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pyplot.text() ⚬|Documentation|1st|20251021005502-00-⌔

matplotlib.pyplot.text — Matplotlib 3.10.8 documentation#matplotlib.pyplot.text

matplotlib.pyplot.text(x, y, s, fontdict=None, ﹡﹡kwargs)

Add text to the Axes.

Add the text s to the Axes at location x, y in data coordinates, with a default horizontalalignment on the left and verticalalignment at the baseline. See Text alignment.

Parameters:
x, y: float

The position to place the text. By default, this is in data coordinates. The coordinate system can be changed using the transform parameter.

s: str

The text.

fontdict: dict, default: None

Discouraged: The use of fontdict is discouraged. Parameters should be passed as individual keyword arguments or using dictionary-unpacking text(..., ﹡﹡fontdict).

A dictionary to override the default text properties. If fontdict is None, the defaults are determined by rcParams.

Returns:
Text

The created Text instance.

Other Parameters:
﹡﹡kwargs: Text properties.

Other miscellaneous text parameters.

📊 ➺

Notes:

Note: This is the pyplot wrapper for axes.Axes.text.

Examples:

Individual keyword arguments can be used to override any given parameter:

>>> text(x, y, s, fontsize=12)

The default transform specifies that text is in data coords, alternatively, you can specify text in axis coords ((0, 0) is lower-left and (1, 1) is upper-right). The example below places text in the center of the Axes:

>>> text(0.5, 0.5, 'matplotlib', horizontalalignment='center',
...      verticalalignment='center', transform=ax.transAxes)

You can put a rectangular box around the text instance (e.g., to set a background color) by using the keyword bbox. bbox is a dictionary of Rectangle properties. For example:

>>> text(x, y, s, bbox=dict(facecolor='red', alpha=0.5))

Printed 2026-06-28.

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