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Axes Properties

Axes appearance and behavior

Axes properties control the appearance and behavior of an Axes object. By changing property values, you can modify certain aspects of the axes. Use dot notation to query and set properties.

ax = gca;
c = ax.Color;
ax.Color = 'blue';

Font

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Font name, specified as a supported font name or "FixedWidth". To display and print text properly, you must choose a font that your system supports. The default font depends on your operating system and locale.

To use a fixed-width font that looks good in any locale, use "FixedWidth". The fixed-width font relies on the root FixedWidthFontName property. Setting the root FixedWidthFontName property causes an immediate update of the display to use the new font.

Character thickness, specified as 'normal' or 'bold'.

MATLAB® uses the FontWeight property to select a font from those available on your system. Not all fonts have a bold weight. Therefore, specifying a bold font weight can still result in the normal font weight.

Font size, specified as a scalar numeric value. The font size affects the title, axis labels, and tick labels. It also affects any legends or colorbars associated with the axes. The default font size depends on the specific operating system and locale. By default, the font size is measured in points. To change the units, set the FontUnits property.

MATLAB automatically scales some of the text to a percentage of the axes font size.

  • Titles and axis labels — 110% of the axes font size by default. To control the scaling, use the TitleFontSizeMultiplier and LabelFontSizeMultiplier properties.

  • Legends and colorbars — 90% of the axes font size by default. To specify a different font size, set the FontSize property for the Legend or Colorbar object instead.

Example: ax.FontSize = 12

Selection mode for the font size, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Font size specified by MATLAB. If you resize the axes to be smaller than the default size, the font size might scale down to improve readability and layout.

  • 'manual' — Font size specified manually. Do not scale the font size as the axes size changes. To specify the font size, set the FontSize property.

Character slant, specified as 'normal' or 'italic'.

Not all fonts have both font styles. Therefore, the italic font might look the same as the normal font.

Scale factor for the label font size, specified as a numeric value greater than 0. The scale factor is applied to the value of the FontSize property to determine the font size for the x-axis, y-axis, and z-axis labels.

Example: ax.LabelFontSizeMultiplier = 1.5

Scale factor for the title font size, specified as a numeric value greater than 0. The scale factor is applied to the value of the FontSize property to determine the font size for the title.

Title character thickness, specified as one of these values:

  • 'normal' — Default weight as defined by the particular font

  • 'bold' — Thicker characters than normal

Subtitle character thickness, specified as one of these values:

  • 'normal' — Default weight as defined by the particular font

  • 'bold' — Thicker characters than normal

Font size units, specified as one of these values.

UnitsDescription
'points'Points. One point equals 1/72 inch.
'inches'Inches.
'centimeters'Centimeters.
'normalized' Interpret font size as a fraction of the axes height. If you resize the axes, the font size modifies accordingly. For example, if the FontSize is 0.1 in normalized units, then the text is 1/10 of the height value stored in the axes Position property.
'pixels'

Pixels.

Starting in R2015b, distances in pixels are independent of your system resolution on Windows® and Macintosh systems.

  • On Windows systems, a pixel is 1/96th of an inch.

  • On Macintosh systems, a pixel is 1/72nd of an inch.

  • On Linux® systems, the size of a pixel is determined by your system resolution.

To set both the font size and the font units in a single function call, you first must set the FontUnits property so that the Axes object correctly interprets the specified font size.

Font smoothing, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

ValueDescriptionResult
'on'

Use antialiasing to make text appear smoother on the screen.

Example: ax.FontSmoothing = 'on'

The letter S with font smoothing applied. The edges are smooth.

'off'

Do not use antialiasing. Use this setting if the text seems blurry.

Example: ax.FontSmoothing = 'off'

The letter S without font smoothing. The edges are jagged.

Note

The FontSmoothing property will have no effect in a future release. Font smoothing will be enabled regardless of the value of the property.

Ticks

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Tick values, specified as a vector of increasing values. If you do not want tick marks along the axis, then specify an empty vector []. The tick values are the locations along the axis where the tick marks appear. The tick labels are the labels that you see next to each tick mark. Use the XTickLabels, YTickLabels, and ZTickLabels properties to specify the associated labels.

Example: ax.XTick = [2 4 6 8 10]

Example: ax.YTick = 0:10:100

Alternatively, use the xticks, yticks, and zticks functions to specify the tick values. For an example, see Specify Axis Tick Values and Labels.

Data Types: single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64 | categorical | datetime | duration

Selection mode for the tick values, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select the tick values based on the range of data for the axis.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the tick values. To specify the values, set the XTick, YTick, or ZTick property.

Example: ax.XTickMode = 'auto'

Tick labels, specified as a cell array of character vectors, string array, or categorical array. If you do not want tick labels to show, then specify an empty cell array {}. If you do not specify enough labels for all the tick values, then the labels repeat.

Tick labels support TeX and LaTeX markup. See the TickLabelInterpreter property for more information.

If you specify this property as a categorical array, MATLAB uses the values in the array, not the categories.

As an alternative to setting this property, you can use the xticklabels, yticklabels, and zticklabels functions. For an example, see Specify Axis Tick Values and Labels.

Example: ax.XTickLabel = {'Jan','Feb','Mar','Apr'}

Selection mode for the tick labels, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select the tick labels.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the tick labels. To specify the labels, set the XTickLabel, YTickLabel, or ZTickLabel property.

Example: ax.XTickLabelMode = 'auto'

Tick label interpreter, specified as one of these values:

  • 'tex' — Interpret labels using a subset of the TeX markup.

  • 'latex' — Interpret labels using a subset of LaTeX markup. When you specify the tick labels, use dollar signs around each element in the cell array.

  • 'none' — Display literal characters.

TeX Markup

By default, MATLAB supports a subset of TeX markup. Use TeX markup to add superscripts and subscripts, modify the text type and color, and include special characters in the labels.

Modifiers remain in effect until the end of the text. Superscripts and subscripts are an exception because they modify only the next character or the characters within the curly braces. When you set the interpreter to 'tex', the supported modifiers are as follows.

ModifierDescriptionExample
^{ }Superscript'text^{superscript}'
_{ }Subscript'text_{subscript}'
\bfBold font'\bf text'
\itItalic font'\it text'
\slOblique font (usually the same as italic font)'\sl text'
\rmNormal font'\rm text'
\fontname{specifier}Font name — Replace specifier with the name of a font family. You can use this in combination with other modifiers.'\fontname{Courier} text'
\fontsize{specifier}Font size —Replace specifier with a numeric scalar value in point units.'\fontsize{15} text'
\color{specifier}Font color — Replace specifier with one of these colors: red, green, yellow, magenta, blue, black, white, gray, darkGreen, orange, or lightBlue.'\color{magenta} text'
\color[rgb]{specifier}Custom font color — Replace specifier with a three-element RGB triplet.'\color[rgb]{0,0.5,0.5} text'

This table lists the supported special characters for the 'tex' interpreter.

