scatterhistogram
Create scatter plot with histograms
Syntax
Description
scatterhistogram(___,
specifies additional options for the scatter plot with marginal histograms using one or
more name-value pair arguments. Specify the options after all other input arguments. For a
list of properties, see ScatterHistogramChart Properties.Name,Value
)
scatterhistogram(
creates the scatter plot with marginal histograms in the figure, panel, or tab specified
by parent
,___)parent
.
returns the s
= scatterhistogram(___)ScatterHistogramChart
object. Use s
to
modify the object after you create it. For a list of properties, see ScatterHistogramChart Properties.
Examples
Scatter Histogram Chart with Tabular Data
Create a scatter plot with marginal histograms from a table of data for medical patients.
Load the patients
data set and create a table from a subset of the variables loaded into the workspace. Then, create a scatter histogram chart comparing the Height
values to the Weight
values.
load patients tbl = table(LastName,Age,Gender,Height,Weight); s = scatterhistogram(tbl,'Height','Weight');
Specify Table Variable for Grouping Data
Using the patients
data set, create a scatter plot with marginal histograms and specify the table variable to use for grouping the data.
Load the patients
data set and create a scatter histogram chart from the data. Compare the patients' Systolic
and Diastolic
values. Group the data according to the patients' smoker status by setting the 'GroupVariable'
name-value pair argument to 'Smoker'
.
load patients tbl = table(LastName,Diastolic,Systolic,Smoker); s = scatterhistogram(tbl,'Diastolic','Systolic','GroupVariable','Smoker');
Visualize Categorical and Numeric Data
Use a scatter plot with marginal histograms to visualize categorical and numeric medical data.
Load the patients
data set, and convert the Smoker
data to a categorical array. Then, create a scatter histogram chart that compares patients' Age
values to their smoker status. The resulting scatter plot contains overlapping data points. However, the y-axis marginal histogram indicates that there are far more nonsmokers than smokers in the data set.
load patients Smoker = categorical(Smoker); s = scatterhistogram(Age,Smoker); xlabel('Age') ylabel('Smoker')
Specify Group Data and Customize Chart Properties
Create a scatter plot with marginal histograms using arrays of shoe data. Group the data according to shoe color, and customize properties of the scatter histogram chart.
Create arrays of data. Then, create a scatter histogram chart to visualize the data. Use custom labels along the x-axis and y-axis to specify the variable names of the first two input arguments. You can specify the title, axis labels, and legend title by setting properties of the ScatterHistogramChart
object.
xvalues = [7 6 5 6.5 9 7.5 8.5 7.5 10 8]; yvalues = categorical({'onsale','regular','onsale','onsale', ... 'regular','regular','onsale','onsale','regular','regular'}); grpvalues = {'Red','Black','Blue','Red','Black','Blue','Red', ... 'Red','Blue','Black'}; s = scatterhistogram(xvalues,yvalues,'GroupData',grpvalues); s.Title = 'Shoe Sales'; s.XLabel = 'Shoe Size'; s.YLabel = 'Price'; s.LegendTitle = 'Shoe Color';
Change the colors in the scatter histogram chart to match the group labels. Change the histogram bin widths to be the same for all groups.
s.Color = {'Red','Black','Blue'}; s.BinWidths = 1;
Specify Scatter Histogram Chart Appearance
Create a scatter plot with marginal histograms. Specify the number of bins and line widths of the histograms, the location of the scatter plot, and the legend visibility.
Load the patients
data set and create a scatter histogram chart from the data. Compare the patients' Diastolic
and Systolic
values, and group the data according to the patients' SelfAssessedHealthStatus
values. Adjust the histograms by specifying the NumBins
and LineWidth
options. Place the scatter plot in the 'NorthEast'
location of the figure by using the ScatterPlotLocation
option. Ensure the legend is visible by specifying the LegendVisible
option as 'on'
.
load patients tbl = table(LastName,Diastolic,Systolic,SelfAssessedHealthStatus); s = scatterhistogram(tbl,'Diastolic','Systolic','GroupVariable','SelfAssessedHealthStatus', ... 'NumBins',4,'LineWidth',1.5,'ScatterPlotLocation','NorthEast','LegendVisible','on');
Group Data Using Two Variables
Create a scatter plot with marginal histograms. Group the data by using a combination of two different variables.
