Hi,
I am using the "plot" command to generate certain graph. I save it in ".tiff" format.
However, the image looks blurry when I copy it to MS Word and especially when I take a print-out (may be because of poor resolution).
Is it possible to produce a better "high resolution" image?
Thanks!

2 Kommentare

Anna Nagle
Anna Nagle am 6 Okt. 2017
If I have time, I save as eps and then use Photoshop or Gimp to crop it and save it in another format if needed. If I don't have time, I save as png since I can import that directly into Word and crop it there if necessary.
For improving images in word go to Word Options> Advanced>Image Size and Quality and check "Do not compress image in file" and edit the image dpi from there. It resulted in better image quality for my Word Documents. I have tried it in Word 2016 and later versions.

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Weitere Antworten (6)

Adri van Nieuwkerk
Adri van Nieuwkerk am 5 Jun. 2018

17 Stimmen

I was looking for something similar and found this answer on stackoverflow. Without having to download a separate function to do this try printing the image using print. Adjust the dpi, set at 300, to the resolution you want. The higher the dpi, the larger the file size.
print(gcf,'foo.png','-dpng','-r300'); *// 300 dpi

4 Kommentare

Osama Arafa
Osama Arafa am 2 Aug. 2019
unfortuntely this doesn't worj with the 'djpeg' format option!
Biswabhanu Puhan
Biswabhanu Puhan am 13 Aug. 2021
Thank you very muc.
Opara Benjamin
Opara Benjamin am 14 Aug. 2021
Awesome. Thank you.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 14 Aug. 2021
@Osama Arafa, @Biswabhanu Puhan, and @Osama Arafa, like I said below, "With r2020a and later, the preferred solution is to use exportgraphics() and/or copygraphics()."

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Toshia M
Toshia M am 17 Mär. 2023
Bearbeitet: Toshia M am 17 Mär. 2023

2 Stimmen

There are two new functions in R2020a that solve this problem. Use exportgraphics to export the contents of a figure to a file. You can specify the file format, resolution, and many other options. For example, create a plot and save it as a 300 dpi TIFF file:
plot([0 4 2 6 3])
ax = gca;
exportgraphics(ax,"myplot.tif","Resolution",300)
To copy the the plot to the clipboard instead, use copygraphics. It has the same resolution option as exportgraphics has, and you can paste it right into Word without having to save a separate file.
copygraphics(ax,"Resolution",300)
Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 25 Nov. 2012

1 Stimme

1 Kommentar

manish sharma
manish sharma am 26 Nov. 2012
Wow. Thanks a lot. It worked.
I have a doubt: Although the image produced is good in resolution but it takes a lot of space in MS Word doc (meaning it occupies half of my A4 page). If I resize it in word, it again degrades the image.
Is their any solution to resize the image to smaller scale maintaining the high resolution?
Thanks again for helping me out!

Melden Sie sich an, um zu kommentieren.

Image Analyst
Image Analyst am 13 Aug. 2021

1 Stimme

With r2020a and later, the preferred solution is to use exportgraphics() and/or copygraphics().
Shubhranshu Kumar Tiwary
Shubhranshu Kumar Tiwary am 10 Dez. 2022

1 Stimme

For improving images in word go to Word Options> Advanced>Image Size and Quality and check/uncheck "Do not compress image in file" and edit the image dpi from there. It resulted in better image quality for my Word Documents. I have tried it in Word 2016 and later versions.
Ali Hussein Numan
Ali Hussein Numan am 18 Nov. 2023
Bearbeitet: Ali Hussein Numan am 18 Nov. 2023

1 Stimme

Hi
Why the resolution of figures when using plot command is higher than print to figure of simulink scope. Note that in both cases copy figure option are used. It that can be considered as drawback especially when there are too many data's in simulink which can not easily transfered into workspace for plotting using command option.Why MathWork does not resolve this problem.

Kategorien

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by