Character SequenceSymbolCharacter SequenceSymbolCharacter SequenceSymbol

\alpha

α

\upsilon

υ

\sim

~

\angle

\phi

ϕ

\leq

\ast

*

\chi

χ

\infty

\beta

β

\psi

ψ

\clubsuit

\gamma

γ

\omega

ω

\diamondsuit

\delta

δ

\Gamma

Γ

\heartsuit

\epsilon

ϵ

\Delta

Δ

\spadesuit

\zeta

ζ

\Theta

Θ

\leftrightarrow

\eta

η

\Lambda

Λ

\leftarrow

\theta

θ

\Xi

Ξ

\Leftarrow

\vartheta

ϑ

\Pi

Π

\uparrow

\iota

ι

\Sigma

Σ

\rightarrow

\kappa

κ

\Upsilon

ϒ

\Rightarrow

\lambda

λ

\Phi

Φ

\downarrow

\mu

µ

\Psi

Ψ

\circ

º

\nu

ν

\Omega

Ω

\pm

±

\xi

ξ

\forall

\geq

\pi

π

\exists

\propto

\rho

ρ

\ni

\partial

\sigma

σ

\cong

\bullet

\varsigma

ς

\approx

\div

÷

\tau

τ

\Re

\neq

\equiv

\oplus

\aleph

\Im

\cup

\wp

\otimes

\subseteq

\oslash

\cap

\in

\supseteq

\supset

\lceil

\subset

\int

\cdot

·

\o

ο

\rfloor

\neg

¬

\nabla

\lfloor

\times

x

\ldots

...

\perp

\surd

\prime

´

\wedge

\varpi

ϖ

\0

\rceil

\rangle

\mid

|

\vee

\langle

\copyright

©

LaTeX Markup

To use LaTeX markup, set the TickLabelInterpreter property to 'latex'. Use dollar symbols around the labels, for example, use '$\int_1^{20} x^2 dx$' for inline mode or '$$\int_1^{20} x^2 dx$$' for display mode.

The displayed text uses the default LaTeX font style. The FontName, FontWeight, and FontAngle properties do not have an effect. To change the font style, use LaTeX markup within the text. The maximum size of the text that you can use with the LaTeX interpreter is 1200 characters. For multiline text, the maximum size of the text reduces by about 10 characters per line.

For examples that use TeX and LaTeX, see Greek Letters and Special Characters in Chart Text. For more information about the LaTeX system, see The LaTeX Project website at https://www.latex-project.org/.

Tick label rotation, specified as a numeric value in degrees. Positive values give counterclockwise rotation. Negative values give clockwise rotation.

Example: ax.XTickLabelRotation = 45

Example: ax.YTickLabelRotation = 90

Alternatively, use the xtickangle, ytickangle, and ztickangle functions.

Selection mode for the tick label rotation, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select the tick label rotation.

  • 'manual' — Use a tick label rotation that you specify. To specify the rotation, set the XTickLabelRotation, YTickLabelRotation, or ZTickLabelRotation property.

Minor tick marks, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

  • 'on' — Display minor tick marks between the major tick marks on the axis. The space between the major tick marks determines the number of minor tick marks. This value is the default for an axis with a log scale.

  • 'off' — Do not display minor tick marks. This value is the default for an axis with a linear scale.

Example: ax.XMinorTick = 'on'

Tick mark direction, specified as one of these values:

  • 'in' — Direct the tick marks inward from the axis lines. (Default for 2-D views)

  • 'out' — Direct the tick marks outward from the axis lines. (Default for 3-D views)

  • 'both' — Center the tick marks over the axis lines.

  • 'none' — Do not display any tick marks.

Selection mode for the TickDir property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select the tick direction based on the current view.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the tick direction. To specify the tick direction, set the TickDir property.

Example: ax.TickDirMode = 'auto'

Tick mark length, specified as a two-element vector of the form [2Dlength 3Dlength]. The first element is the tick mark length in 2-D views and the second element is the tick mark length in 3-D views. Specify the values in units normalized relative to the longest of the visible x-axis, y-axis, or z-axis lines.

Example: ax.TickLength = [0.02 0.035]

Rulers

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Minimum and maximum limits, specified as a two-element vector of the form [min max], where max is greater than min. You can specify the limits as numeric, categorical, datetime, or duration values. However, the type of values that you specify must match the type of values along the axis.

You can specify both limits, or specify one limit and let MATLAB automatically calculate the other. For an automatically calculated minimum or maximum limit, use -inf or inf, respectively. MATLAB uses the 'tight' limit method to calculate the corresponding limit.

Example: ax.XLim = [0 10]

Example: ax.YLim = [-inf 10]

Example: ax.ZLim = [0 inf]

Alternatively, use the xlim, ylim, and zlim functions to set the limits. For an example, see Specify Axis Limits.

Data Types: single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64 | datetime | duration

Selection mode for the axis limits, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Enable automatic limit selection, which is based on the total span of the plotted data and the value of the XLimitMethod, YLimitMethod, or ZLimitMethod property.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the axis limits. To specify the axis limits, set the XLim, YLim, or ZLim property.

Example: ax.XLimMode = 'auto'

Axis limit selection method, specified as a value from the table. The examples in the table show the approximate appearance for different values of the XLimitMethod property. Your results might differ depending on your data, the size of the axes, and the type of plot you create.

ValueDescriptionExample (XLimitMethod)
'tickaligned'

In general, align the edges of the axes box with the tick marks that are closest to your data without excluding any data. The appearance might vary depending on the type of data you plot and the type of chart you create.

Plotted sine wave with XLimitMethod set to 'tickaligned'.

'tight'

Fit the axes box tightly around the data by setting the axis limits equal to the range of the data.

Plotted sine wave with XLimitMethod set to 'tight'.

'padded'

Fit the axes box around the data with a thin margin of padding on each side. The width of the margin is approximately 7% of your data range.

Plotted sine wave with XLimitMethod set to 'padded'.

Note

The axis limit method has no effect when the corresponding mode property (XLimMode, YLimMode, or ZLimMode) is set to 'manual'.

Axis ruler, returned as a ruler object. The ruler controls the appearance and behavior of the x-axis, y-axis, or z-axis. Modify the appearance and behavior of a particular axis by accessing the associated ruler and setting ruler properties. The type of ruler that MATLAB creates for each axis depends on the plotted data. For a list of ruler properties that Axes objects support, see:

For example, access the ruler for the x-axis through the XAxis property. Then, change the Color property of the ruler, and thus the color of the x-axis, to red. Similarly, change the color of the y-axis to green.

ax = gca;
ax.XAxis.Color = 'r';
ax.YAxis.Color = 'g';
If the Axes object has two y-axes, then the YAxis property stores two ruler objects.

x-axis location, specified as one of the values in this table. This property applies only to 2-D views.

ValueDescriptionResult
'bottom'

Bottom of the axes.

Example: ax.XAxisLocation = 'bottom'

Empty axes with the x-axis at the bottom.

'top'

Top of the axes.

Example: ax.XAxisLocation = 'top'

Empty axes with the x-axis at the top.

'origin'

Through the origin point (0,0).

Example: ax.XAxisLocation = 'origin'

Empty axes with the x-axis at the origin.

y-axis location, specified as one of the values in this table. This property applies only to 2-D views.

ValueDescriptionResult
'left'

Left side of the axes.

Example: ax.YAxisLocation = 'left'

Empty axes with the y-axis on the left.

'right'

Right side of the axes.

Example: ax.YAxisLocation = 'right'

Empty axes with the y-axis on the right.

'origin'

Through the origin point (0,0).

