Note
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Configuring PyGMT defaults
Default GMT parameters can be set globally or locally using
pygmt.config
.
import pygmt
Configuring default GMT parameters
Users can override default parameters either temporarily (locally) or
permanently (globally) using pygmt.config
. The full list of default
parameters that can be changed can be found at https://docs.generic-mapping-tools.org/6.5/gmt.conf.html.
We demonstrate the usage of pygmt.config
by configuring a map plot.
# Start with a basic figure with the default style
fig = pygmt.Figure()
fig.basemap(region=[115, 119.5, 4, 7.5], projection="M10c", frame=True)
fig.coast(land="black", water="skyblue")
fig.show()
Globally overriding defaults
The MAP_FRAME_TYPE
parameter specifies the style of map frame to use, of
which there are 5 options: fancy
(default, see above), fancy+
,
plain
, graph
(which does not apply to geographical maps) and
inside
.
The FORMAT_GEO_MAP
parameter controls the format of geographical tick
annotations. The default uses degrees and minutes. Here we specify the ticks
to be a decimal number of degrees.
fig = pygmt.Figure()
# Configuration for the 'current figure'.
pygmt.config(MAP_FRAME_TYPE="plain")
pygmt.config(FORMAT_GEO_MAP="ddd.xx")
fig.basemap(region=[115, 119.5, 4, 7.5], projection="M10c", frame=True)
fig.coast(land="black", water="skyblue")
fig.show()
Locally overriding defaults
It is also possible to temporarily override the default parameters, which is
very useful for limiting the scope of changes to a particular plot.
pygmt.config
is implemented as a context manager, which handles the
setup and teardown of a GMT session. Python users are likely familiar with
the with open(...) as file:
snippet, which returns a file
context
manager. In this way, it can be used to override a parameter for a single
command, or a sequence of commands. An application of pygmt.config
as a context manager is shown below:
fig = pygmt.Figure()
# This will have a fancy+ frame
with pygmt.config(MAP_FRAME_TYPE="fancy+"):
fig.basemap(region=[115, 119.5, 4, 7.5], projection="M10c", frame=True)
fig.coast(land="black", water="skyblue")
# Shift plot origin down by 10cm to plot another map
fig.shift_origin(yshift="-10c")
# This figure retains the default "fancy" frame
fig.basemap(region=[115, 119.5, 4, 7.5], projection="M10c", frame=True)
fig.coast(land="black", water="skyblue")
fig.show()
Total running time of the script: (0 minutes 0.545 seconds)