I have measured the positions of different products in different angles positions (6 values in steps of 60 deg. over a complete rotation). Instead of representing my values on a Cartesian graph where 0 and 360 are the same point, I want to use a polar graph.
With matplotlib
, I got a spider chart type graph, but I want to avoid straight lines between points and display and extrapolated values between those. I have a solution that is kind of OK, but I was hoping there is a nice "one liner" I could use to have a more realistic representation or a better tangent handling for some points.
Does anyone have an idea to improve my code below ?
# Libraries
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
# Some data to play with
df = pd.DataFrame({'measure':[10, -5, 15,20,20, 20,15,5,10], 'angle':[0,45,90,135,180, 225, 270, 315,360]})
# The few lines I would like to avoid...
angles = [y/180*np.pi for x in [np.arange(x, x+45,5) for x in df.angle[:-1]] for y in x]
values = [y for x in [np.linspace(x, df.measure[i+1], 10)[:-1] for i, x in enumerate(df.measure[:-1])] for y in x]
angles.append(360/180*np.pi)
values.append(values[0])
# Initialise the spider plot
ax = plt.subplot(polar=True)
# Plot data
ax.plot(df.angle/180*np.pi, df['measure'], linewidth=1, linestyle='solid', label="Spider chart")
ax.plot(angles, values, linewidth=1, linestyle='solid', label='what I want')
ax.legend()
# Fill area
ax.fill(angles, values, 'b', alpha=0.1)
plt.show()
the result is below, I want something similar to the orange line with some kind of spline to avoid sharp corners I currently get