how to do a contour plot using function handle?
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U B
am 22 Jul. 2024
Kommentiert: Star Strider
am 23 Jul. 2024
By creating meshgrid, I can do contour plot.
T=linspace(0,2*pi,100);
d = linspace(0,2*pi,100) ;
[X,Y] = meshgrid(T,d);
M =(sin(Y).*sin(2.*X)) ;
contourf(X*(180/pi),Y*(180/pi),M)
But when I try to do it as
M = @(T,d)(sin(d).*sin(2.*T)) ;
fcontour(M)
I'm not able to get any graph. If anybody can explain to me how this works. Appriciate your help.
3 Kommentare
Aquatris
am 22 Jul. 2024
I tried in 2019b, and just giving function to the fcontour function also works. No need to provide arguments to the M. Interesting behaviour.
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Star Strider
am 22 Jul. 2024
Provide arguments to ‘M’ and it works —
T=linspace(0,2*pi,100);
d = linspace(0,2*pi,100) ;
[X,Y] = meshgrid(T,d);
M = @(T,d)(sin(d).*sin(2.*T)) ;
figure
contourf(M(X,Y))
.
4 Kommentare
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Muskan
am 22 Jul. 2024
Hi,
As per my understanding the issue occurs because because "fcontour" needs a function handle that takes two individual scalar inputs, not a single vector. So, the correct approach is to define the function handle in such a way that it matches fcontour's expected input.
You can follow the following steps to properly define and use the function handle with "fcontour":
- Define the function handle to take two separate inputs.
- Use "fcontour" with the correct function handle and specify the range for "T" and "d".
Here is a code snippet on how you can achieve the same:
% Define the function handle to take two separate inputs
M = @(T, d) sin(d).*sin(2.*T);
% Plot using fcontour
fcontour(M, [0 2*pi 0 2*pi])
xlabel('T (radians)')
ylabel('d (radians)')
title('Contour plot of sin(d) * sin(2*T)')
Kindly refer to the following documentation of "fcontour" for more information: https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/fcontour.html
2 Kommentare
Stephen23
am 22 Jul. 2024
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 22 Jul. 2024
"As per my understanding the issue occurs because because "fcontour" needs a function handle that takes two individual scalar inputs, not a single vector. "
The FCONTOUR documentation actually states that "The function must accept two matrix input arguments and return a matrix output argument of the same size." (bold added)
The OP's code does not accept "a single vector", it accepts two matrices.
"So, the correct approach is to define the function handle in such a way that it matches fcontour's expected input."
It already does.
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