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Removing white space around a saved image

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How do I remove white space from an image?

Scroll all the way to the bottom of the available color options. Click the "Set Transparent Color" link. When the Color window closes, double-click any white area in the picture. All of the white is removed, making the white background transparent.

How do I save a Matplotlib figure without white space?

Hide the Whitespaces and Borders in Matplotlib Figure To get rid of whitespace around the border, we can set bbox_inches='tight' in the savefig() method. Similarly, to remove the white border around the image while we set pad_inches = 0 in the savefig() method.

How do I get rid of extra space in Matplotlib?

You can use either plt. margins(x=0) or ax. margins(x=0) to remove all margins on the x-axis.

What is PLT Tight_layout ()?

matplotlib.pyplot.tight_layout() Function The tight_layout() function in pyplot module of matplotlib library is used to automatically adjust subplot parameters to give specified padding.


You can remove the white space padding by setting bbox_inches="tight" in savefig:

plt.savefig("test.png",bbox_inches='tight')

You'll have to put the argument to bbox_inches as a string, perhaps this is why it didn't work earlier for you.


Possible duplicates:

Matplotlib plots: removing axis, legends and white spaces

How to set the margins for a matplotlib figure?

Reduce left and right margins in matplotlib plot


I cannot claim I know exactly why or how my “solution” works, but this is what I had to do when I wanted to plot the outline of a couple of aerofoil sections — without white margins — to a PDF file. (Note that I used matplotlib inside an IPython notebook, with the -pylab flag.)

plt.gca().set_axis_off()
plt.subplots_adjust(top = 1, bottom = 0, right = 1, left = 0, 
            hspace = 0, wspace = 0)
plt.margins(0,0)
plt.gca().xaxis.set_major_locator(plt.NullLocator())
plt.gca().yaxis.set_major_locator(plt.NullLocator())
plt.savefig("filename.pdf", bbox_inches = 'tight',
    pad_inches = 0)

I have tried to deactivate different parts of this, but this always lead to a white margin somewhere. You may even have modify this to keep fat lines near the limits of the figure from being shaved by the lack of margins.


After trying the above answers with no success (and a slew of other stack posts) what finally worked for me was just

plt.gca().set_axis_off()
plt.subplots_adjust(top = 1, bottom = 0, right = 1, left = 0, 
            hspace = 0, wspace = 0)
plt.margins(0,0)
plt.savefig("myfig.pdf")

Importantly this does not include the bbox or padding arguments.


I found something from Arvind Pereira (http://robotics.usc.edu/~ampereir/wordpress/?p=626) and seemed to work for me:

plt.savefig(filename, transparent = True, bbox_inches = 'tight', pad_inches = 0)

The following function incorporates johannes-s answer above. I have tested it with plt.figure and plt.subplots() with multiple axes, and it works nicely.

def save(filepath, fig=None):
    '''Save the current image with no whitespace
    Example filepath: "myfig.png" or r"C:\myfig.pdf" 
    '''
    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    if not fig:
        fig = plt.gcf()

    plt.subplots_adjust(0,0,1,1,0,0)
    for ax in fig.axes:
        ax.axis('off')
        ax.margins(0,0)
        ax.xaxis.set_major_locator(plt.NullLocator())
        ax.yaxis.set_major_locator(plt.NullLocator())
    fig.savefig(filepath, pad_inches = 0, bbox_inches='tight')

I found the following codes work perfectly for the job.

fig = plt.figure(figsize=[6,6])
ax = fig.add_subplot(111)
ax.imshow(data)
ax.axes.get_xaxis().set_visible(False)
ax.axes.get_yaxis().set_visible(False)
ax.set_frame_on(False)
plt.savefig('data.png', dpi=400, bbox_inches='tight',pad_inches=0)