Font selection
ProPlot registers several new fonts and includes tools for adding your own fonts. These features are described below.
Included fonts
Matplotlib provides a font_manager
module for working with system fonts and classifies fonts into five font families: [rc[‘font.serif’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.serif#the-matplotlibrc-file)
[rc[‘font.sans-serif’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.sans-serif#the-matplotlibrc-file)
, [rc[‘font.monospace’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.monospace#the-matplotlibrc-file)
, [rc[‘font.cursive’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.cursive#the-matplotlibrc-file)
, and [rc[‘font.fantasy’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.fantasy#the-matplotlibrc-file)
. The default font family is sans-serif, because sans-serif fonts are generally more suitable for figures than serif fonts, and the default font name belonging to this family is DejaVu Sans, which comes packaged with matplotlib.
Matplotlib uses DejaVu Sans in part because it includes glyphs for a very wide range of symbols, especially mathematical symbols. However DejaVu Sans is seldom used outside of matplotlib and (in our opinion) is not very aesthetically pleasing. To improve the font selection while keeping things consistent across different workstations, ProPlot comes packaged with the open-source TeX Gyre font series and adds them as the default entries for all of matplotlib’s font famlies:
The Century lookalike
[rc[‘font.serif’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.serif#the-matplotlibrc-file)
='TeX Gyre Schola'
.The Helvetica lookalike
[rc[‘font.sans-serif’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.sans-serif#the-matplotlibrc-file)
='TeX Gyre Heros'
.The Courier) lookalike
[rc[‘font.monospace’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.monospace#the-matplotlibrc-file)
='TeX Gyre Cursor'
.The Chancery lookalike
[rc[‘font.cursive’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.cursive#the-matplotlibrc-file)
='TeX Gyre Chorus'
.The Avant Garde lookalike
[rc[‘font.fantasy’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.fantasy#the-matplotlibrc-file)
='TeX Gyre Adventor'
.
Thus after importing ProPlot, the default font will be the more conventional and aesthetically pleasing Helvetica lookalike TeX Gyre Heros. The new font priority lists for each font family are shown in the default proplotrc file.
To compare different fonts, use the show_fonts
command. By default, this displays the sans serif fonts available on your system and packaged with ProPlot. The sans serif table on the RTD server is shown below. The “¤” symbol appears where characters for a particular font are unavailable (when making plots, “¤” is replaced with the character from a fallback font). Since most TeX Gyre fonts have limited character sets, if your plots contain lots of mathematical symbols, you may want to set [rc[‘font.family’]](https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/introductory/customizing.html?highlight=font.family#the-matplotlibrc-file)
to DejaVu Sans or Fira Math, which is packaged with ProPlot.
Note
Try to avoid .ttf
files with Thin
in the file name. Matplotlib interprets fonts with the “thin” style having normal weight (see this matplotlib issue), causing them to override the correct normal weight versions. While ProPlot tries to filter out these files, this cannot be done systematically. In the below example, the “Roboto” font may be overridden by its “thin” version because the RTD server includes this style.
[1]:
import proplot as plot
fig, axs = plot.show_fonts()
Using your own fonts
You can register your own fonts by adding files to the ~/.proplot/fonts
directory and calling register_fonts
. This command is also called on import. To change the default font, use the rc
object or modify your ~/.proplotrc
. See the configuration section for details.
Sometimes the font you would like to use is installed, but the font file is not stored under the matplotlib-compatible .ttf
, .otf
, or .afm
formats. For example, several macOS fonts are unavailable because they are stored as .dfont
collections. Also, while matplotlib nominally supports .ttc
collections, ProPlot ignores them because figures with .ttc
fonts cannot be saved as PDFs. You can get matplotlib to use .dfont
and .ttc
collections by expanding them into individual .ttf
files with the DFontSplitter application, then saving the files in-place or in the ~/.proplot/fonts
folder.
To find font collections, check the paths listed in OSXFontDirectories
, X11FontDirectories
, MSUserFontDirectories
, and MSFontDirectories
under the matplotlib.font_manager
module.