Plotting Matrix points
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Hello everyone!
I have a 2 by 10 matrix:
B =
28.7636 27.7497
26.7351 25.7208
23.6934 22.6793
20.6512 19.6371
18.6241 17.6092
15.5820 14.5679
13.5537 11.5246
10.5116 9.4974
8.4835 6.4551
5.4414 4.4273
I am trying to figure out how to plot these matrix points in pairs:
28.7636 27.7497 % start of first point and end of first point
26.7351 25.7208 % start of 2nd point and end of 2nd point
And so on...
I haven't been able to determine the correct plot syntax to accomplish this. Matlab has so many commands when it comes to plotting I dont even know where to start!
Thank in advance!
5 Kommentare
Fangjun Jiang
am 20 Jul. 2011
Your figure is almost done with the Horizontal lines solution I provided.
Akzeptierte Antwort
Walter Roberson
am 19 Jul. 2011
If you do not want to loop over line(B(K,1),B(K,2)) then you can use this trick:
X = reshape(B(:,1),2,[]);
X(3,:) = nan;
X = X(:);
Y = reshape(B(:,2),2,[]);
Y(3,:) = nan;
Y = Y(:);
plot(X,Y)
This introduces a nan after every second point, and then zips everything back together. nan are treated as indicating a break in plotting.
Jan, I think it was, pointed out to me that inf could be used in place of nan for this purpose, and that most modern cpus handle inf more quickly than they handle nan.
5 Kommentare
Weitere Antworten (4)
Fangjun Jiang
am 19 Jul. 2011
Not enough information. Your B is 10x2 matrix, not 2x10. Maybe:
a=[1:10;1:10];
line(a,B');
Horizontal lines:
line(B',zeros(2,10));
hold on;
plot(B,zeros(10,2),'o');
Vertical lines:
line(zeros(2,10),B');
hold on;
plot(zeros(10,2),B,'o');
7 Kommentare
Fangjun Jiang
am 20 Jul. 2011
Should the start time be less than the stop time? Maybe it doesn't matter. Should horizontal lines be more suitable than vertical lines since they indicate time lapse? Anyway, see edit in my answer for both options.
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