Example: ax.YAxisLocation = 'origin'

Empty axes with the y-axis at the origin.

Color of the axis line, tick values, and labels in the x, y, or z direction, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, a color name, or a short name. The color you specify also affects the grid lines, unless you specify the grid line color using the GridColor or MinorGridColor property.

For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.

  • An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range [0,1], for example, [0.4 0.6 0.7].

  • A hexadecimal color code is a string scalar or character vector that starts with a hash symbol (#) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from 0 to F. The values are not case sensitive. Therefore, the color codes "#FF8800", "#ff8800", "#F80", and "#f80" are equivalent.

Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.

Color NameShort NameRGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
"red""r"[1 0 0]"#FF0000"

Sample of the color red

"green""g"[0 1 0]"#00FF00"

Sample of the color green

"blue""b"[0 0 1]"#0000FF"

Sample of the color blue

"cyan" "c"[0 1 1]"#00FFFF"

Sample of the color cyan

"magenta""m"[1 0 1]"#FF00FF"

Sample of the color magenta

"yellow""y"[1 1 0]"#FFFF00"

Sample of the color yellow

"black""k"[0 0 0]"#000000"

Sample of the color black

"white""w"[1 1 1]"#FFFFFF"

Sample of the color white

"none"Not applicableNot applicableNot applicableNo color

Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.

RGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
[0 0.4470 0.7410]"#0072BD"

Sample of RGB triplet [0 0.4470 0.7410], which appears as dark blue

[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980]"#D95319"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.8500 0.3250 0.0980], which appears as dark orange

[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250]"#EDB120"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.9290 0.6940 0.1250], which appears as dark yellow

[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560]"#7E2F8E"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4940 0.1840 0.5560], which appears as dark purple

[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880]"#77AC30"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4660 0.6740 0.1880], which appears as medium green

[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330]"#4DBEEE"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.3010 0.7450 0.9330], which appears as light blue

[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840]"#A2142F"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.6350 0.0780 0.1840], which appears as dark red

Example: ax.XColor = [1 1 0]

Example: ax.YColor = 'y'

Example: ax.ZColor = 'yellow'

Example: ax.ZColor = '#FFFF00'

Property for setting the x-axis grid color, specified as 'auto' or 'manual'. The mode value only affects the x-axis grid color. The x-axis line, tick values, and labels always use the XColor value, regardless of the mode.

The x-axis grid color depends on both the XColorMode property and the GridColorMode property, as shown here.

XColorModeGridColorModex-Axis Grid Color
'auto''auto'GridColor property
'manual'GridColor property
'manual''auto'XColor property
'manual'GridColor property

The x-axis minor grid color depends on both the XColorMode property and the MinorGridColorMode property, as shown here.

XColorModeMinorGridColorModex-Axis Minor Grid Color
'auto''auto'MinorGridColor property
'manual'MinorGridColor property
'manual''auto'XColor property
'manual'MinorGridColor property

Property for setting the y-axis grid color, specified as 'auto' or 'manual'. The mode value only affects the y-axis grid color. The y-axis line, tick values, and labels always use the YColor value, regardless of the mode.

The y-axis grid color depends on both the YColorMode property and the GridColorMode property, as shown here.

YColorModeGridColorModey-Axis Grid Color
'auto''auto'GridColor property
'manual'GridColor property
'manual''auto'YColor property
'manual'GridColor property

The y-axis minor grid color depends on both the YColorMode property and the MinorGridColorMode property, as shown here.

YColorModeMinorGridColorModey-Axis Minor Grid Color
'auto''auto'MinorGridColor property
'manual'MinorGridColor property
'manual''auto'YColor property
'manual'MinorGridColor property

Property for setting the z-axis grid color, specified as 'auto' or 'manual'. The mode value only affects the z-axis grid color. The z-axis line, tick values, and labels always use the ZColor value, regardless of the mode.

The z-axis grid color depends on both the ZColorMode property and the GridColorMode property, as shown here.

ZColorModeGridColorModez-Axis Grid Color
'auto''auto'GridColor property
'manual'GridColor property
'manual''auto'ZColor property
'manual'GridColor property

The z-axis minor grid color depends on both the ZColorMode property and the MinorGridColorMode property, as shown here.

ZColorModeMinorGridColorModez-Axis Minor Grid Color
'auto''auto'MinorGridColor property
'manual'MinorGridColor property
'manual''auto'ZColor property
'manual'MinorGridColor property

x-axis direction, specified as one of these values.

ValueDescriptionResult in 2-DResult in 3-D
'normal'

Values increase from left to right.

Example: ax.XDir = 'normal'

2-D axes with the x-axis direction set to 'normal'. The tick values for the x-axis increase from left to right.

3-D axes with the x-axis direction set to 'normal'. If you look at the x-y plane, the x-axis tick values increase from left to right.

'reverse'

Values increase from right to left.

Example: ax.XDir = 'reverse'

2-D axes with the x-axis direction set to 'reverse'. The tick values for the x-axis increase from right to left.

3-D axes with the x-axis direction set to 'reverse'. If you look at the x-y plane, the x-axis tick values increase from right to left.

y-axis direction, specified as one of these values.

ValueDescriptionResult in 2-DResult in 3-D
'normal'

Values increase from bottom to top (2-D view) or front to back (3-D view).

Example: ax.YDir = 'normal'

2-D axes with the y-axis direction set to 'normal'. The tick values for the y-axis increase from bottom to top.

3-D axes with the y-axis direction set to 'normal'. If you look at the x-y plane, the y-axis tick values increase from bottom to top.

'reverse'

Values increase from top to bottom (2-D view) or back to front (3-D view).

Example: ax.YDir = 'reverse'

2-D axes with the y-axis direction set to 'reverse'. The tick values for the y-axis increase from top to bottom.

3-D axes with the y-axis direction set to 'reverse'. If you look at the x-y plane, the y-axis tick values increase from top to bottom.

z-axis direction, specified as one of these values.

ValueDescriptionResult in 3-D
'normal'

Values increase pointing out of the screen (2-D view) or from bottom to top (3-D view).

Example: ax.ZDir = 'normal'

3-D axes with the z-axis direction set to 'normal'. If the z-axis is the vertical axis, its tick values increase from bottom to top.

'reverse'

Values increase pointing into the screen (2-D view) or from top to bottom (3-D view).

Example: ax.ZDir = 'reverse'

3-D axes with the z-axis direction set to 'reverse'. If the z-axis is the vertical axis, its tick values increase from top to bottom.

Axis scale, specified as one of these values.

ValueDescriptionResult
'linear'

Linear scale

Example: ax.XScale = 'linear'

Axis with the scale set to 'linear'. The tick values that start at 0 and increment by adding 100 to the previous value.
'log'

Log scale

Example: ax.XScale = 'log'

Note

The axes might exclude coordinates in some cases:

  • If the coordinates include positive and negative values, only the positive values are displayed.

  • If the coordinates are all negative, all of the values are displayed on a log scale with the appropriate sign.

  • Zero values are not displayed.

Axis with the scale set to 'log'. The tick values start at 0.10 (10 raised to -1). Each major tick value increases by a factor of 10.

Grids

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Grid lines, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

  • 'on' — Display grid lines perpendicular to the axis; for example, along lines of constant x, y, or z values.

  • 'off' — Do not display the grid lines.