Load the patients
data set. Combine the Smoker
and Gender
data to create a new variable. Create a scatter histogram chart that compares the Diastolic
and Systolic
values of the patients. Use the new variable SmokerGender
to group the data in the scatter histogram chart.
load patients [idx,genderStatus,smokerStatus] = findgroups(string(Gender),string(Smoker)); SmokerGender = strcat(genderStatus(idx),"-",smokerStatus(idx)); s = scatterhistogram(Diastolic,Systolic,'GroupData',SmokerGender,'LegendVisible','on'); xlabel('Diastolic') ylabel('Systolic')
Specify Kernel Density Plots
Create a scatter plot with marginal kernel density histograms.
Load the patients
data set. Create a table from the Diastolic
, Systolic
, and Smoker
variables.
load patients.mat
tbl = table(Diastolic,Systolic,Smoker);
Create a scatter histogram chart that compares the Diastolic
and Systolic
pressure values of the patients. Use patient smoking status to group the data and display marginal kernel density plots. The plot shows that smokers have higher average systolic and diastolic blood pressure compared to nonsmokers.
s = scatterhistogram(tbl,"Diastolic","Systolic", ... GroupVariable="Smoker",HistogramDisplayStyle="smooth", ... LineStyle="-");
Input Arguments
tbl
— Source table
table
Source table, specified as a table.
You can create a table from workspace variables using the table
function, or you can import data as a table using the readtable
function.
The SourceTable
property of the ScatterHistogramChart
object stores the source
table.
xvar
— Table variable for x-axis
character vector | string scalar | numeric scalar | logical vector
Table variable for x-axis, specified in one of these forms:
Character vector or string scalar — Indicating one of the variable names. For example,
scatterhistogram(tbl,'Acceleration','Horsepower')
selects the variable named'Acceleration'
for the x-axis.Numeric scalar — Indicating the table variable index. For example,
scatterhistogram(tbl,5,3)
selects the fifth variable in the table for the x-axis.Logical vector — Containing one
true
element.
The values associated with your table variable must be of a numeric type or
categorical
.
The XVariable
property of the ScatterHistogramChart
object stores the selected
variable name.
yvar
— Table variable for y-axis
character vector | string scalar | numeric scalar | logical vector
Table variable for y-axis, specified in one of these forms:
Character vector or string scalar — Indicating one of the variable names. For example,
scatterhistogram(tbl,'Acceleration','Horsepower')
selects the variable named'Horsepower'
for the y-axis.Numeric scalar — Indicating the table variable index. For example,
scatterhistogram(tbl,5,3)
selects the third variable in the table for the y-axis.Logical vector — Containing one
true
element.
The values associated with your table variable must be of a numeric type or
categorical
.
The YVariable
property of the ScatterHistogramChart
object stores the selected
variable name.
grpvar
— Table variable for grouping data
character vector | string scalar | numeric scalar | logical vector
Table variable for grouping data, specified in one of these forms:
Character vector or string scalar — Indicating one of the variable names
Numeric scalar — Indicating the table variable index
Logical vector — Containing one
true
element
The values associated with your table variable must form a numeric vector, logical vector, categorical array, string array, or cell array of character vectors.
grpvar
splits the data in xvar
and
yvar
into unique groups. Each group has a default color and an
independent histogram in each axis. In the legend, scatterhistogram
displays the group names in order of their first appearance in
GroupData
.
Example: 'Model_Year'
Example: 2
xvalues
— Values appearing along x-axis
numeric vector | categorical array
Values appearing along the x-axis, specified as a numeric vector or categorical array.
The XData
property of the
ScatterHistogramChart
object stores the
xvalues
data.
Example: [0.5 4.3 2.4 5.6 3.4]
Example: categorical({'small','medium','small','large','medium','small'})
yvalues
— Values appearing along y-axis
numeric vector | categorical array
Values appearing along the y-axis, specified as a numeric vector or categorical array.
The YData
property of the
ScatterHistogramChart
object stores the
yvalues
data.
