How to get the exact position of a plotted point?

Hi,
I've plotted a graph and additionally marked a specific point. A 'ButtonDownFcn' is assigned to the point, to enable user interaction.
By clicking onto the point I would like to receive its exact x and y coordinates.
My approach:
function getPlotPointCoord()
clc;
figure(1);
x = -2*pi:0.05:+2*pi;
subplot(1,2,1);
hold on;
plot(x, sin(x));
% plot point at (x=0, y=0)
plot(0, sin(0), 'bx', 'ButtonDownFcn', @getPoint);
function getPoint(varargin)
currentPoint = get(gca, 'CurrentPoint');
fprintf('Hit Point! Coordinates: %f, %f \n', ...
currentPoint(1), currentPoint(3));
end
end
The call _get(gca, 'CurrentPoint') for instance returns the following values:
Hit Point! Coordinates: 0.000000, 0.002924
Hit Point! Coordinates: 0.000000, 0.002924
Hit Point! Coordinates: 0.000000, 0.002924
Hit Point! Coordinates: -0.106952, -0.008772
Hit Point! Coordinates: 0.106952, -0.014620
Is there a way to receive the true values (x=0, y=0) of the 'button' instead of the current (most likely) mouse-coordinates?
Thank you!

 Akzeptierte Antwort

Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang am 17 Aug. 2011

2 Stimmen

What do you mean? You want the x/y value of the data points? You can get that from menu Tools->Data Cursor and then click along the curve.

8 Kommentare

BF83
BF83 am 17 Aug. 2011
Thanks for your answer.
I don't want to use the data cursor in this special case. I wonder if there is a easy way to obtain these coordinates just by using the 'ButtonDownFcn' assigned to the specific point.
Okay, then I guess you could write a few more lines to compare the current point to see which data point is the closest.
Wait a minute! Can't you do this?!
plot(0, sin(0), 'bx', 'ButtonDownFcn', 'disp([0,sin(0)])');
BF83
BF83 am 17 Aug. 2011
Ok! Perhaps I can pass the coordinates to a function, for instance to @getPoint?
Yes. Like:
plot(0, sin(0), 'bx', 'ButtonDownFcn', 'getPoint(0,sin(0))')
BF83
BF83 am 17 Aug. 2011
Okay, great. I'm sure that it will solve my problem. I'm gonna test it tomorrow.
Thank you for coming up with this easy and elegant solution.
Trishank Sharma
Trishank Sharma am 8 Jul. 2018
Bearbeitet: Trishank Sharma am 8 Jul. 2018
Hi what if I have a set of 60 points (n=60), where x and y are real and imaginary parts of a complex number Z. Can I know the point number (the 'n'th point) beside the coordinates or do I have to do it manually?
maziar
maziar am 15 Mai 2021
Thanks

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Weitere Antworten (3)

BF83
BF83 am 18 Aug. 2011

0 Stimmen

A working example for completion:
function getPlotPointCoord()
clc;
figure(1);
x = -2*pi:0.05:+2*pi;
subplot(1,2,1);
hold on;
plot(x, sin(x));
plot(0, sin(0), 'bx', 'ButtonDownFcn', {@getPoint, 0, sin(0)});
function getPoint(src, eventdata, x, y)
currentPoint = get(gca, 'CurrentPoint');
fprintf('Hit Point! Mouse Coordinates: %f, %f \n', ...
currentPoint(1), currentPoint(3));
fprintf('Hit Point! Real Coordinates: %f, %f \n', x, y);
end
end
Tarami Readus
Tarami Readus am 23 Jan. 2019

0 Stimmen

Where in the code does he add the marker, and to what specific point? I would like to know how to do that
Adam Albayati
Adam Albayati am 8 Mai 2019

0 Stimmen

function getPlotPointCoord()
clc;
figure(1);
x = -2*pi:0.05:+2*pi;
subplot(1,2,1);
hold on;
plot(x, sin(x));
% plot point at (x=0, y=0)
plot(0, sin(0), 'bx', 'ButtonDownFcn', @getPoint);
function getPoint(varargin)
currentPoint = get(gca, 'CurrentPoint');
fprintf('Hit Point! Coordinates: %f, %f \n', ...
currentPoint(1), currentPoint(3));
end
end

Gefragt:

am 17 Aug. 2011

Kommentiert:

am 15 Mai 2021

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