Alternatively, use the grid on or grid off command to set all three properties to 'on' or 'off', respectively. For more information, see grid.

Example: ax.XGrid = 'on'

Placement of grid lines and tick marks in relation to graphic objects, specified as one of these values:

  • 'bottom' — Display tick marks and grid lines under graphics objects.

  • 'top' — Display tick marks and grid lines over graphics objects.

This property affects only 2-D views.

Example: ax.Layer = 'top'

Line style for grid lines, specified as one of the line styles in this table.

Line StyleDescriptionResulting Line
"-"Solid line

Sample of solid line

"--"Dashed line

Sample of dashed line

":"Dotted line

Sample of dotted line

"-."Dash-dotted line

Sample of dash-dotted line, with alternating dashes and dots

"none"No lineNo line

To display the grid lines, use the grid on command or set the XGrid, YGrid, or ZGrid property to 'on'.

Example: ax.GridLineStyle = '--'

Since R2023a

Grid line width, specified as a positive number. Set this property or the MinorGridLineWidth property to control the thickness of the grid lines independently of the box outline and tick marks.

Example

Create vectors x and y, and plot them. Display the grid lines in the axes by calling grid on. Increase the thickness of the grid lines, box outline, and tick marks by setting the LineWidth property of the axes to 1.5.

x = linspace(0,10);
y = sin(x);
plot(x,y)
grid on
ax = gca;
ax.LineWidth = 1.5;

Line plot with a thick box outline, thick tick marks, and thick grid lines

Make the grid lines thinner by setting the grid line width to 0.5.

ax.GridLineWidth = 0.5;

Updated plot with thin grid lines, but with the same thick box outline and thick tick marks

Since R2023a

How the grid line width is set, specified as one of these values:

  • "auto" — Set the GridLineWidth property to the same value as the LineWidth property.

  • "manual" — Hold the current value of the GridLineWidth property.

MATLAB sets this property to "manual" when you explicitly set the GridLineWidth property to a value.

Color of grid lines, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, a color name, or a short name.

For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.

  • An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range [0,1], for example, [0.4 0.6 0.7].

  • A hexadecimal color code is a string scalar or character vector that starts with a hash symbol (#) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from 0 to F. The values are not case sensitive. Therefore, the color codes "#FF8800", "#ff8800", "#F80", and "#f80" are equivalent.

Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.

Color NameShort NameRGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
"red""r"[1 0 0]"#FF0000"

Sample of the color red

"green""g"[0 1 0]"#00FF00"

Sample of the color green

"blue""b"[0 0 1]"#0000FF"

Sample of the color blue

"cyan" "c"[0 1 1]"#00FFFF"

Sample of the color cyan

"magenta""m"[1 0 1]"#FF00FF"

Sample of the color magenta

"yellow""y"[1 1 0]"#FFFF00"

Sample of the color yellow

"black""k"[0 0 0]"#000000"

Sample of the color black

"white""w"[1 1 1]"#FFFFFF"

Sample of the color white

"none"Not applicableNot applicableNot applicableNo color

Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.

RGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
[0 0.4470 0.7410]"#0072BD"

Sample of RGB triplet [0 0.4470 0.7410], which appears as dark blue

[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980]"#D95319"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.8500 0.3250 0.0980], which appears as dark orange

[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250]"#EDB120"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.9290 0.6940 0.1250], which appears as dark yellow

[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560]"#7E2F8E"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4940 0.1840 0.5560], which appears as dark purple

[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880]"#77AC30"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4660 0.6740 0.1880], which appears as medium green

[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330]"#4DBEEE"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.3010 0.7450 0.9330], which appears as light blue

[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840]"#A2142F"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.6350 0.0780 0.1840], which appears as dark red

To set the colors for the axes box outline, use the XColor, YColor, and ZColor properties.

To display the grid lines, use the grid on command or set the XGrid, YGrid, or ZGrid property to 'on'.

Example: ax.GridColor = [0 0 1]

Example: ax.GridColor = 'b'

Example: ax.GridColor = 'blue'

Example: ax.GridColor = '#0000FF'

Property for setting the grid color, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Check the values of the XColorMode, YColorMode, and ZColorMode properties to determine the grid line colors for the x, y, and z directions.

  • 'manual' — Use GridColor to set the grid line color for all directions.

Grid-line transparency, specified as a value in the range [0,1]. A value of 1 means opaque and a value of 0 means completely transparent.

Example: ax.GridAlpha = 0.5

Selection mode for the GridAlpha property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Default transparency value of 0.15.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the transparency value. To specify the value, set the GridAlpha property.

Example: ax.GridAlphaMode = 'auto'

Minor grid lines, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

  • 'on' — Display grid lines aligned with the minor tick marks of the axis. You do not need to enable minor ticks to display minor grid lines.

  • 'off' — Do not display grid lines.

Alternatively, use the grid minor command to toggle the visibility of the minor grid lines.

Example: ax.XMinorGrid = 'on'

Line style for minor grid lines, specified as one of the line styles shown in this table.

Line StyleDescriptionResulting Line
"-"Solid line

Sample of solid line

"--"Dashed line

Sample of dashed line

":"Dotted line

Sample of dotted line

"-."Dash-dotted line

Sample of dash-dotted line, with alternating dashes and dots

"none"No lineNo line

To display minor grid lines, use the grid minor command or set the XMinorGrid, YMinorGrid, or ZMinorGrid property to 'on'.

Example: ax.MinorGridLineStyle = '-.'

Since R2023a

Minor grid line width, specified as a positive number. Set this property or the GridLineWidth property to control the thickness of the grid lines independently of the box outline and tick marks.

Tip

  • To see the minor grid lines, set the XMinorGrid, YMinorGrid, or ZMinorGrid properties to "on".

  • When you set the GridLineWidth property, MATLAB also sets the MinorGridLineWidth property to the same value. To avoid changing the MinorGridLineWidth property, set the MinorGridLineWidthMode property to "manual" before setting the GridLineWidth property.

Since R2023a

How the minor grid line width is set, specified as one of these values:

  • "auto" — Set the MinorGridLineWidth property to the same value as the GridLineWidth property.

  • "manual" — Hold the current value of the MinorGridLineWidth property.

MATLAB sets this property to "manual" when you explicitly set the MinorGridLineWidth property to a value.

Color of minor grid lines, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, a color name, or a short name.

For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.

  • An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range [0,1], for example, [0.4 0.6 0.7].

  • A hexadecimal color code is a string scalar or character vector that starts with a hash symbol (#) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from 0 to F. The values are not case sensitive. Therefore, the color codes "#FF8800", "#ff8800", "#F80", and "#f80" are equivalent.

Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.

Color NameShort NameRGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
"red""r"[1 0 0]"#FF0000"

Sample of the color red

"green""g"[0 1 0]"#00FF00"

Sample of the color green

"blue""b"[0 0 1]"#0000FF"

Sample of the color blue

"cyan" "c"[0 1 1]"#00FFFF"

Sample of the color cyan

"magenta""m"[1 0 1]"#FF00FF"

Sample of the color magenta

"yellow""y"[1 1 0]"#FFFF00"

Sample of the color yellow

"black""k"[0 0 0]"#000000"

Sample of the color black

"white""w"[1 1 1]"#FFFFFF"

Sample of the color white

"none"Not applicableNot applicableNot applicableNo color

Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.

RGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
[0 0.4470 0.7410]"#0072BD"

Sample of RGB triplet [0 0.4470 0.7410], which appears as dark blue

[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980]"#D95319"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.8500 0.3250 0.0980], which appears as dark orange

[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250]"#EDB120"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.9290 0.6940 0.1250], which appears as dark yellow

[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560]"#7E2F8E"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4940 0.1840 0.5560], which appears as dark purple

[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880]"#77AC30"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4660 0.6740 0.1880], which appears as medium green

[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330]"#4DBEEE"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.3010 0.7450 0.9330], which appears as light blue

[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840]"#A2142F"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.6350 0.0780 0.1840], which appears as dark red

To display minor grid lines, use the grid minor command or set the XMinorGrid, YMinorGrid, or ZMinorGrid property to 'on'.

Example: ax.MinorGridColor = [0 0 1]

Example: ax.MinorGridColor = 'b'

Example: ax.MinorGridColor = 'blue'

Example: ax.MinorGridColor = '#0000FF'

Property for setting the minor grid color, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Check the values of the XColorMode, YColorMode, and ZColorMode properties to determine the grid line colors for the x, y, and z directions.

  • 'manual' — Use MinorGridColor to set the minor grid line color for all directions.

Minor grid line transparency, specified as a value in the range [0,1]. A value of 1 means opaque and a value of 0 means completely transparent.

Example: ax.MinorGridAlpha = 0.5

Selection mode for the MinorGridAlpha property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Default transparency value of 0.25.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the transparency value. To specify the value, set the MinorGridAlpha property.

Example: ax.MinorGridAlphaMode = 'auto'

Labels

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Text object for the axes title. To add a title, set the String property of the text object. To change the title appearance, such as the font style or color, set other properties. For a complete list, see Text Properties.

ax = gca;
ax.Title.String = 'My Title';
ax.Title.FontWeight = 'normal';

Alternatively, use the title function to add a title and control the appearance.

title('My Title','FontWeight','normal')

Note

This text object is not contained in the axes Children property, cannot be returned by findobj, and does not use default values defined for text objects.

Text object for the axes subtitle. To add a subtitle, set the String property of the text object. To change its appearance, such as the font angle, set other properties. For a complete list, see Text Properties.

ax = gca;
ax.Subtitle.String = 'An Insightful Subtitle';
ax.Subtitle.FontAngle = 'italic';

Alternatively, use the subtitle function to add a subtitle and control the appearance.

subtitle('An Insightful Subtitle','FontAngle','italic')

Or use the title function, and specify two character vector input arguments and two output arguments. Then set properties on the second text object returned by the function.

[t,s] = title('Clever Title','An Insightful Subtitle');
s.FontAngle = 'italic';

Note

This text object is not contained in the axes Children property, cannot be returned by findobj, and does not use default values defined for text objects.

Title and subtitle horizontal alignment with the plot box, specified as one of the values from the table.

TitleHorizontalAlignment ValueDescriptionAppearance
'center'The title and subtitle are centered over the plot box.

Title and subtitle centered over the plot box.

'left'The title and subtitle are aligned with the left side of the plot box.

Title and subtitle aligned with left edge of the plot box.

'right'The title and subtitle are aligned with the right side of the plot box.

Title and subtitle aligned with right edge of the plot box.

Text object for axis label. To add an axis label, set the String property of the text object. To change the label appearance, such as the font size, set other properties. For a complete list, see Text Properties.

ax = gca;
ax.YLabel.String = 'My y-Axis Label';
ax.YLabel.FontSize = 12;

Alternatively, use the xlabel, ylabel, and zlabel functions to add an axis label and control the appearance.

ylabel('My y-Axis Label','FontSize',12)

Note

These text objects are not contained in the axes Children property, cannot be returned by findobj, and do not use default values defined for text objects.

This property is read-only.

Legend associated with the Axes object, specified as a Legend object. To add a legend to the axes, use the legend function. Then, you can use this property to modify the legend. For a complete list of properties, see Legend Properties.

plot(rand(3))
legend({'Line 1','Line 2','Line 3'},'FontSize',12)
ax = gca;
ax.Legend.TextColor = 'red';

You also can use this property to determine if the axes has a legend.

ax = gca;
lgd = ax.Legend
if ~isempty(lgd)
    disp('Legend Exists')
end

Multiple Plots

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Color order, specified as a three-column matrix of RGB triplets. This property defines the palette of colors MATLAB uses to create plot objects such as Line, Scatter, and Bar objects. Each row of the array is an RGB triplet. An RGB triplet is a three-element vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of a color. The intensities must be in the range [0, 1]. This table lists the default colors.

This table lists the default colors.

RGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
[0 0.4470 0.7410]"#0072BD"

Sample of RGB triplet [0 0.4470 0.7410], which appears as dark blue

[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980]"#D95319"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.8500 0.3250 0.0980], which appears as dark orange

[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250]"#EDB120"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.9290 0.6940 0.1250], which appears as dark yellow

[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560]"#7E2F8E"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4940 0.1840 0.5560], which appears as dark purple

[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880]"#77AC30"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4660 0.6740 0.1880], which appears as medium green

[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330]"#4DBEEE"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.3010 0.7450 0.9330], which appears as light blue

[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840]"#A2142F"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.6350 0.0780 0.1840], which appears as dark red

MATLAB assigns colors to objects according to their order of creation. For example, when plotting lines, the first line uses the first color, the second line uses the second color, and so on. If there are more lines than colors, then the cycle repeats.

Changing the Color Order Before or After Plotting

You can change the color order in either of the following ways:

  • Call the colororder function to change the color order for all the axes in a figure. The colors of existing plots in the figure update immediately. If you place additional axes into the figure, those axes also use the new color order. If you continue to call plotting commands, those commands also use the new colors.

  • Set the ColorOrder property on the axes, call the hold function to set the axes hold state to 'on', and then call the desired plotting functions. This is like calling the colororder function, but in this case you are setting the color order for the specific axes, not the entire figure. Setting the hold state to 'on' is necessary to ensure that subsequent plotting commands do not reset the axes to use the default color order.

Line style order, specified as a character vector, a cell array of character vectors, or a string array. This property lists the line styles that MATLAB uses to display multiple plot lines in the axes. MATLAB assigns styles to lines according to their order of creation. By default, it changes to the next line style only after cycling through all the colors in the ColorOrder property with the current line style. Set the LineStyleCyclingMethod property to "withcolor" to cycle through both together or to "beforecolor" to cycle through the line styles first. The default LineStyleOrder has only one line style, "-".

To customize the line style order, create a cell array of character vectors or a string array. Specify each element of the array as a line specifier or marker specifier from the following tables. You can combine a line and a marker specifier into a single element, such as "-*".

