As an alleged subject-matter expert on pandas, I feel the question should remain closed.
First let's address the specific question asked:
I'm asking the community if this is an example of fair/ethical behavior and if pandas is a duplicate to matplotlib?
The pandas
library has matplotlib
as a dependency for visualization (Optional Dependencies) meaning that it is certainly acceptable to close a pandas
question as a duplicate of matplotlib
especially where plotting is concerned.
But even beyond this, there are lots of problems which have answers that derive from dependencies.
Probably one of the largest examples is Is floating point math broken? which has 4,164 linked questions. Many languages have this issue:
- PHP - Floating Number Precision
- Is double Multiplication Broken in .NET?
- Float sum with javascript
These questions can and should be closed as duplicates as the foundational issue is exactly the same, they all rely on the exact same approach for storing numbers causing the exact same behaviour.
Here too there are many modules and libraries that are going to depend on matplotlib
which means that it is completely reasonable to close them as a duplicate.
Why do I believe the question should remain closed?
There is no meaningful difference between the figsize
parameter that gets passed to either pandas.Series.plot
or pandas.DataFrame.plot
as it will eventually make it to matplotlib
(assuming the default plotting backend is used as it in this specific question). There is no reason for why there needs to be a separate Q/A just for this one parameter.
Even if there was not a pandas
specific answer already in How do you change the size of figures drawn with Matplotlib? I would still support it as a dupe target. Specifically because the second and third answers work without modification. I may need to put a comment that directs to specific answers like:
-
You should pass figsize
directly to plot
-> df.plot(figsize=(10, 5))
. You could also use plt.rcParams
like this answer or create some subplots
and pass ax
to plot
like this answer
- But I do not believe that it is unreasonable to provide some direction when closing as a duplicate. In fact, I believe Trenton's comment which links directly to a pandas specific answer in the canonical fulfills this expectation.
The closure does not make the question any less relevant. This question exists and is still visible, it is still the first Google result for "how to change figure size pandas". This is unlikely to change. If anything this question is now more visible as it is linked to a canonical that has been viewed 4.2 million times. It is currently #3 on the Linked list on the right-hand side of the page. It's now more likely someone looking for a pandas
specific answer on the canonical is going to see "How to increase image size of pandas.DataFrame.plot" before they see the 6th answer on this thread which is pandas
specific.
Can we just make the canonical better instead?
My primary issue with the closure is not whether it is a valid duplicate, because it most certainly is, but rather that, while the canonical has a significant amount of useful information that can be used to answer the question, that information is not as accessible as it could be. How do you change the size of figures drawn with Matplotlib? is in a fair bit of disarray, insofar that it is a 12-year-old question with 23 visible answers, several of which are near identical to each other, many of which are now deprecated/no longer working, and many comments which may be better served edited into the answer bodies for visibility.
Personally, I feel that a community effort to clean up the canonical so that all of the wonderful information already present can be a better working resource for everyone who needs it.
There was also a parenthetical question (which seemed less relevant, so I put it down here):
originally titled "How to increase image size of pandas.DataFrame.plot in jupyter notebook?" as a duplicate to "How do you change the size of figures drawn with Matplotlib?" (why not remove the question there as well?).
"How to increase image size of pandas.DataFrame.plot in jupyter notebook?" is not a question as it lacks an auxiliary verb which is why the question mark was removed, while "How do you change the size of figures drawn with Matplotlib?" has the auxiliary verb do which makes it an interrogative in English so the question mark stayed.
figsize
parameter". Several answers in the linked question state the same thing (stackoverflow.com/a/39770939 stackoverflow.com/a/66638878 stackoverflow.com/a/67180265 etc.). Saying that pandas and matplotlib are different things is a red herring: users of pandas will generally plot data using matplotlib, as was the intent of the asker here.figsize
parameter. No, there is hardly a good reason to reopen this one.figsize
parameter.