Example: [0.5 4.3 2.4 5.6 3.4]
Example: categorical({'small','medium','small','large','medium','small'})
grpvalues
— Group values
numeric vector | logical vector | categorical array | string array | cell array of character vectors
Group values for the scatter plot and the corresponding marginal histograms, specified as a numeric vector, logical vector, categorical array, string array, or cell array of character vectors.
grpvalues
splits the data in xvalues
and
yvalues
into unique groups. Each group has a default color and an
independent histogram in each axis. In the legend, scatterhistogram
displays the group names in order of their first appearance in
GroupData
.
Example: [1 2 1 3 2 1 3]
Example: categorical({'blue','green','green','blue','green'})
parent
— Parent container
Figure
object | Panel
object | Tab
object | TiledChartLayout
object | GridLayout
object
Parent container, specified as a Figure
, Panel
,
Tab
, TiledChartLayout
, or GridLayout
object.
Name-Value Arguments
Specify optional pairs of arguments as
Name1=Value1,...,NameN=ValueN
, where Name
is
the argument name and Value
is the corresponding value.
Name-value arguments must appear after other arguments, but the order of the
pairs does not matter.
Before R2021a, use commas to separate each name and value, and enclose
Name
in quotes.
Example: scatterhistogram(tbl,xvar,yvar,'GroupVariable',grpvar,'HistogramDisplayStyle','stairs')
specifies grpvar
as the grouping variable and displays stairstep plots
next to the scatter plot.
Note
The properties listed here are only a subset. For a complete list, see ScatterHistogramChart Properties.
Title
— Chart title
''
(default) | character vector | string array | cell array of character vectors | categorical array
Chart title, specified as a character vector, string array, cell array of character vectors, or categorical array. The default chart has no title.
To create a multiline title, specify a string array or cell array of character vectors. Each element in the array corresponds to a line of text.
If you specify the title as a categorical array, MATLAB® uses the values in the array, not the categories.
Example: s = scatterhistogram(__,'Title','My Title
Text')
Example: s.Title = 'My Title Text'
Example: s.Title = {'My','Title'}
NumBins
— Number of histogram bins
positive integer scalar | positive integer column vector | positive integer matrix
Number of histogram bins, specified as a positive integer scalar, 2-by-1
positive integer vector, or 2-by-n positive integer
matrix, where n is the number of groups in
GroupData
.
Specified Value | Description |
---|---|
scalar | The value is the number of bins for the x and y histograms. |
2-by-1 vector | The first value is the number of bins for the x data, and the second value is the number of bins for the y data. |
2-by-n matrix | The (1,j) value is the
number of bins for the histogram of the
x data that is in the
j th group. Similarly, the
(2,j) value is the number of
bins for the histogram of the y
data that is in the j th
group. |
scatterhistogram
uses the
'BinMethod','auto'
name-value pair argument of
histogram
to determine
the default NumBins
and BinWidths
values.
You cannot change NumBins
for categorical data.
Example: s =
scatterhistogram(__,'NumBins',20)
Example: s.NumBins = [10; 15]
HistogramDisplayStyle
— Histogram display style
'stairs'
(default) | 'bar'
| 'smooth'
Histogram display style, specified as one of these options.
Display Style | Description |
---|---|
'stairs' | Display a stairstep plot that shows the outline of the histogram without filling the bars. |
'bar' | Display a histogram bar plot. |
'smooth' | Display a smooth plot generated through kernel density estimates. |
scatterhistogram
uses the 'pdf'
type of
normalization to generate the histograms. For more information, see the
'Normalization'
name-value pair argument of histogram
.
Example: s =
scatterhistogram(__,'HistogramDisplayStyle','smooth')
Example: s.HistogramDisplayStyle = 'bar'
LineWidth
— Histogram line width
positive scalar | positive vector
Histogram line width, specified as a positive scalar or positive vector in points. By
default, scatterhistogram
assigns a line width of
0.5
to each histogram plot line.
When the total number of groups exceeds the number of specified line widths,
scatterhistogram
cycles through the specified line
widths.
Example: s = scatterhistogram(__,'LineWidth',0.75)
Example: s.LineWidth = [0.5 0.75 0.5]
MarkerStyle
— Marker symbol
character vector | string array | cell array of character vectors
Marker symbol for each scatter plot group, specified in one of these forms:
Character vector designating a marker style
String array or cell array of character vectors designating one or more marker styles
Choose among these marker options.