Line StyleDescriptionResulting Line
"-"Solid line

Sample of solid line

"--"Dashed line

Sample of dashed line

":"Dotted line

Sample of dotted line

"-."Dash-dotted line

Sample of dash-dotted line, with alternating dashes and dots

MarkerDescriptionResulting Marker
"o"Circle

Sample of circle marker

"+"Plus sign

Sample of plus sign marker

"*"Asterisk

Sample of asterisk marker

"."Point

Sample of point marker

"x"Cross

Sample of cross marker

"_"Horizontal line

Sample of horizontal line marker

"|"Vertical line

Sample of vertical line marker

"square"Square

Sample of square marker

"diamond"Diamond

Sample of diamond marker

"^"Upward-pointing triangle

Sample of upward-pointing triangle marker

"v"Downward-pointing triangle

Sample of downward-pointing triangle marker

">"Right-pointing triangle

Sample of right-pointing triangle marker

"<"Left-pointing triangle

Sample of left-pointing triangle marker

"pentagram"Pentagram

Sample of pentagram marker

"hexagram"Hexagram

Sample of hexagram marker

Changing Line Style Order Before or After Plotting

You can change the line style order before or after plotting into the axes. When you set the LineStyleOrder property to a new value, MATLAB updates the styles of any lines that are in the axes. If you continue plotting into the axes, your plotting commands continue using the line styles from the updated list.

Before R2019b: You must change the line style order before plotting. Set the value of the LineStyleOrder property, and then call the hold function to set the axes hold state to "on" before calling any plotting functions. For more information, see Changing ColorOrder or LineStyleOrder affects existing plots immediately and Indexing scheme for ColorOrder and LineStyleOrder might change plot colors and line styles.

Since R2023a

How to cycle through the line styles when there are multiple lines in the axes, specified as one of the values from this table.

The examples in this table were created using the default colors in the ColorOrder property and three line styles (["-","-o","--"]) in the LineStyleOrder property.

ValueDescriptionExample

"aftercolor"

Cycle through the line styles of the LineStyleOrder after the colors of the ColorOrder.

Six lines that use the "aftercolor" line style cycling method. Each line is a different color with the same line style.

"beforecolor"

Cycle through the line styles of the LineStyleOrder before the colors of the ColorOrder.

Six lines that use the "beforecolor" line style cycling method. The first three lines use all three line styles with the first color. The last three lines repeat the line styles with the second color.

"withcolor"

Cycle through the line styles of the LineStyleOrder with the colors of the ColorOrder.

Six lines that use the "withcolor" line style cycling method. The first three lines use all three line styles with the first three colors. The last three lines repeat the line styles with the next three colors.

This property is read-only.

SeriesIndex value for the next plot object added to the axes, returned as a whole number greater than or equal to 0. This property is useful when you want to track how the objects cycle through the colors and line styles. This property maintains a count of the objects in the axes that have a numeric SeriesIndex property value. MATLAB uses it to assign a SeriesIndex value to each new object. The count starts at 1 when you create the axes, and it increases by 1 for each additional object. Thus, the count is typically n+1, where n is the number of objects in the axes.

If you manually change the ColorOrderIndex or LineStyleOrderIndex property on the axes, the value of the NextSeriesIndex property changes to 0. As a consequence, objects that have a SeriesIndex property no longer update automatically when you change the ColorOrder or LineStyleOrder properties on the axes.

Properties to reset when adding a new plot to the axes, specified as one of these values:

  • 'add' — Add new plots to the existing axes. Do not delete existing plots or reset axes properties before displaying the new plot.

  • 'replacechildren' — Delete existing plots before displaying the new plot. Reset the ColorOrderIndex and LineStyleOrderIndex properties to 1, but do not reset other axes properties. The next plot added to the axes uses the first color and line style based on the ColorOrder and LineStyle order properties. This value is similar to using cla before every new plot.

  • 'replace' — Delete existing plots and reset axes properties, except Position and Units, to their default values before displaying the new plot.

  • 'replaceall' — Delete existing plots and reset axes properties, except Position and Units, to their default values before displaying the new plot. This value is similar to using cla reset before every new plot.

Note

For Axes objects with only one y-axis, the 'replace' and 'replaceall' property values are equivalent. For Axes objects with two y-axes, the 'replace' value affects only the active side while the 'replaceall' value affects both sides.

Figures also have a NextPlot property. Alternatively, you can use the newplot function to prepare figures and axes for subsequent graphics commands.

Order for rendering objects, specified as one of these values:

  • 'depth' — Draw objects in back-to-front order based on the current view. Use this value to ensure that objects in front of other objects are drawn correctly.

  • 'childorder' — Draw objects in the order in which they are created by graphics functions, without considering the relationship of the objects in three dimensions. This value can result in faster rendering, particularly if the figure is very large, but also can result in improper depth sorting of the objects displayed.

Color order index, specified as a positive integer. This property specifies the next color MATLAB selects from the axes ColorOrder property when it creates the next plot object such as a Line, Scatter, or Bar object.

Note

Setting the SeriesIndex property of individual plot objects is recommended over setting the ColorOrderIndex property of the axes. The behavior of the ColorOrderIndex property changed in R2019b. For more information, see Indexing scheme for ColorOrder and LineStyleOrder might change plot colors and line styles.

Line style order index, specified as a positive integer. This property specifies the next line style MATLAB selects from the axes LineStyleOrder property to create the next plot line.

Note

Setting the SeriesIndex property of individual plot objects is recommended over setting the LineStyleOrderIndex property of the axes. The behavior of the LineStyleOrderIndex property changed in R2019b. For more information, see Indexing scheme for ColorOrder and LineStyleOrder might change plot colors and line styles.

Color and Transparency Maps

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Color map, specified as an m-by-3 array of RGB (red, green, blue) triplets that define m individual colors.

Example: ax.Colormap = [1 0 1; 0 0 1; 1 1 0] sets the color map to three colors: magenta, blue, and yellow.

MATLAB accesses these colors by their row number.

Alternatively, use the colormap function to change the color map.

Scale for color mapping, specified as one of these values:

  • 'linear' — Linear scale. The tick values along the colorbar also use a linear scale.

  • 'log' — Log scale. The tick values along the colorbar also use a log scale.

Color limits for objects in axes that use the colormap, specified as a two-element vector of the form [cmin cmax]. This property determines how data values map to the colors in the colormap where:

  • cmin specifies the data value that maps to the first color in the colormap.

  • cmax specifies the data value that maps to the last color in the colormap.

The Axes object interpolates data values between cmin and cmax across the colormap. Values outside this range use either the first or last color, whichever is closest.

Selection mode for the CLim property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select the limits based on the color data of the graphics objects contained in the axes.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the values. To specify the values, set the CLim property. The values do not change when the limits of the axes children change.

Transparency map, specified as an array of finite alpha values that progress linearly from 0 to 1. The size of the array can be m-by-1 or 1-by-m. MATLAB accesses alpha values by their index in the array. An alphamap can be any length.

Scale for transparency mapping, specified as one of these values:

  • 'linear' — Linear scale

  • 'log' — Log scale

Alpha limits, specified as a two-element vector of the form [amin amax]. This property affects the AlphaData values of graphics objects, such as surface, image, and patch objects. This property determines how the AlphaData values map to the figure alpha map, where:

  • amin specifies the data value that maps to the first alpha value in the figure alpha map.

  • amax specifies the data value that maps to the last alpha value in the figure alpha map.

The Axes object interpolates data values between amin and amax across the figure alpha map. Values outside this range use either the first or last alpha map value, whichever is closest.

The Alphamap property of the figure contains the alpha map. For more information, see the alpha function.

Selection mode for the ALim property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select the limits based on the AlphaData values of the graphics objects contained in the axes.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the alpha limits. To specify the alpha limits, set the ALim property.

