How to use rotatable 3D mesh graphs in presentation
16 Ansichten (letzte 30 Tage)
Ältere Kommentare anzeigen
Hello, I have recently finished a Matlab project and have to make a presentation, which needs to be memorable (believe me, that is of enormous importance). As all the graphs are of ‘mesh’ type I actually would like to show them from different angles during the presentation. Thus, I look for software that will allow me to rotate these 3D graphs just as it is possible in Matlab. Do you know of any presentation program that does so or could you suggest any other way to achieve it? Truly appreciate your quick responses.
0 Kommentare
Antworten (5)
Sean de Wolski
am 8 Apr. 2011
I would use a while loop + pause or a timer function to call view with an increasing angular increment.
doc timer
doc pause
doc view
doc persistent %in case you need to remember the previous angle.
3 Kommentare
Sean de Wolski
am 11 Apr. 2011
Well you can create a movie from your figure series! Then you could save it as an AVI and show it in Powerpoint, Keynote etc.
Teja Muppirala
am 12 Apr. 2011
Option 1: Start MATLAB up during your presentation. (If you could do this, you probably wouldn't be asking this question)
Option 2: Use MATLAB Compiler. You would write a simple program to open a figure, and compile it to an executable.
3 Kommentare
Jiro Doke
am 12 Apr. 2011
MATLAB Compiler (http://www.mathworks.com/products/compiler/) allows you to create standalone applications. So it could be set up as a separate figure window that would pop up. It won't be "embedded" inside PowerPoint.
Is this going to be on your computer, or would you be taking the presentation on a USB drive or something and showing it on someone else's computer? To run a program created by MATLAB Compiler, you need to first install a runtime (called MATLAB Compiler Runtime). This is available with MATLAB Compiler product, but it would need to be installed on your presentation machine prior to running your presentation.
Vittorio Casella
am 13 Apr. 2011
Hi, I think you need something like this.
But, beware, I'm not an expert of this.
Greetings Vittorio Casella
Yair Altman
am 29 Apr. 2011
Sven Körner described a way to do this using a combination of STL-export, Java and HTML: http://undocumentedmatlab.com/blog/jfreechart-graphs-and-gauges/#comment-30601
0 Kommentare
Siehe auch
Kategorien
Mehr zu Introduction to Installation and Licensing finden Sie in Help Center und File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!