import pandas as pd
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
%matplotlib inline

Import your data

df = pd.read_csv("../country-gdp-2014.csv")
df.head()
Country Continent GDP_per_capita life_expectancy Population
0 Afghanistan Asia 663 54.863 22856302
1 Albania Europe 4195 74.200 3071856
2 Algeria Africa 5098 68.963 30533827
3 Angola Africa 2446 45.234 13926373
4 Antigua and Barbuda N. America 12738 73.544 77656

Change the font just for the title or axis labels

The default font is BitstreamVeraSans Roman, but we want to try out something else. You can pass fontname to .set_xlabel, .set_ylabel, .set_title, or .annotate to specify a particular font. This does not change the font for the numbers on the axes.

# Plot the median life expectancy by continent
ax = df.groupby('Continent')['Population'].median().sort_values().plot(kind='barh')
ax.set_xlabel("")

# Change the y axis label to Arial
ax.set_ylabel("Median Population", fontname="Arial", fontsize=12)

# Set the title to Comic Sans
ax.set_title("Oceania has small countries", fontname='Comic Sans MS', fontsize=18)
<matplotlib.text.Text at 0x108bddc88>

png

Change the font for the tick marks/numbers on the axes

Changing the fonts for the labels on each axis (the numbers) is a little bit more complicated, but you can use it in combination with the content above to specify fonts for every part of your graph.

# Plot the median life expectancy by continent
ax = df.groupby('Continent')['Population'].median().sort_values().plot(kind='barh')
ax.set_xlabel("")

# Change the y axis label to Arial
ax.set_ylabel("Median Population", fontname="Arial", fontsize=12)

# Set the title to Comic Sans
ax.set_title("Oceania has small countries", fontname='Comic Sans MS', fontsize=18)

# Set the font name for axis tick labels to be Comic Sans
for tick in ax.get_xticklabels():
    tick.set_fontname("Comic Sans MS")
for tick in ax.get_yticklabels():
    tick.set_fontname("Comic Sans MS")

png

Specify a default font for everything on your graphs

You can also specify a default font for everything in matplotlib. This will affect every single plot you make.

Note: Although you can do this, unless you’re practicing to make a house style I recommend specifying single-use fonts (the above section) instead of defaults.

I don’t know why, but you can only set it once. If you change your mind about what you want your default font to be you’ll have to restart your kernel.

It also knows whether your font is serif or sans-serif. If you try it with serif and it doesn’t work, change both of them to sans-serif instead. For example, if I changed my font to Georgia down below I’d need it to be serif instead, since it’s a font with serifs.

# Along with matplotlib.pyplot, for this one
# you also need to import matplotlib itself
import matplotlib

# Say, "the default sans-serif font is COMIC SANS"
matplotlib.rcParams['font.sans-serif'] = "Comic Sans MS"
# Then, "ALWAYS use sans-serif fonts"
matplotlib.rcParams['font.family'] = "sans-serif"

ax = df.groupby('Continent')['Population'].median().sort_values().plot(kind='barh')
ax.set_xlabel("")
ax.set_ylabel("Median Population")
ax.set_title("Oceania has small countries", fontsize=20)
<matplotlib.text.Text at 0x108eb1668>

png

Listing all of the fonts matplotlib knows about

If you’d like to know what fonts are available for use, check out list all fonts available in matplotlib plus samples.