Marker | Description | Resulting Marker |
---|---|---|
"o" | Circle |
|
"+" | Plus sign |
|
"*" | Asterisk |
|
"." | Point |
|
"x" | Cross |
|
"_" | Horizontal line |
|
"|" | Vertical line |
|
"square" | Square |
|
"diamond" | Diamond |
|
"^" | Upward-pointing triangle |
|
"v" | Downward-pointing triangle |
|
">" | Right-pointing triangle |
|
"<" | Left-pointing triangle |
|
"pentagram" | Pentagram |
|
"hexagram" | Hexagram |
|
"none" | No markers | Not applicable |
By default, scatterhistogram
assigns the marker symbol
'o'
to each group in the scatter plot. When the total number of
groups exceeds the number of specified symbols, scatterhistogram
cycles through the specified symbols.
Example: s = scatterhistogram(__,'MarkerStyle','x')
Example: s.MarkerStyle = {'x','o'}
ScatterPlotLocation
— Location of scatter plot
'SouthWest'
(default) | 'SouthEast'
| 'NorthEast'
| 'NorthWest'
Location of the scatter plot, specified as one of these options.
Location | Description |
---|---|
'SouthWest' | Plot the histograms above and to the right of the scatter plot. |
'SouthEast' | Plot the histograms above and to the left of the scatter plot. |
'NorthEast' | Plot the histograms below and to the left of the scatter plot. |
'NorthWest' | Plot the histograms below and to the right of the scatter plot. |
Example: s =
scatterhistogram(__,'ScatterPlotLocation','NorthEast')
Example: s.ScatterPlotLocation = 'SouthEast'
LegendVisible
— State of legend visibility
'on'
| 'off'
State of legend visibility, specified as 'on'
or 'off'
. Set LegendVisible
to 'on'
to display the legend or 'off'
to hide the legend.
If GroupData
is empty ([]
) or contains a single group,
then scatterhistogram
does not display a legend. Otherwise,
scatterhistogram
displays a legend by default, unless the
legend overlaps the scatter plot or marginal histograms.
In the legend, scatterhistogram
displays the group names in order
of their first appearance in GroupData
.
Example: s = scatterhistogram(__,'LegendVisible','on')
Example: s.LegendVisible = 'off'
Output Arguments
s
— Scatter plot with histograms
ScatterHistogramChart
object
ScatterHistogramChart
object, which is a standalone visualization. Use s
to modify the object
after you create it. For a list of properties, see ScatterHistogramChart Properties.
More About
Standalone Visualization
A standalone visualization is a chart designed for a special purpose that
works independently from other charts. Unlike other charts such as plot
and surf
, a standalone visualization has a preconfigured axes object
built into it, and some customizations are not available. A standalone visualization also
has these characteristics:
It cannot be combined with other graphics elements, such as lines, patches, or surfaces. Thus, the
hold
command is not supported.The
gca
function can return the chart object as the current axes.You can pass the chart object to many MATLAB functions that accept an axes object as an input argument. For example, you can pass the chart object to the
title
function.
Tips
To interactively explore the data in your
ScatterHistogramChart
object, use these options. Some of these options are not available in the Live Editor.Zoom/pan — Use the scroll wheel or the + and - buttons to zoom. Click and drag the scatter plot to pan.
scatterhistogram
updates the marginal histograms based on the data within the current scatter plot limits.Data tips — Hover over the scatter plot or marginal histograms to display a data tip.
If you create a scatter plot with marginal histograms from a table, then you can customize data tips for the scatter plot.
To add or remove a row from the data tip, right-click anywhere on the scatter plot and point to Modify Data Tips. Then, select or deselect a variable.
To add or remove multiple rows, right-click on the plot, point to Modify Data Tips, and select More. Then, add variables by clicking >> or remove them by clicking <<.
Version History
Introduced in R2018bR2024a: Kernel density estimation no longer requires Statistics Toolbox
Starting in R2024a, you can specify the HistogramDisplayStyle
name-value argument as "smooth"
without a Statistics and Machine Learning Toolbox™ license.
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