Box Styling

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Background color, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, a color name, or a short name.

For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.

  • An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range [0,1], for example, [0.4 0.6 0.7].

  • A hexadecimal color code is a string scalar or character vector that starts with a hash symbol (#) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from 0 to F. The values are not case sensitive. Therefore, the color codes "#FF8800", "#ff8800", "#F80", and "#f80" are equivalent.

Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.

Color NameShort NameRGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
"red""r"[1 0 0]"#FF0000"

Sample of the color red

"green""g"[0 1 0]"#00FF00"

Sample of the color green

"blue""b"[0 0 1]"#0000FF"

Sample of the color blue

"cyan" "c"[0 1 1]"#00FFFF"

Sample of the color cyan

"magenta""m"[1 0 1]"#FF00FF"

Sample of the color magenta

"yellow""y"[1 1 0]"#FFFF00"

Sample of the color yellow

"black""k"[0 0 0]"#000000"

Sample of the color black

"white""w"[1 1 1]"#FFFFFF"

Sample of the color white

"none"Not applicableNot applicableNot applicableNo color

Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.

RGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
[0 0.4470 0.7410]"#0072BD"

Sample of RGB triplet [0 0.4470 0.7410], which appears as dark blue

[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980]"#D95319"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.8500 0.3250 0.0980], which appears as dark orange

[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250]"#EDB120"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.9290 0.6940 0.1250], which appears as dark yellow

[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560]"#7E2F8E"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4940 0.1840 0.5560], which appears as dark purple

[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880]"#77AC30"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4660 0.6740 0.1880], which appears as medium green

[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330]"#4DBEEE"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.3010 0.7450 0.9330], which appears as light blue

[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840]"#A2142F"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.6350 0.0780 0.1840], which appears as dark red

Example: ax.Color = [0 0 1];

Example: ax.Color = 'b';

Example: ax.Color = 'blue';

Example: ax.Color = '#0000FF';

Line width of axes outline, tick marks, and grid lines, specified as a positive numeric value in point units. One point equals 1/72 inch.

Example: ax.LineWidth = 1.5

Box outline, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

ValueDescription2-D Result3-D Result
'on'

Display the box outline around the axes. For 3-D views, use the BoxStyle property to change extent of the outline.

Example: ax.Box = 'on'

2-D axes with the box outline on. The axes appears as a closed rectangle.

3-D axes with the box outline on. The axes appears as a closed cube.

'off'

Do not display the box outline around the axes.

Example: ax.Box = 'off'

2-D axes with the box outline off. The axes appears as an L shape consisting of one horizontal x-axis intersecting with one vertical y-axis.

3-D axes with the box outline off. The x-y plane is an L shape consisting of one x-axis intersecting with one y-axis. The z-axis extends up from a corner of the x-y plane.

The XColor, YColor, and ZColor properties control the color of the outline.

Example: ax.Box = 'on'

Box outline style, specified as 'back' or 'full'. This property affects only 3-D views.

ValueDescriptionResult
'back'

Outline the back planes of the 3-D box.

Example: ax.BoxStyle = 'back'

3-D axes with the box style set to 'back'.

'full'

Outline the entire 3-D box.

Example: ax.BoxStyle = 'full'

3-D axes with the box style set to 'full'.

Clipping of objects to the axes limits, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

The clipping behavior of an object within the Axes object depends on both the Clipping property of the Axes object and the Clipping property of the individual object. The property value of the Axes object has these effects:

  • 'on' — Enable each individual object within the axes to control its own clipping behavior based on the Clipping property value for the object.

  • 'off' — Disable clipping for all objects within the axes, regardless of the Clipping property value for the individual objects. Parts of objects can appear outside of the axes limits. For example, parts can appear outside the limits if you create a plot, use the hold on command, freeze the axis scaling, and then add a plot that is larger than the original plot.

This table lists the results for different combinations of Clipping property values.

Clipping Property for Axes ObjectClipping Property for Individual ObjectResult
'on''on'Individual object is clipped. Others might or might not be.
'on''off'Individual object is not clipped. Others might or might not be.
'off''on'All objects are unclipped.
'off''off'All objects are unclipped.

Clipping boundaries, specified as one of the values in this table. If a plot contains markers, then as long as the data point lies within the axes limits, MATLAB draws the entire marker.

The ClippingStyle property has no effect if the Clipping property is set to 'off'.

ValueDescriptionsIllustration of Boundary Region
'3dbox'

Clip plotted objects to the six sides of the axes box defined by the axis limits.

Thick lines might display outside the axes limits.

3-D axes containing a plotted surface with the clipping style set to '3dbox'. The surface clips at the boundaries of the plot box.

'rectangle'

Clip plotted objects to a rectangular boundary enclosing the axes in any given view.

Clip thick lines at the axes limits.

3-D axes containing a plotted surface with the clipping style set to 'rectangle'. The surface extends beyond the plot box boundaries, but it clips to the edges of a rectangle that encloses the plot box.

Background light color, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, a color name, or a short name. The background light is a directionless light that shines uniformly on all objects in the axes. To add light, use the light function.

For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.

  • An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range [0,1], for example, [0.4 0.6 0.7].

  • A hexadecimal color code is a string scalar or character vector that starts with a hash symbol (#) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from 0 to F. The values are not case sensitive. Therefore, the color codes "#FF8800", "#ff8800", "#F80", and "#f80" are equivalent.

Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.

Color NameShort NameRGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
"red""r"[1 0 0]"#FF0000"

Sample of the color red

"green""g"[0 1 0]"#00FF00"

Sample of the color green

"blue""b"[0 0 1]"#0000FF"

Sample of the color blue

"cyan" "c"[0 1 1]"#00FFFF"

Sample of the color cyan

"magenta""m"[1 0 1]"#FF00FF"

Sample of the color magenta

"yellow""y"[1 1 0]"#FFFF00"

Sample of the color yellow

"black""k"[0 0 0]"#000000"

Sample of the color black

"white""w"[1 1 1]"#FFFFFF"

Sample of the color white

"none"Not applicableNot applicableNot applicableNo color

Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.

RGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
[0 0.4470 0.7410]"#0072BD"

Sample of RGB triplet [0 0.4470 0.7410], which appears as dark blue

[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980]"#D95319"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.8500 0.3250 0.0980], which appears as dark orange

[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250]"#EDB120"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.9290 0.6940 0.1250], which appears as dark yellow

[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560]"#7E2F8E"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4940 0.1840 0.5560], which appears as dark purple

[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880]"#77AC30"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.4660 0.6740 0.1880], which appears as medium green

[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330]"#4DBEEE"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.3010 0.7450 0.9330], which appears as light blue

[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840]"#A2142F"

Sample of RGB triplet [0.6350 0.0780 0.1840], which appears as dark red

Example: ax.AmbientLightColor = [1 0 1]

Example: ax.AmbientLightColor = 'm'

Example: ax.AmbientLightColor = 'magenta'

Example: ax.AmbientLightColor = '#FF00FF'

Position

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Size and location, including the labels and a margin, specified as a four-element vector of the form [left bottom width height]. By default, MATLAB measures the values in units normalized to the container. To change the units, set the Units property. The default value of [0 0 1 1] includes the whole interior of the container.

