Seaborn scatterplot addition legend items










3















I'm seeing '1 and 2' as additional labels in my legend for a seaborn scatterplot. They'll disappear when I set the legend to False, but so does the legend I do want in there.
Any idea where this comes from and how to prevent it from appearing?



This sample code generates the image with the issue;



import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
import seaborn as sns

df = pd.DataFrame('restHR': np.random.randint(40,65, size=(100,)),
'Time': np.random.randint(0,10, size=(100,)))

sns.set()
fig, ax = plt.subplots()

ax = sns.scatterplot(df['Time'], df['restHR'], size=2, alpha=0.3, label="Race",linewidths=0)

plt.legend(frameon=False, bbox_to_anchor=(1,0.5), loc="center left",prop='size': 8)
plt.subplots_adjust(right=0.75)

plt.show()


enter image description here










share|improve this question






















  • What is the purpose of size=2? Usually you would do size="columnname" to group sizes. Using an integer instead is allowed by the documentation, however it does not explain what it does.

    – ImportanceOfBeingErnest
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:33















3















I'm seeing '1 and 2' as additional labels in my legend for a seaborn scatterplot. They'll disappear when I set the legend to False, but so does the legend I do want in there.
Any idea where this comes from and how to prevent it from appearing?



This sample code generates the image with the issue;



import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
import seaborn as sns

df = pd.DataFrame('restHR': np.random.randint(40,65, size=(100,)),
'Time': np.random.randint(0,10, size=(100,)))

sns.set()
fig, ax = plt.subplots()

ax = sns.scatterplot(df['Time'], df['restHR'], size=2, alpha=0.3, label="Race",linewidths=0)

plt.legend(frameon=False, bbox_to_anchor=(1,0.5), loc="center left",prop='size': 8)
plt.subplots_adjust(right=0.75)

plt.show()


enter image description here










share|improve this question






















  • What is the purpose of size=2? Usually you would do size="columnname" to group sizes. Using an integer instead is allowed by the documentation, however it does not explain what it does.

    – ImportanceOfBeingErnest
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:33













3












3








3








I'm seeing '1 and 2' as additional labels in my legend for a seaborn scatterplot. They'll disappear when I set the legend to False, but so does the legend I do want in there.
Any idea where this comes from and how to prevent it from appearing?



This sample code generates the image with the issue;



import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
import seaborn as sns

df = pd.DataFrame('restHR': np.random.randint(40,65, size=(100,)),
'Time': np.random.randint(0,10, size=(100,)))

sns.set()
fig, ax = plt.subplots()

ax = sns.scatterplot(df['Time'], df['restHR'], size=2, alpha=0.3, label="Race",linewidths=0)

plt.legend(frameon=False, bbox_to_anchor=(1,0.5), loc="center left",prop='size': 8)
plt.subplots_adjust(right=0.75)

plt.show()


enter image description here










share|improve this question














I'm seeing '1 and 2' as additional labels in my legend for a seaborn scatterplot. They'll disappear when I set the legend to False, but so does the legend I do want in there.
Any idea where this comes from and how to prevent it from appearing?



This sample code generates the image with the issue;



import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
import seaborn as sns

df = pd.DataFrame('restHR': np.random.randint(40,65, size=(100,)),
'Time': np.random.randint(0,10, size=(100,)))

sns.set()
fig, ax = plt.subplots()

ax = sns.scatterplot(df['Time'], df['restHR'], size=2, alpha=0.3, label="Race",linewidths=0)

plt.legend(frameon=False, bbox_to_anchor=(1,0.5), loc="center left",prop='size': 8)
plt.subplots_adjust(right=0.75)

plt.show()


enter image description here







python seaborn scatter-plot






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 12 '18 at 15:13









ChrisvdbergeChrisvdberge

5212822




5212822












  • What is the purpose of size=2? Usually you would do size="columnname" to group sizes. Using an integer instead is allowed by the documentation, however it does not explain what it does.

