Create effective data visualizations with Python (matplotlib, seaborn, plotly). Use when building charts, choosing the right chart type for a dataset, creating publication-quality figures, or applying design principles like accessibility and color theory.
Generates Python code for data visualizations with guidance on chart selection, design, and accessibility.
/plugin marketplace add sksdesignnew/claudepg/plugin install data@knowledge-work-pluginsThis skill inherits all available tools. When active, it can use any tool Claude has access to.
Chart selection guidance, Python visualization code patterns, design principles, and accessibility considerations for creating effective data visualizations.
| What You're Showing | Best Chart | Alternatives |
|---|---|---|
| Trend over time | Line chart | Area chart (if showing cumulative or composition) |
| Comparison across categories | Vertical bar chart | Horizontal bar (many categories), lollipop chart |
| Ranking | Horizontal bar chart | Dot plot, slope chart (comparing two periods) |
| Part-to-whole composition | Stacked bar chart | Treemap (hierarchical), waffle chart |
| Composition over time | Stacked area chart | 100% stacked bar (for proportion focus) |
| Distribution | Histogram | Box plot (comparing groups), violin plot, strip plot |
| Correlation (2 variables) | Scatter plot | Bubble chart (add 3rd variable as size) |
| Correlation (many variables) | Heatmap (correlation matrix) | Pair plot |
| Geographic patterns | Choropleth map | Bubble map, hex map |
| Flow / process | Sankey diagram | Funnel chart (sequential stages) |
| Relationship network | Network graph | Chord diagram |
| Performance vs. target | Bullet chart | Gauge (single KPI only) |
| Multiple KPIs at once | Small multiples | Dashboard with separate charts |
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import matplotlib.ticker as mticker
import seaborn as sns
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
# Professional style setup
plt.style.use('seaborn-v0_8-whitegrid')
plt.rcParams.update({
'figure.figsize': (10, 6),
'figure.dpi': 150,
'font.size': 11,
'axes.titlesize': 14,
'axes.titleweight': 'bold',
'axes.labelsize': 11,
'xtick.labelsize': 10,
'ytick.labelsize': 10,
'legend.fontsize': 10,
'figure.titlesize': 16,
})
# Colorblind-friendly palettes
PALETTE_CATEGORICAL = ['#4C72B0', '#DD8452', '#55A868', '#C44E52', '#8172B3', '#937860']
PALETTE_SEQUENTIAL = 'YlOrRd'
PALETTE_DIVERGING = 'RdBu_r'
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 6))
for label, group in df.groupby('category'):
ax.plot(group['date'], group['value'], label=label, linewidth=2)
ax.set_title('Metric Trend by Category', fontweight='bold')
ax.set_xlabel('Date')
ax.set_ylabel('Value')
ax.legend(loc='upper left', frameon=True)
ax.spines['top'].set_visible(False)
ax.spines['right'].set_visible(False)
# Format dates on x-axis
fig.autofmt_xdate()
plt.tight_layout()
plt.savefig('trend_chart.png', dpi=150, bbox_inches='tight')
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 6))
# Sort by value for easy reading
df_sorted = df.sort_values('metric', ascending=True)
bars = ax.barh(df_sorted['category'], df_sorted['metric'], color=PALETTE_CATEGORICAL[0])
# Add value labels
for bar in bars:
width = bar.get_width()
ax.text(width + 0.5, bar.get_y() + bar.get_height()/2,
f'{width:,.0f}', ha='left', va='center', fontsize=10)
ax.set_title('Metric by Category (Ranked)', fontweight='bold')
ax.set_xlabel('Metric Value')
ax.spines['top'].set_visible(False)
ax.spines['right'].set_visible(False)
plt.tight_layout()
