- the 1st row are the data points to be plotted,
- the 2nd row are NaN.
How do I speed up plotting of interactable scatter points?
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Daniel Ko
am 23 Aug. 2019
Beantwortet: MOHAMMED BELAL
am 11 Jan. 2020
Hello,
I have the following code:
for ii = 1:length(tempSpikes)
p(ii) = plot(app.Trace, tempSpikes(ii)*app.msConvert, app.xi(app.m.mainCh,tempSpikes(ii)),'k*');
end
set(p, 'ButtonDownFcn', {@pointSelected, app.Trace, p})
set(app.Trace,'UserData', []);
This plot loop plots 100s to 1000s of individual markers that can be clicked on using the callback pointselected.
pointselected is a function that just flags which markers have been selected/deselected.
This plotting process takes a long time (>10 sec), and using figure tools like zoom and pan are very slow also.
Is there a way to speed this up? I tried replacing the plot command with scatter and that was 3 times as slow.
Thanks!
Edit: The plot I have has the xaxis range from 0 to 2e5 while the yaxis ranges from -1000 to 1000 at a aspect ratio of 2:1. So using ginput and distance finding is not ideal as the distance in the xaxis is much greater per pixel causing unexpected points to be chosen if the mouse is slightly off the point.
Also ideally I would like the points to be clickable and unclickable infinitely until I press a button to act on the data. I may be zooming in and out between clicking points and clicking other buttons on the GUI. ginput locks me into point collection mode.
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Stephen23
am 23 Aug. 2019
Bearbeitet: Stephen23
am 23 Aug. 2019
Actually one single plot or line call can generate multiple line objects even if each one line only contains one point, the trick is to provide both X and Y matrices as:
This forces MATLAB to recognise each column as one point. Here is a working example:
X = rand(1,1000);
X(2,:) = NaN;
Y = rand(1,1000);
Y(2,:) = NaN;
H = plot(X,Y,'*');
set(H,'ButtonDownFcn',@(o,e)set(o,'Marker','o'))
Giving this plot (without any obvious delay when plotted):
In this example I have already clicked on four points in the top left-hand corner, where the marker was changed into circles by the callback. The callback works quickly, there is no significant delay after clicking on a point.
Weitere Antworten (4)
darova
am 23 Aug. 2019
Creates handler for each point
x = rand(3,1);
y = rand(3,1);
h = plot([x x*0]',[y y*0]','.r');
Select points
x = rand(10,1);
y = rand(10,1);
plot(x,y,'.r')
g = ginput(3);
D = pdist2([x y],g);
[~,ix] = min(D);
hold on
plot(x(ix),y(ix),'or')
hold off
4 Kommentare
Yair Altman
am 23 Aug. 2019
Try to use the vectorized version of plot to plot all the data points in a single function call rather than a loop, and also try using a simpler marker object (e.g. '+' rather than '*'):
p = plot(app.Trace, tempSpikes*app.msConvert, app.xi(app.m.mainCh,tempSpikes), 'k+');
You can also try to replace the plot function with the lower-level line function, which is faster than either plot or scatter (example).
Alternatively, you could possibly also use the scatter function, which has an undocumented speedup option, which is quite old so might not work in your case, but it's worth a try (link).
Yair Altman
am 23 Aug. 2019
Indeed - you get a single line object with multiple data points, this is the main reason for the speedup. In your callback you can determine which data-point was clicked by checking the click-location's proximity to the data points, something similar to the following:
hAxes = gca;
clickedPos = get(hAxes,'CurrentPoint');
xSize = diff(hAxes.XLim);
ySize = diff(hAxes.YLim);
% compute distance of clicked point from all data points
dist = hAxes.PlotBoxAspectRatio(1)^2 * ((clickedPos(1,1)-p.XData)./xSize).^2 ...
+ hAxes.PlotBoxAspectRatio(2)^2 * ((clickedPos(1,2)-p.YData)./ySize).^2;
% select the data point which is relatively closest to the clicked point
[minDist, dataPointIdx] = min(dist);
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MOHAMMED BELAL
am 11 Jan. 2020
hello how i can plot Sobel,Prewitt,Laplacian Edge Detectors performance and process time for comparison.
Any help ?
thank you.
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