Simple Bar Chart
Welcome to the second section! You've done great work so far! In this section, we will consider another common type of chart - this is a bar chart.
The concept for creating a bar chart is the same as for line plot: initialize Axes
and Figure
objects using the .subplots()
method and then apply .bar()
function to Axes
object. The first argument (x
) of the function is the x coordinates of the bar, the second (height
) - the heights of the bars. For example, let's visualize some abstract subject grades.
123456789101112131415# Import library import matplotlib.pyplot as plt # Create data for chart subjects = ['Math', 'Literature', 'History', 'Physics', 'Arts'] grades = [95, 76, 83, 92, 68] # Create Axes and Figure objects fig, ax = plt.subplots() # Initialize bar chart ax.bar(subjects, grades) # Display the plot plt.show()
Tack för dina kommentarer!
Fråga AI
Fråga AI
Fråga vad du vill eller prova någon av de föreslagna frågorna för att starta vårt samtal
Awesome!
Completion rate improved to 2.94
Simple Bar Chart
Svep för att visa menyn
Welcome to the second section! You've done great work so far! In this section, we will consider another common type of chart - this is a bar chart.
The concept for creating a bar chart is the same as for line plot: initialize Axes
and Figure
objects using the .subplots()
method and then apply .bar()
function to Axes
object. The first argument (x
) of the function is the x coordinates of the bar, the second (height
) - the heights of the bars. For example, let's visualize some abstract subject grades.
123456789101112131415# Import library import matplotlib.pyplot as plt # Create data for chart subjects = ['Math', 'Literature', 'History', 'Physics', 'Arts'] grades = [95, 76, 83, 92, 68] # Create Axes and Figure objects fig, ax = plt.subplots() # Initialize bar chart ax.bar(subjects, grades) # Display the plot plt.show()
Tack för dina kommentarer!