    – ImportanceOfBeingErnest
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:33

















  • What is the purpose of size=2? Usually you would do size="columnname" to group sizes. Using an integer instead is allowed by the documentation, however it does not explain what it does.

    – ImportanceOfBeingErnest
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:33
















What is the purpose of size=2? Usually you would do size="columnname" to group sizes. Using an integer instead is allowed by the documentation, however it does not explain what it does.

– ImportanceOfBeingErnest
Nov 12 '18 at 15:33





What is the purpose of size=2? Usually you would do size="columnname" to group sizes. Using an integer instead is allowed by the documentation, however it does not explain what it does.

– ImportanceOfBeingErnest
Nov 12 '18 at 15:33












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














It's from size=2. The size parameter is used when you want varied size for the points given a grouped variable.



I am not sure why you have it there, but if you want to adjust the size of the symbol, use s=2 instead.






share|improve this answer























  • excellent, thanks! This was a consequence of me plotting the size based on another variable previously, but now wanting to set it to a fixed size. 's=' does indeed do the trick. Still makes me wonder where exactly the two additional values come from and why it is 2 values? (as opposed to 1 for the additional variable?). Using size=4 gives me 2 values: 3 and 4 for instance.

    – Chrisvdberge
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:25






  • 1





    I am not sure. It seems to me that seaborn is trying to extrapolate/interpolate integer values when used as input for the 'size' parameter. I tried a few things, if you create a column and assign 2 to all values of that column, it would give you the same result. However, when assigning 1 and 4 to the values, seaborn also creates legend symbols for 2 and 3, although no values are present in that column. Working with strings (e.g. 'foo' and 'bar' instead of 1 and 4) didn't give me this problem.

    – Xiaoyu Lu
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:42










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














It's from size=2. The size parameter is used when you want varied size for the points given a grouped variable.



I am not sure why you have it there, but if you want to adjust the size of the symbol, use s=2 instead.






share|improve this answer























  • excellent, thanks! This was a consequence of me plotting the size based on another variable previously, but now wanting to set it to a fixed size. 's=' does indeed do the trick. Still makes me wonder where exactly the two additional values come from and why it is 2 values? (as opposed to 1 for the additional variable?). Using size=4 gives me 2 values: 3 and 4 for instance.

    – Chrisvdberge
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:25






  • 1





    I am not sure. It seems to me that seaborn is trying to extrapolate/interpolate integer values when used as input for the 'size' parameter. I tried a few things, if you create a column and assign 2 to all values of that column, it would give you the same result. However, when assigning 1 and 4 to the values, seaborn also creates legend symbols for 2 and 3, although no values are present in that column. Working with strings (e.g. 'foo' and 'bar' instead of 1 and 4) didn't give me this problem.

    – Xiaoyu Lu
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:42















1














It's from size=2. The size parameter is used when you want varied size for the points given a grouped variable.



I am not sure why you have it there, but if you want to adjust the size of the symbol, use s=2 instead.






share|improve this answer























  • excellent, thanks! This was a consequence of me plotting the size based on another variable previously, but now wanting to set it to a fixed size. 's=' does indeed do the trick. Still makes me wonder where exactly the two additional values come from and why it is 2 values? (as opposed to 1 for the additional variable?). Using size=4 gives me 2 values: 3 and 4 for instance.

    – Chrisvdberge
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:25






  • 1





    I am not sure. It seems to me that seaborn is trying to extrapolate/interpolate integer values when used as input for the 'size' parameter. I tried a few things, if you create a column and assign 2 to all values of that column, it would give you the same result. However, when assigning 1 and 4 to the values, seaborn also creates legend symbols for 2 and 3, although no values are present in that column. Working with strings (e.g. 'foo' and 'bar' instead of 1 and 4) didn't give me this problem.

    – Xiaoyu Lu
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:42













1












1








1







It's from size=2. The size parameter is used when you want varied size for the points given a grouped variable.



