The Portable Graphics Format (PGF) is a language for producing vector graphics within TeX documents. There is also a higher-level language TikZ (TikZ ist kein Zeichenprogramm -- TikZ is not a drawing program) which uses PGF.
Since version 1.2, the Python plotting library Matplotlib has included a PGF backend to generate figures ready for inclusion in a TeX document. In order to get consistent figures that fit with the style of the document, this requires some configuration. The aim of pgfutils is to simplify this configuration and allow figures to be easily generated from a Python script.
The module provides two functions which set up and then save the figure. The actual plotting is performed by standard Matplotlib functions. For example, to generate a plot showing the 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th and 11th harmonics of an ideal square wave and the resulting sum:
# Set up the figure environment.
from pgfutils import setup_figure, save
setup_figure(width=0.9, height=0.4)
import numpy as np
from matplotlib import pyplot as plt
# Generate a square wave from a few terms of its Fourier series.
f = 3
t = np.linspace(0, 1, 501)
square = np.zeros(t.shape)
for n in range(1, 12, 2):
# Create this harmonic and plot it as a dashed
# partially-transparent line.
component = np.sin(2 * n * np.pi * f * t) / n
plt.plot(t, component, '--', alpha=0.4)
# Add it to the overall signal.
square += component
# Scale the final sum.
square *= 4 / np.pi
# Plot and label the figure.
plt.plot(t, square, 'C0')
plt.xlim(0, 1)
plt.ylim(-1.2, 1.2)
plt.xlabel("Time (s)")
plt.ylabel("Amplitude (V)")
# Save as a PGF image.
save()
pgfutils follows NEP29 when determining supported Python versions. Any minor version of Python released within the 42 months prior to a pgfutils release is supported, with a minimum of 2 minor versions. As of pgfutils 1.8.0, this means Python 3.8 or later.
The only required external dependency is Matplotlib. Any minor version of Matplotlib which was first released within the 24 months prior to a pgfutils release is supported, with a minimum of 2 minor versions. As of pgfutils 1.8.0, this means Matplotlib 3.3.0 or later.
Older versions of Python or Matplotlib may work, but are not tested and are not supported.
pgfutils comes with some examples which demonstrate its usage and integration
into a build system. Depending on your installation method, these may be
present somewhere in your filesystem (e.g., on a Linux system, they might be at
/usr/share/matplotlib-pgfutils/examples
). They can also be found in the
data/share/matplotlib-pgfutils/examples directory.
Documentation for pgfutils can be found online at https://matplotlib-pgfutils.readthedocs.io/
Alternatively, you can find the source of this documentation in Markdown format in the doc/ directory of the source:
An example configuration file showing the default settings is given in data/share/matplotlib-pgfutils/pgfutils.cfg.
Extensive unit tests are included in the tests/ directory of the source. Each commit to the source repository is automatically tested using GitHub actions. The test coverage (that is, how many of the lines of code in the source were executed during the tests) is monitored by Codecov. The badges above show the status of the last commit made to the source.
You can also run the tests on a local copy of the code. They are designed to be
run with the pytest framework and employ the Coverage.py package via
the pytest-cov plugin to measure the coverage. If you have these packages
installed, run pytest
from the top-level directory to execute the tests. A
basic test coverage report will be printed on the terminal, and the full report
can be viewed by opening the htmlcov/index.html
file in your web browser.
pgfutils is released under the three-clause BSD license. The terms of this license can be found in the LICENSE file in the source, or online at https://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-3-Clause
The Cotham Sans font used in some unit tests is copyright (c) 2015 Sebastien Sanfilippo and is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. The license can be found in the source at tests/sources/fonts/Cotham/OFL.txt or online at https://scripts.sil.org/OFL and the font itself can be found at https://github.com/sebsan/Cotham