This should be a problem with a trivial solution, but still I wasn't able to find one.
Say that I have 2 matlab figures fig1.fig, fig2.fig which I want to load and show in the same plotting window.
What should I do?
I mean, I am pretty sure that I can accomplish the task using some low(er) level graphic command which extracts contents from one image and put them in the second one, nonetheless I cannot believe that there is not any high level function (load fig2 on top of fig1) that does this...Comparing 2 plots (unfortunately already saved) is a very common task, I'd say.
Its not clear if you want to extract data from the figures and compare the data, or if you want to combine the plots from two figures into a single figure.
Here is how you combine two figures into one (if thats what you want to do)..
First load the figures:
fig1 = open('FigureFile1.fig');
fig2 = open('FigureFile2.fig');
Get the axes objects from the figures
ax1 = get(fig1, 'Children');
ax2 = get(fig2, 'Children');
Now copy the hangle graphics objects from ax2 to ax1. The loop isn't neccesary if your figures only have a single axes
for i = 1 : numel(ax2)
ax2Children = get(ax2(i),'Children');
copyobj(ax2Children, ax1(i));
end
Note This example assumes that your figures have the same nubmer of axes and that you want to copy objects from the first axes in the second figure to the first axes on the first figure. Its up to you to figure out the proper indexing if the axes indices aren't lined up.
The answer slayton gave is good. Here's another tip: If you have two plots opened in two separate Matlab figure windows, don't forget you can point-and-click copy the proper plots. Do this by clicking the arrow pointer in the Matlab figure window, and then clicking on the plotted line. Copy the (plotted line, textbox, etc...) object. Then, similarly select the axis in the other Matlab figure window and paste it.
I give this 'silly' solution because it has proven to be useful in in collaboration meetings. Point-and-click copying in front of someone (like your adviser) communicates exactly what curves are being compared, and it prevents you from having to fire up code in front of others.
You can also go to File in the menu, Generate Code, for each plots.
Then copy and paste both in the same mfile, with a "hold on" in between and changing details related to the appearance.
Then run the new m-file.
Related
I have a sequence of finding fits for data (cd to folder, read and fit the data) and subsequently plotting them in a loop.
I observe that few plots are done incorrectly, skipped and added in subsequent plots. A four second pause between each plots seems to solve this issue.
I assume everything is sequential in Matlab, meaning subsequent commands wait until current command is finished. I believe this is not the way happening now. I believe using pause is not the best solution. Can someone provide a fix for this?
A set of subsequent plots without the pause (solid line is a fit of datapoints on the fly):
The same plots with pause of 4 seconds:
subplot, and most other functions that generate graphics objects, provide a handle to the generated graphics object that you can use to address the object explicitly with functions like plot.
If an explicit axis handle is not provided to a plotting function, it will use the current axes, which can very often lead to issues like these. So much so that it's caveated in the documentation:
User interaction can change the current axes or chart. It is better to assign the axes or chart to a variable when you create it instead of relying on gca.
So rather than doing:
axes
plot(1:10)
You should do the following:
ax = axes;
plot(ax, 1:10)
I'm working on a custom progress monitor with some graphs. I've noticed that Matlab's waitbar creates a figure with some special properties so that if you do
plot(rand(100,1));
wb = waitbar(0);
plot(rand(100,1));
the second plot ends up replacing the first plot and not in wb. Is there a property I can set so that when I create my progress monitor and then plot something afterwards, the graph doesn't end up in my figure?
To be clear, I'm trying to have
plot(rand(100,1));
temp = MyProgressBar();
plot(rand(100,1));
create a figure for the first plot, create a different figure in the second line, then plot a new graph in the third line.
To protect your progress bar figure against subsequent plotting operations, I would set the 'HandleVisibility' property of its axes to 'off'. That should prevent it ever becoming the current axes, thus keeping subsequent plotting commands from modifying or adding to it. It's a good practice for stand-alone figures/GUIs in general that you turn off the handle visibility of all objects (figure, uicontrols, etc.) in this way to insulate them against being modified by outside code. This is almost certainly what is done in the code for waitbar.
As an additional aside, it's good practice to target your plots to a given axes by passing the axes handle as the first argument. You also have to make sure that, if you want new plots to be added to existing plots, you use things like the hold command first. Here's how I'd rework your example, assuming you want the two plots to appear on the same axes:
plot(rand(100,1)); % Creates new figure and axes
hAxes = gca; % Get the axes handle
hold on; % Allow subsequent plots to be added
temp = MyProgressBar();
plot(hAxes, rand(100,1)); % Will be added to the first plot axes
i'm writting some code in Matlab editor, which has about 30 figures. So, when I publish it, it opens 30 figures windows, which is annoying. How do I keep it from opening the windows, but keeping the figures in the published window?
I've tried with close(figure), but then the figures don't show on the published window.
Thanks in advance
The simplest thing to do is close all when you are done with the figures. I'm not sure if that can be part of the script or if you have to run it manually after publishing.
At least the plot command has an option to control figure visibility. So you would write something like
h = plot(... , 'Visible', 'off');
I expect these exist for other graphics objects as well, I know it does for the figure associated with anova.
Edit: The above hides the plot but not the figure itself. To hide the figure immediately after it is created, do
set(gcf, 'Visible', 'off')
close function in matlab does what you want. Read the documentation for more details
To close all the plots at the same time, you could use
close all
To close a particular figure named 'fig5' (for example), you could use
fig5 = scatter(x, y);
close(fig5)
If you use just "close", only the recent figure will close.
Perhaps you want hold on which will plot all of the graphs to the same window?