I am not sure why you have it there, but if you want to adjust the size of the symbol, use s=2 instead.






share|improve this answer













It's from size=2. The size parameter is used when you want varied size for the points given a grouped variable.



I am not sure why you have it there, but if you want to adjust the size of the symbol, use s=2 instead.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 12 '18 at 15:21









Xiaoyu LuXiaoyu Lu

431413




431413












  • excellent, thanks! This was a consequence of me plotting the size based on another variable previously, but now wanting to set it to a fixed size. 's=' does indeed do the trick. Still makes me wonder where exactly the two additional values come from and why it is 2 values? (as opposed to 1 for the additional variable?). Using size=4 gives me 2 values: 3 and 4 for instance.

    – Chrisvdberge
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:25






  • 1





    I am not sure. It seems to me that seaborn is trying to extrapolate/interpolate integer values when used as input for the 'size' parameter. I tried a few things, if you create a column and assign 2 to all values of that column, it would give you the same result. However, when assigning 1 and 4 to the values, seaborn also creates legend symbols for 2 and 3, although no values are present in that column. Working with strings (e.g. 'foo' and 'bar' instead of 1 and 4) didn't give me this problem.

    – Xiaoyu Lu
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:42

















  • excellent, thanks! This was a consequence of me plotting the size based on another variable previously, but now wanting to set it to a fixed size. 's=' does indeed do the trick. Still makes me wonder where exactly the two additional values come from and why it is 2 values? (as opposed to 1 for the additional variable?). Using size=4 gives me 2 values: 3 and 4 for instance.

    – Chrisvdberge
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:25






  • 1





    I am not sure. It seems to me that seaborn is trying to extrapolate/interpolate integer values when used as input for the 'size' parameter. I tried a few things, if you create a column and assign 2 to all values of that column, it would give you the same result. However, when assigning 1 and 4 to the values, seaborn also creates legend symbols for 2 and 3, although no values are present in that column. Working with strings (e.g. 'foo' and 'bar' instead of 1 and 4) didn't give me this problem.

    – Xiaoyu Lu
    Nov 12 '18 at 15:42
















excellent, thanks! This was a consequence of me plotting the size based on another variable previously, but now wanting to set it to a fixed size. 's=' does indeed do the trick. Still makes me wonder where exactly the two additional values come from and why it is 2 values? (as opposed to 1 for the additional variable?). Using size=4 gives me 2 values: 3 and 4 for instance.

– Chrisvdberge
Nov 12 '18 at 15:25





excellent, thanks! This was a consequence of me plotting the size based on another variable previously, but now wanting to set it to a fixed size. 's=' does indeed do the trick. Still makes me wonder where exactly the two additional values come from and why it is 2 values? (as opposed to 1 for the additional variable?). Using size=4 gives me 2 values: 3 and 4 for instance.

– Chrisvdberge
Nov 12 '18 at 15:25




1




1





I am not sure. It seems to me that seaborn is trying to extrapolate/interpolate integer values when used as input for the 'size' parameter. I tried a few things, if you create a column and assign 2 to all values of that column, it would give you the same result. However, when assigning 1 and 4 to the values, seaborn also creates legend symbols for 2 and 3, although no values are present in that column. Working with strings (e.g. 'foo' and 'bar' instead of 1 and 4) didn't give me this problem.

– Xiaoyu Lu
Nov 12 '18 at 15:42





I am not sure. It seems to me that seaborn is trying to extrapolate/interpolate integer values when used as input for the 'size' parameter. I tried a few things, if you create a column and assign 2 to all values of that column, it would give you the same result. However, when assigning 1 and 4 to the values, seaborn also creates legend symbols for 2 and 3, although no values are present in that column. Working with strings (e.g. 'foo' and 'bar' instead of 1 and 4) didn't give me this problem.

– Xiaoyu Lu
Nov 12 '18 at 15:42

















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