The colorbars displayed below are probably not exactly like yours, as they are just example colorbars to function as a proof of concept.
In the following I assume you have a colorbar similar to this, with increasing values to the right:
Method 1: Inverting the x-axis
Inverts the whole x-axis of the colorbar
If you want to invert the x-axis, meaning that the values on the x-axis are descending to the right, making the colorbar "mirrored", you can make use of the ColorbarBase
's ax
attribute:
cb1 = mpl.colorbar.ColorbarBase(colorbar1,
cmap=cmap1,
norm=norm1,
orientation='horizontal')
cb1.ax.invert_xaxis()
This gives.the output below.
It is also possible to change the number of ticklabels by setting the colorbars locator
. Here the MultipleLocator
is used, although you can use many other locators as well.
from matplotlib.ticker import MultipleLocator
cb1.locator = MultipleLocator(1) # Show ticks only for each multiple of 1
cb1.update_ticks()
cb1.ax.invert_xaxis()
Method 2: Using custom ticklabels
Reverses the order of the ticklabels, keeping the orientation of the colorbar
If you want the orientation of the colorbar itself as it is, and only reverse the order in which the ticklabels appear, you can use the set_ticks
and set_ticklabels
methods. This is more of a "brute force" approach than the previous solution.
cb1.set_ticks(np.arange(15, 21))
cb1.set_ticklabels(np.arange(20, 14, -1))
This gives the colorbar seen below. Note that the colors are kept intact, only the tick locations and ticklabels have changed.
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