Attempting to plot one line with multiple colors
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Jbo
am 17 Nov. 2016
Kommentiert: Lukas Klar
am 24 Apr. 2025
Ok, I have looked high and low, and for the life of me I cannot find the answer. If this has already been answered please forgive me.
What I am attempting to do is plot a line with a vector of color data. I.E. plot(x, y, colorVector).
There appears to be a way to trick Mesh or such, but that's computationally slow. I've used a loop method, that plots 2 points of x and y at a time, but that eats up a lot of CPU in overhead to plot (or, I believe it does. Either way it's a lot of computational time). You can use the set call, but because of how the plotting engine works, that results in having to either wait, or drawnow which uses a lot of CPU cycles.
Is there any way that I can do like a plot(x, y, 'color', colorData) ?
Thanks!
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Akzeptierte Antwort
Walter Roberson
am 17 Nov. 2016
No. Line objects, and Chart Line objects, and world Primitive Chart Line Objects, all have the restriction that any one line object can only be a single color.
2 Kommentare
Walter Roberson
am 18 Nov. 2016
Only one 'color' option will be paid attention to for plot() . You can use multiple linespec, but linespec are restricted to the color names, 'b' (blue), 'c' (cyan), 'g' (green), 'k' (black), 'm' (magenta), 'r' (red), 'w' (white) . If your colorVector is a character vector containing those codes then you could
for i = 1 : length(X)-1
plotArgs{i}={X(i:i+1), Y(i:i+1), colorVector(i)};
end
plot(plotArgs{:})
This would be equivalent to
for i = 1 : length(X) - 1
line('XData', X(i:i+1), 'YData', Y(i:i+1), 'Color', colorVector(i));
end
as plot() loops calling line(). But the line() version can be extended,
for i = 1 : length(X) - 1
line('XData', X(i:i+1), 'YData', Y(i:i+1), 'Color', colorVector(i, :));
end
and now colorVector can be a RGB table, one color triple per row.
Weitere Antworten (1)
Lukas Klar
am 9 Aug. 2023
Bearbeitet: Lukas Klar
am 23 Apr. 2025
I struggled with this one 7 years later. Here is my solution: Specify the color in a colormap and use patch with EdgeColor='flat' to plot.
x = 0:10;
y = x.^2;
% specify colors
mycolormap = [1 0 0;...
0 1 0;...
0 0 1];
% assign colors to points, make sure to use all specified colors
c = [1 2 3 2 3 1 1 3 2 1 3];
% add a NaN to the end to avoid closing of the patch
x = [x NaN];
y = [y NaN];
c = [c NaN];
% plot as patch with EdgeColor='flat'
figure
patch(x, y, c, EdgeColor='flat', Marker='.', LineWidth=2, MarkerSize=20)
colormap(mycolormap)
I my case the best solution was to make smooth transition with EdgeColor='interp'
% use EdgeColor='interp' and a smooth colormap
figure
patch(x, y, c, EdgeColor='interp', Marker='.', LineWidth=2, MarkerSize=20)
colormap('cool')
I found no perfect solution to add a legend, I couldn't find a way to alter the line in the legend. But you can paint over it. Disadvantage: it does not correctly scale if the figure is rescaled.
% store figure handle to scale at least with the initial figure size
fh = figure;
% create an empty line because the patch legend is kind of bulky
plot(nan)
hold on
% plot the real multi color line
patch(x, y, c, EdgeColor='interp', Marker='.', LineWidth=2, MarkerSize=20)
colormap('cool')
% add the legend and store its handle
lh = legend('multicolorline', Location='northwest');
% create an invisible axis on the complete figure
annotationAxes = axes(Position=[0, 0, 1, 1], Visible='off', HitTest='off');
annotationAxes.XLim = [0 1];
annotationAxes.YLim = [0 1];
% find the location of the legend line
xpatch = [0.01, 42 / fh.Position(3)] + lh.Position(1); % why 42? Because it's the correct answer
ypatch = [0, 0] + lh.Position(2) + lh.Position(4) / 2; % vertical center of the legend
% paint a multicolor line over the single color line of the legend
patch(xpatch, ypatch, [1 2], EdgeColor='interp', Marker='.', LineWidth=2, MarkerSize=20)
@Alan Hoskins I hope that does the trick for you. If you have multiple lines in the legend you have to tinker with the ypatch variable
2 Kommentare
Alan Hoskins
am 17 Apr. 2025
Nice solution. Now is there away to make a gradient line in the legend?
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