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If I start an ipython notebook with matplotlib inlined, is there a way to subsequently plot a figure so that it shows in the "standard", non-inlined, way, without having to reload the notebook without the inline command? I'd like to be able to have some figures inlined int he notebook, but others in the traditional interactive mode, where I can zoom and pan.

user2379888
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4 Answers4

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You can switch the matplotlib's backend by %matplotlib <backend>. To switch back to your system's default backend use %matplotlib auto or just simply %matplotlib.

There are many backends available such as gtk, qt, notebook, etc. I personally highly recommend the notebook (a.k.a. nbagg) backend. It is similar to inline but interactive, allowing zooming/panning from inside Jupyter.

For more info try: ?%matplotlib inside an IPython/Jupyter or IPython's online documentation

Gustavo Bezerra
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    typing `%matplotlib` kills the kernel for me, and I have to rerun the notebook from scratch after typing this command. Is there a way of doing this without killing the kernel? – mgig Aug 15 '16 at 18:48
  • I can't reproduce the issue so I am not sure what is causing that for you. I tested with numpy 1.11.0, matplotlib 1.5.1 and IPython 5.0.0. I had some non-matplotlib-related kernel crashing problems with Numpy 1.11.1, and downgrading to 1.11.0 solved the issue for me. – Gustavo Bezerra Aug 16 '16 at 03:42
  • For me worked only with ```auto```, simple ```%matplotlib``` throws an exeption – Artyom Akselrod Jul 23 '20 at 09:29
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plt.ioff() and plt.ion() works like a charm in my Jupyter notebook with the notebook as backend (assuming the usual import matplotlib.pyplot as plt).

mattmilten
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    Despite calling `ion()` or `ioff()` the plot is always displayed inline for me. – Konstantin Aug 23 '18 at 11:56
  • ion and ioff set interactive mode, determining if the plot is updated after each plotting command (interactive mode on) or it waits plt.show() (if interactive mode is off). This is independent on inline, that decides if the notebook or the console should display the graphics (this happens any time the plot is updated, meaning at every plotting command if interactive mode is set with ion, or after plt.plot if unset with ioff). – Vincenzooo Sep 14 '18 at 14:35
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It depends on the exact configuration of your matplotlib, but you can switch between inline and one of 'osx', 'qt4', 'qt5', 'gtk3', 'wx', 'qt', 'gtk', 'tk' (some are aliases of other). just use %matplotlib <the one you want> to switch. Depending on conditions you migh have only access to one of these.

Matt
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  • If I switch to/from qt in the middle of a notebook, I often get plots that fail to load and cause the kernel to crash (usually the qt plots). This is on version 3.1.1. – Marses Dec 29 '19 at 13:53
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Another possibility is to use matplotlib.pyplot.close(fig). This works for me even though %matplotlib auto raises a horrible wx error (related to the versions of the GTK development files I have installed in LD_LIBRARY_PATH).

While this might cause problems if you're doing something like making a video (or it might not; haven't tried), it worked for me when assembling images in a table using IPython.display.HTML per this answer.

tsbertalan
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