I would like to update my matplotlibplot with values calculated in each iteration of a for loop. The idea is that I can see in real time which values are calculated and watch the progress iteration by iteration as my script is running. I do not want to first iterate through the loop, store the values and then perform the plot.
Some sample code is here:
from itertools import count
import random
from matplotlib.animation import FuncAnimation
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
def animate(i, x_vals, y_vals):
plt.cla()
plt.plot(x_vals, y_vals)
if __name__ == "__main__":
x_vals = []
y_vals = []
fig = plt.figure()
index = count()
for i in range(10):
print(i)
x_vals.append(next(index))
y_vals.append(random.randint(0, 10))
ani = FuncAnimation(fig, animate, fargs=(x_vals, y_vals))
plt.show()
Most of the examples I have seen online, deal with the case where everything for the animation is global variables, which I would like to avoid. When I use a debugger to step through my code line by line, the figure does appear and it is animated. When I just run the script without the debugger, the figure displays but nothing is plot and I can see that my loop doesn't progress past the first iteration, first waiting for the figure window to be closed and then continuing.
You should never be using a loop when animating in matplotlib.
The animate
function gets called automatically based on your interval.
Something like this should work
def animate(i, x=[], y=[]):
plt.cla()
x.append(i)
y.append(random.randint(0, 10))
plt.plot(x, y)
if __name__ == "__main__":
fig = plt.figure()
ani = FuncAnimation(fig, animate, interval=700)
plt.show()