Whats shown in red is the default twinx()
behavior. The extra modification in the example applies to whats shown in green.
You can modify both new axes similar as the green
one, but select the left
spine and apply a negative offset. So add/change the example with:
par1.spines["left"].set_position(("axes", -0.4)) # red one
par2.spines["left"].set_position(("axes", -0.2)) # green one
make_patch_spines_invisible(par1)
make_patch_spines_invisible(par2)
par1.spines["left"].set_visible(True)
par1.yaxis.set_label_position('left')
par1.yaxis.set_ticks_position('left')
par2.spines["left"].set_visible(True)
par2.yaxis.set_label_position('left')
par2.yaxis.set_ticks_position('left')
The zorder
from lines is only taken into account within the axes (or so it appears?), since you have separate axes on top of each other, you should modify the zorder
of the axes:
host.set_zorder(1)
par1.set_zorder(2)
par2.set_zorder(3)
Note that the host
has a white background, placing it on top will hide the other lines unless you set the background to be transparent.
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