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How to make Bar Charts in Python with Plotly.
basic
python
base
Bar Charts
3
example_index
python/bar-charts/
thumbnail/bar.jpg

Bar chart with Plotly Express

Plotly Express is the easy-to-use, high-level interface to Plotly, which operates on a variety of types of data and produces easy-to-style figures.

With px.bar, each row of the DataFrame is represented as a rectangular mark.

import plotly.express as px
data_canada = px.data.gapminder().query("country == 'Canada'")
fig = px.bar(data_canada, x='year', y='pop')
fig.show()
data_canada

Customize bar chart with Plotly Express

The bar plot can be customized using keyword arguments.

import plotly.express as px
data = px.data.gapminder()

data_canada = data[data.country == 'Canada']
fig = px.bar(data_canada, x='year', y='pop',
             hover_data=['lifeExp', 'gdpPercap'], color='lifeExp',
             labels={'pop':'population of Canada'}, height=400)
fig.show()

When several rows share the same value of x (here Female or Male), the rectangles are stacked on top of one another by default.

import plotly.express as px
df = px.data.tips()
fig = px.bar(df, x="sex", y="total_bill", color='time')
fig.show()
# Change the default stacking
import plotly.express as px
fig = px.bar(df, x="sex", y="total_bill", color='smoker', barmode='group',
             height=400)
fig.show()

Facetted subplots

Use the keyword arguments facet_row (resp. facet_col) to create facetted subplots, where different rows (resp. columns) correspond to different values of the dataframe column specified in facet_row.

import plotly.express as px
fig = px.bar(df, x="sex", y="total_bill", color="smoker", barmode="group",
             facet_row="time", facet_col="day",
             category_orders={"day": ["Thur", "Fri", "Sat", "Sun"],
                              "time": ["Lunch", "Dinner"]})
fig.show()

To learn more, see the link to px.bar reference page.

Basic Bar Chart with plotly.graph_objects

If Plotly Express does not provide a good starting point, it is also possible to use the more generic go.Bar function from plotly.graph_objects.

import plotly.graph_objects as go
animals=['giraffes', 'orangutans', 'monkeys']

fig = go.Figure([go.Bar(x=animals, y=[20, 14, 23])])
fig.show()

Grouped Bar Chart

Customize the figure using fig.update.

import plotly.graph_objects as go
animals=['giraffes', 'orangutans', 'monkeys']

fig = go.Figure(data=[
    go.Bar(name='SF Zoo', x=animals, y=[20, 14, 23]),
    go.Bar(name='LA Zoo', x=animals, y=[12, 18, 29])
])
# Change the bar mode
fig.update_layout(barmode='group')
fig.show()

Stacked Bar Chart

import plotly.graph_objects as go
animals=['giraffes', 'orangutans', 'monkeys']

fig = go.Figure(data=[
    go.Bar(name='SF Zoo', x=animals, y=[20, 14, 23]),
    go.Bar(name='LA Zoo', x=animals, y=[12, 18, 29])
])
# Change the bar mode
fig.update_layout(barmode='stack')
fig.show()

Bar Chart with Hover Text

import plotly.graph_objects as go

x = ['Product A', 'Product B', 'Product C']
y = [20, 14, 23]

# Use the hovertext kw argument for hover text
fig = go.Figure(data=[go.Bar(x=x, y=y,
            hovertext=['27% market share', '24% market share', '19% market share'])])
# Customize aspect
fig.update_traces(marker_color='rgb(158,202,225)', marker_line_color='rgb(8,48,107)',
                  marker_line_width=1.5, opacity=0.6)
fig.update_layout(title_text='January 2013 Sales Report')
fig.show()

Bar Chart with Direct Labels

import plotly.graph_objects as go

x = ['Product A', 'Product B', 'Product C']
y = [20, 14, 23]

# Use textposition='auto' for direct text
fig = go.Figure(data=[go.Bar(
            x=x, y=y,
            text=y,
            textposition='auto',
        )])

fig.show()

Controlling text fontsize with uniformtext

If you want all the text labels to have the same size, you can use the uniformtext layout parameter. The minsize attribute sets the font size, and the mode attribute sets what happens for labels which cannot fit with the desired fontsize: either hide them or show them with overflow. In the example below we also force the text to be outside of bars with textposition.

import plotly.express as px

df = px.data.gapminder().query("continent == 'Europe' and year == 2007 and pop > 2.e6")
fig = px.bar(df, y='pop', x='country', text='pop')
fig.update_traces(texttemplate='%{text:.2s}', textposition='outside')
fig.update_layout(uniformtext_minsize=8, uniformtext_mode='hide')
fig.show()

Rotated Bar Chart Labels

import plotly.graph_objects as go

months = ['Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun',
          'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec']

fig = go.Figure()
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(
    x=months,
    y=[20, 14, 25, 16, 18, 22, 19, 15, 12, 16, 14, 17],
    name='Primary Product',
    marker_color='indianred'
))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(
    x=months,
    y=[19, 14, 22, 14, 16, 19, 15, 14, 10, 12, 12, 16],
    name='Secondary Product',
    marker_color='lightsalmon'
))