plt.savefig('bar_chart.png', dpi=150, bbox_inches='tight')
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 6))
ax.hist(df['value'], bins=30, color=PALETTE_CATEGORICAL[0], edgecolor='white', alpha=0.8)
# Add mean and median lines
mean_val = df['value'].mean()
median_val = df['value'].median()
ax.axvline(mean_val, color='red', linestyle='--', linewidth=1.5, label=f'Mean: {mean_val:,.1f}')
ax.axvline(median_val, color='green', linestyle='--', linewidth=1.5, label=f'Median: {median_val:,.1f}')
ax.set_title('Distribution of Values', fontweight='bold')
ax.set_xlabel('Value')
ax.set_ylabel('Frequency')
ax.legend()
ax.spines['top'].set_visible(False)
ax.spines['right'].set_visible(False)
plt.tight_layout()
plt.savefig('histogram.png', dpi=150, bbox_inches='tight')
fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(10, 8))
# Pivot data for heatmap format
pivot = df.pivot_table(index='row_dim', columns='col_dim', values='metric', aggfunc='sum')
sns.heatmap(pivot, annot=True, fmt=',.0f', cmap='YlOrRd',
linewidths=0.5, ax=ax, cbar_kws={'label': 'Metric Value'})
ax.set_title('Metric by Row Dimension and Column Dimension', fontweight='bold')
ax.set_xlabel('Column Dimension')
ax.set_ylabel('Row Dimension')
plt.tight_layout()
plt.savefig('heatmap.png', dpi=150, bbox_inches='tight')
categories = df['category'].unique()
n_cats = len(categories)
n_cols = min(3, n_cats)
n_rows = (n_cats + n_cols - 1) // n_cols
fig, axes = plt.subplots(n_rows, n_cols, figsize=(5*n_cols, 4*n_rows), sharex=True, sharey=True)
axes = axes.flatten() if n_cats > 1 else [axes]
for i, cat in enumerate(categories):
ax = axes[i]
subset = df[df['category'] == cat]
ax.plot(subset['date'], subset['value'], color=PALETTE_CATEGORICAL[i % len(PALETTE_CATEGORICAL)])
ax.set_title(cat, fontsize=12)
ax.spines['top'].set_visible(False)
ax.spines['right'].set_visible(False)
# Hide empty subplots
for j in range(i+1, len(axes)):
axes[j].set_visible(False)
fig.suptitle('Trends by Category', fontsize=14, fontweight='bold', y=1.02)
plt.tight_layout()
plt.savefig('small_multiples.png', dpi=150, bbox_inches='tight')
def format_number(val, format_type='number'):
"""Format numbers for chart labels."""
if format_type == 'currency':
if abs(val) >= 1e9:
return f'${val/1e9:.1f}B'
elif abs(val) >= 1e6:
return f'${val/1e6:.1f}M'
elif abs(val) >= 1e3:
return f'${val/1e3:.1f}K'
else:
return f'${val:,.0f}'
elif format_type == 'percent':
return f'{val:.1f}%'
elif format_type == 'number':
if abs(val) >= 1e9:
return f'{val/1e9:.1f}B'
elif abs(val) >= 1e6:
return f'{val/1e6:.1f}M'
elif abs(val) >= 1e3:
return f'{val/1e3:.1f}K'
else:
return f'{val:,.0f}'
return str(val)
# Usage with axis formatter
ax.yaxis.set_major_formatter(mticker.FuncFormatter(lambda x, p: format_number(x, 'currency')))
import plotly.express as px
import plotly.graph_objects as go
# Simple interactive line chart
fig = px.line(df, x='date', y='value', color='category',
title='Interactive Metric Trend',
labels={'value': 'Metric Value', 'date': 'Date'})
fig.update_layout(hovermode='x unified')
fig.write_html('interactive_chart.html')
fig.show()
# Interactive scatter with hover data
fig = px.scatter(df, x='metric_a', y='metric_b', color='category',
size='size_metric', hover_data=['name', 'detail_field'],
title='Correlation Analysis')
fig.show()
sns.color_palette("colorblind")Before sharing a visualization:
Use when working with Payload CMS projects (payload.config.ts, collections, fields, hooks, access control, Payload API). Use when debugging validation errors, security issues, relationship queries, transactions, or hook behavior.