You can Use subplot(m,n,p) to plot multiple graphs on same figure window.
to outline the solution,
first step is to plot using handler. Use figa=figure; where figa is now handler for figure. If you use multiple, like 30 you said, figures, then figa=figure;figb=figure.......figad=figure;
second step; use the figures for whatever you want to plot in;
it has to be done by revoking the figure, for example
figure(figa);hold on;plot(x1,y1)
figure(figb);hold on;plot(x2,y2)....so on for 30 plots
third set is to save all figures
saveas(figa,'1.fig');saveas(figb,'2.fig');.......so on for 30 plots;
fourth step is to close plots from your monitor
close all;
fifth step is to reopen those figures
openfig('1.fig');openfig('2.fig');.............so on for 30 figs
One suggestion: Use excel to create this long list of figure names and better use separate .m files to avoid bulking your matlab main code.
I am writing two small psychoacoustic testing applications in MATLAB. The first one works without problems but the second one doesn't, and I just can't figure out why.
Here is the problem: the axes object is created, but it is empty.
failed_axis http://dl.getdropbox.com/u/98854/help.png
Here is the code that creates this figure and axes:
hFig = figure('dockcontrols','off','menubar','none', ...
'name','choose the better sounding file', ...
'numbertitle','off','position',[0,0,700,500], ...
'resize','off','toolbar','none','units','normalized', ...
'color',[.8,.8,.8]);
progress_idc = axes('position',[.1,.8,.8,.05],'box','on','parent',hFig,...
'xlim',[-.03,1.03],'xtickmode','manual','xtick',[], ...
'xticklabelmode','manual','xticklabel',[], ...
'ylim',[-1,1],'ytickmode','manual','ytick',[], ...
'yticklabelmode','manual','yticklabel',[], ...
'nextplot','add');
And here is the code that plots in this axes (the function is called regularly by a timer):
function replot(varargin) % this is a nested function
cla;
% plot start_indicator
plot([x_start,x_start],[-.7,.7],'k','linewidth',2);
fill([x_start,x_start-.02,x_start-.02],[0,-.7,.7],[0,0,0]);
% plot stop_indicator
plot([x_stop,x_stop],[-.7,.7],'k','linewidth',2);
fill([x_stop,x_stop+.02,x_stop+.02],[0,-.7,.7],[0,0,0]);
% plot play_position
plot([x_play,x_play],[-1,1],'r');
drawnow;
end
This is what it looks like if it works:
proper_axis http://dl.getdropbox.com/u/98854/help2.png
Do you have any idea what is going wrong here?
I ran the code you included above and got the correct output.
If I had to take a wild guess as to what the problem is, I'd guess that you may be creating other axes in your application that you are not listing above, or that you may have other axes not related to the application open at the time the application is running. When you plot your objects in the function replot, you are by default plotting them to the currently active axes. If you have multiple axes open, the plotting may therefore be going on in the wrong set of axes.
One suggestion I would make is to explicitly specify what the parent axes object should be in your calls to PLOT and FILL. If you add the arguments ...,'Parent',progress_idc); to your plotting calls, it will ensure that the correct axes is always used. I make a habit of always specifying the parent axes object instead of assuming that the currently active axes will always be the one I need it to be.
I finally found the (dumb) answer. The title accidentally had the same position as the plot axis. Due to some rendering-details of Matlab, it obscures the whole axis except for the rightmost and bottommost line of pixels, which makes the axis look "empty".
Oh, what a dumb error.
Usually when I plot in MATLAB, it always draws on the same figure. How do I make it draw in a new figure?
I know it is pretty elementary, but I'm not finding it using Google Search.
figure;
plot(something);
or
figure(2);
plot(something);
...
figure(3);
plot(something else);
...
etc.
While doing "figure(1), figure(2),..." will solve the problem in most cases, it will not solve them in all cases. Suppose you have a bunch of MATLAB figures on your desktop and how many you have open varies from time to time before you run your code. Using the answers provided, you will overwrite these figures, which you may not want. The easy workaround is to just use the command "figure" before you plot.
Example: you have five figures on your desktop from a previous script you ran and you use
figure(1);
plot(...)
figure(2);
plot(...)
You just plotted over the figures on your desktop. However the code
figure;
plot(...)
figure;
plot(...)
just created figures 6 and 7 with your desired plots and left your previous plots 1-5 alone.
The other thing to be careful about, is to use the clf (clear figure) command when you are starting a fresh plot. Otherwise you may be plotting on a pre-existing figure (not possible with the figure command by itself, but if you do figure(2) there may already be a figure #2), with more than one axis, or an axis that is placed kinda funny. Use clf to ensure that you're starting from scratch:
figure(N);
clf;
plot(something);
...
As has already been said: figure will create a new figure for your next plots. While calling figure you can also configure it. Example:
figHandle = figure('Name', 'Name of Figure', 'OuterPosition',[1, 1, scrsz(3), scrsz(4)]);
The example sets the name for the window and the outer size of it in relation to the used screen.
Here figHandle is the handle to the resulting figure and can be used later to change appearance and content. Examples:
Dot notation:
figHandle.PaperOrientation = 'portrait';
figHandle.PaperUnits = 'centimeters';
Old Style:
set(figHandle, 'PaperOrientation', 'portrait', 'PaperUnits', 'centimeters');
Using the handle with dot notation or set, options for printing are configured here.
By keeping the handles for the figures with distinc names you can interact with multiple active figures. To set a existing figure as your active, call figure(figHandle). New plots will go there now.
Another common option is when you do want multiple plots in a single window
f = figure;
hold on
plot(x1,y1)
plot(x2,y2)
...
plots multiple data sets on the same (new) figure.
As simple as this-
figure, plot(yourfigure);