# Here we modify the tickangle of the xaxis, resulting in rotated labels.
fig.update_layout(barmode='group', xaxis_tickangle=-45)
fig.show()

Customizing Individual Bar Colors

import plotly.graph_objects as go

colors = ['lightslategray',] * 5
colors[1] = 'crimson'

fig = go.Figure(data=[go.Bar(
    x=['Feature A', 'Feature B', 'Feature C',
       'Feature D', 'Feature E'],
    y=[20, 14, 23, 25, 22],
    marker_color=colors # marker color can be a single color value or an iterable
)])
fig.update_layout(title_text='Least Used Feature')

Customizing Individual Bar Widths

import plotly.graph_objects as go

fig = go.Figure(data=[go.Bar(
    x=[1, 2, 3, 5.5, 10],
    y=[10, 8, 6, 4, 2],
    width=[0.8, 0.8, 0.8, 3.5, 4] # customize width here
)])

fig.show()

Customizing Individual Bar Base

import plotly.graph_objects as go

years = ['2016','2017','2018']

fig = go.Figure()
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=years, y=[500, 600, 700],
                base=[-500,-600,-700],
                marker_color='crimson',
                name='expenses'))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=years, y=[300, 400, 700],
                base=0,
                marker_color='lightslategrey',
                name='revenue'
                ))

fig.show()

Colored and Styled Bar Chart

In this example several parameters of the layout as customized, hence it is convenient to use directly the go.Layout(...) constructor instead of calling fig.update.

import plotly.graph_objects as go

years = [1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003,
         2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012]

fig = go.Figure()
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=years,
                y=[219, 146, 112, 127, 124, 180, 236, 207, 236, 263,
                   350, 430, 474, 526, 488, 537, 500, 439],
                name='Rest of world',
                marker_color='rgb(55, 83, 109)'
                ))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=years,
                y=[16, 13, 10, 11, 28, 37, 43, 55, 56, 88, 105, 156, 270,
                   299, 340, 403, 549, 499],
                name='China',
                marker_color='rgb(26, 118, 255)'
                ))

fig.update_layout(
    title='US Export of Plastic Scrap',
    xaxis_tickfont_size=14,
    yaxis=dict(
        title='USD (millions)',
        titlefont_size=16,
        tickfont_size=14,
    ),
    legend=dict(
        x=0,
        y=1.0,
        bgcolor='rgba(255, 255, 255, 0)',
        bordercolor='rgba(255, 255, 255, 0)'
    ),
    barmode='group',
    bargap=0.15, # gap between bars of adjacent location coordinates.
    bargroupgap=0.1 # gap between bars of the same location coordinate.
)
fig.show()

Bar Chart with Relative Barmode

With "relative" barmode, the bars are stacked on top of one another, with negative values below the axis, positive values above.

import plotly.graph_objects as go
x = [1, 2, 3, 4]

fig = go.Figure()
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[1, 4, 9, 16]))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[6, -8, -4.5, 8]))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[-15, -3, 4.5, -8]))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[-1, 3, -3, -4]))

fig.update_layout(barmode='relative', title_text='Relative Barmode')
fig.show()

Bar Chart with Sorted or Ordered Categories

Set categoryorder to "category ascending" or "category descending" for the alphanumerical order of the category names or "total ascending" or "total descending" for numerical order of values. categoryorder for more information. Note that sorting the bars by a particular trace isn't possible right now - it's only possible to sort by the total values. Of course, you can always sort your data before plotting it if you need more customization.

This example orders the bar chart alphabetically with categoryorder: 'category ascending'

import plotly.graph_objects as go

x=['b', 'a', 'c', 'd']
fig = go.Figure(go.Bar(x=x, y=[2,5,1,9], name='Montreal'))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[1, 4, 9, 16], name='Ottawa'))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[6, 8, 4.5, 8], name='Toronto'))

fig.update_layout(barmode='stack', xaxis={'categoryorder':'category ascending'})
fig.show()

This example shows how to customise sort ordering by defining categoryorder to "array" to derive the ordering from the attribute categoryarray.

import plotly.graph_objects as go

x=['b', 'a', 'c', 'd']
fig = go.Figure(go.Bar(x=x, y=[2,5,1,9], name='Montreal'))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[1, 4, 9, 16], name='Ottawa'))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[6, 8, 4.5, 8], name='Toronto'))

fig.update_layout(barmode='stack', xaxis={'categoryorder':'array', 'categoryarray':['d','a','c','b']})
fig.show()

This example orders the bar chart by descending value with categoryorder: 'total descending'

import plotly.graph_objects as go

x=['b', 'a', 'c', 'd']
fig = go.Figure(go.Bar(x=x, y=[2,5,1,9], name='Montreal'))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[1, 4, 9, 16], name='Ottawa'))
fig.add_trace(go.Bar(x=x, y=[6, 8, 4.5, 8], name='Toronto'))

fig.update_layout(barmode='stack', xaxis={'categoryorder':'total descending'})
fig.show()

Horizontal Bar Charts

See examples of horizontal bar charts here.

Reference

See https://plotly.com/python/reference/#bar for more information and chart attribute options!