PERCENTAGES:
Number Format String 1 ‘0%’ 100% 0.974878234 ‘0.000%’ 97.488% -0.43 ‘0 %’ -43 % 0.43 ‘(0.000 %)’ 43.000 % TIME:
Number Format String 25 ‘00:00:00’ 0:00:25 238 ‘00:00:00’ 0:03:58 63846 ‘00:00:00’ 17:44:06 For the complete specification, see http://numbrojs.com/format.html
-
language
¶ property type:
Enum
(NumeralLanguage
)The language to use for formatting language-specific features (e.g. thousands separator).
-
rounding
¶ property type:
Enum
(RoundingFunction
)Rounding functions (round, floor, ceil) and their synonyms (nearest, rounddown, roundup).
-
-
class
PrintfTickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.models.formatters.TickFormatter
Tick formatter based on a printf-style format string.
-
format
¶ property type:
String
The number format, as defined as follows: the placeholder in the format string is marked by % and is followed by one or more of these elements, in this order:
- An optional
+
sign Causes the result to be preceded with a plus or minus sign on numeric values. By default, only the
-
sign is used on negative numbers.
- An optional
- An optional padding specifier
Specifies what (if any) character to use for padding. Possible values are 0 or any other character preceded by a
'
(single quote). The default is to pad with spaces.
- An optional
-
sign Causes sprintf to left-align the result of this placeholder. The default is to right-align the result.
- An optional
- An optional number
Specifies how many characters the result should have. If the value to be returned is shorter than this number, the result will be padded.
- An optional precision modifier
Consists of a
.
(dot) followed by a number, specifies how many digits should be displayed for floating point numbers. When used on a string, it causes the result to be truncated.
- A type specifier
Can be any of:
%
— yields a literal%
characterb
— yields an integer as a binary numberc
— yields an integer as the character with that ASCII valued
ori
— yields an integer as a signed decimal numbere
— yields a float using scientific notationu
— yields an integer as an unsigned decimal numberf
— yields a float as iso
— yields an integer as an octal numbers
— yields a string as isx
— yields an integer as a hexadecimal number (lower-case)X
— yields an integer as a hexadecimal number (upper-case)
-
-
class
TickFormatter
(**kwargs)[source]¶ Bases:
bokeh.model.Model
A base class for all tick formatter types.
TickFormatter
is not generally useful to instantiate on its own.