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plot - Python realtime plotting

I acquire some data in two arrays: one for the time, and one for the value. When I reach 1000 points, I trigger a signal and plot these points (x=time, y=value).

I need to keep on the same figure the previous plots, but only a reasonable number to avoid slowing down the process. For example, I would like to keep 10,000 points on my graph. The matplotlib interactive plot works fine, but I don't know how to erase the first points and it slows my computer very quickly. I looked into matplotlib.animation, but it only seems to repeat the same plot, and not really actualise it.

I'm really looking for a light solution, to avoid any slowing.

As I acquire for a very large amount of time, I erase the input data on every loop (the 1001st point is stored in the 1st row and so on).

Here is what I have for now, but it keeps all the points on the graph:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

def init_plot():
  plt.ion()
  plt.figure()
  plt.title("Test d'acqusition", fontsize=20)
  plt.xlabel("Temps(s)", fontsize=20)
  plt.ylabel("Tension (V)", fontsize=20)
  plt.grid(True)

def continuous_plot(x, fx, x2, fx2):
  plt.plot(x, fx, 'bo', markersize=1)
  plt.plot(x2, fx2, 'ro', markersize=1)
  plt.draw()

I call the init function once, and the continous_plot is in a process, called every time I have 1000 points in my array.

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by (71.8m points)

The lightest solution you may have is to replace the X and Y values of an existing plot. (Or the Y value only, if your X data does not change. A simple example:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import numpy as np
import time

fig = plt.figure()
ax = fig.add_subplot(111)

# some X and Y data
x = np.arange(10000)
y = np.random.randn(10000)

li, = ax.plot(x, y)

# draw and show it
ax.relim() 
ax.autoscale_view(True,True,True)
fig.canvas.draw()
plt.show(block=False)

# loop to update the data
while True:
    try:
        y[:-10] = y[10:]
        y[-10:] = np.random.randn(10)

        # set the new data
        li.set_ydata(y)

        fig.canvas.draw()

        time.sleep(0.01)
    except KeyboardInterrupt:
        break

This solution is quite fast, as well. The maximum speed of the above code is 100 redraws per second (limited by the time.sleep), I get around 70-80, which means that one redraw takes around 4 ms. But YMMV depending on the backend, etc.


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