  • The left and bottom elements define the distance from the lower left corner of the container (typically a figure, panel, or tab) to the lower left corner of the outer position boundary.

  • The width and height elements are the outer position boundary dimensions.

These figures show the areas defined by the OuterPosition values (blue) and the Position values (red).

2-D View of Axes3-D View of Axes

2-D axes with a title and axis labels. The inner position is outlined in red. It encloses the plot box only. The title, axis labels, and tick labels lie outside this rectangle. The outer position is outlined in blue. It encloses the plot box, the title, and the axis labels.

3-D axes with a title and axis labels. The inner position is outlined in red. It encloses the plot box. The title and axis labels lie outside this rectangle. Depending on the orientation of the plot box, some of the tick labels might lie inside or outside of this rectangle. The outer position is outlined in blue. It encloses the plot box, the title, and all of the axis labels.

For more information on the axes position, see Control Axes Layout.

Note

Setting this property has no effect when the parent container is a TiledChartLayout object.

Inner size and location, specified as a four-element vector of the form [left bottom width height]. This property is equivalent to the Position property.

Note

  • When querying the inner position of axes with constrained aspect ratios (such square axes or those containing images) consider using the tightPosition function for more accuracy. (since R2022b)

  • Setting this property has no effect when the parent container is a TiledChartLayout

Size and location, excluding a margin for the labels, specified as a four-element vector of the form [left bottom width height]. By default, MATLAB measures the values in units normalized to the container. To change the units, set the Units property.

  • The left and bottom elements define the distance from the lower left corner of the container (typically a figure, panel, or tab) to the lower left corner of the position boundary.

  • The width and height elements are the position boundary dimensions. For axes in a 3-D view, the Position property is the smallest rectangle that encloses the axes.

If you want to specify the position and account for the text around the axes, then set the OuterPosition property instead. These figures show the areas defined by the OuterPosition values (blue) and the Position values (red).

2-D View of Axes3-D View of Axes

2-D axes with a title and axis labels. The inner position is outlined in red. It encloses the plot box only. The title, axis labels, and tick labels lie outside this rectangle. The outer position is outlined in blue. It encloses the plot box, the title, and the axis labels.

3-D axes with a title and axis labels. The inner position is outlined in red. It encloses the plot box. The title and axis labels lie outside this rectangle. Depending on the orientation of the plot box, some of the tick labels might lie inside or outside of this rectangle. The outer position is outlined in blue. It encloses the plot box, the title, and all of the axis labels.

For more information on the axes position, see Control Axes Layout.

Note

  • When querying the position of axes with constrained aspect ratios (such square axes or those containing images) consider using the tightPosition function for more accuracy. (since R2022b)

  • Setting this property has no effect when the parent container is a TiledChartLayout

This property is read-only.

Margins for the text labels, returned as a four-element vector of the form [left bottom right top]. By default, MATLAB measures the values in units normalized to the container. To change the units, set the Units property.

The elements define the distances between the bounds of the Position property and the extent of the surrounding text. The Position values combined with the TightInset values define the tightest bounding box that encloses the axes and the surrounding text.

These figures show the areas defined by the OuterPosition values (blue), the Position values (red), and the Position expanded by the TightInset values (magenta).

2-D View of Axes3-D View of Axes

2-D axes with a title and axis labels. The blue outer position rectangle encloses the plot box, title, axis labels, and all tick values with an extra margin of space. The red position rectangle encloses the plot box only. And the magenta tight inset rectangle is tightly cropped to include the plot box, title, axis labels, and tick values with minimal extra space.

3-D axes with a title and axis labels. The blue outer position rectangle encloses the plot box, title, axis labels, and all tick values with an extra margin of space. The red position rectangle encloses the plot box, and potentially some of the tick values depending on the orientation of the plot box. The magenta tight inset rectangle is tightly cropped to include the plot box, title, axis labels, and tick values with minimal extra space.

For more information, see Control Axes Layout.

Position property to hold constant when adding, removing, or changing decorations, specified as one of the following values:

  • "outerposition" — The OuterPosition property remains constant when you add, remove, or change decorations such as a title or an axis label. If any positional adjustments are needed, MATLAB adjusts the InnerPosition property.

  • "innerposition" — The InnerPosition property remains constant when you add, remove, or change decorations such as a title or an axis label. If any positional adjustments are needed, MATLAB adjusts the OuterPosition property.

Note

Setting this property has no effect when the parent container is a TiledChartLayout object.

Position units, specified as one of these values.

UnitsDescription
"normalized" (default)Normalized with respect to the container, which is typically the figure or a panel. The lower left corner of the container maps to (0,0) and the upper right corner maps to (1,1).
"inches"Inches.
"centimeters"Centimeters.
"characters"

Based on the default uicontrol font of the graphics root object:

  • Character width = width of letter x.

  • Character height = distance between the baselines of two lines of text.

"points"Typography points. One point equals 1/72 inch.
"pixels"

Pixels.

Starting in R2015b, distances in pixels are independent of your system resolution on Windows and Macintosh systems.

  • On Windows systems, a pixel is 1/96th of an inch.

  • On Macintosh systems, a pixel is 1/72nd of an inch.

  • On Linux systems, the size of a pixel is determined by your system resolution.

When specifying the units as a Name,Value pair during object creation, you must set the Units property before specifying the properties that you want to use these units, such as Position.

Relative length of data units along each axis, specified as a three-element vector of the form [dx dy dz]. This vector defines the relative x, y, and z data scale factors. For example, specifying this property as [1 2 1] sets the length of one unit of data in the x-direction to be the same length as two units of data in the y-direction and one unit of data in the z-direction.

Alternatively, use the daspect function to change the data aspect ratio.

Example: ax.DataAspectRatio = [1 1 1]

Data Types: single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64

Data aspect ratio mode, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select values that make best use of the available space. If PlotBoxAspectRatioMode and CameraViewAngleMode are also set to 'auto', then enable "stretch-to-fill" behavior. Stretch the axes so that it fills the available space as defined by the Position property.

  • 'manual' — Disable the "stretch-to-fill" behavior and use the manually specified data aspect ratio. To specify the values, set the DataAspectRatio property.

Relative length of each axis, specified as a three-element vector of the form [px py pz] defining the relative x-axis, y-axis, and z-axis scale factors. The plot box is a box enclosing the axes data region as defined by the axis limits.

Alternatively, use the pbaspect function to change the plot box aspect ratio.

If you specify the axis limits, data aspect ratio, and plot box aspect ratio, then MATLAB ignores the plot box aspect ratio. It adheres to the axis limits and data aspect ratio.

Example: ax.PlotBoxAspectRatio = [1 0.75 0.75]

Data Types: single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64

Selection mode for the PlotBoxAspectRatio property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select values that make best use of the available space. If DataAspectRatioMode and CameraViewAngleMode also are set to 'auto', then enable "stretch-to-fill" behavior. Stretch the Axes object so that it fills the available space as defined by the Position property.

  • 'manual' — Disable the "stretch-to-fill" behavior and use the manually specified plot box aspect ratio. To specify the values, set the PlotBoxAspectRatio property.

Layout options, specified as a TiledChartLayoutOptions or a GridLayoutOptions object. This property is useful when the axes object is either in a tiled chart layout or a grid layout.

To position the axes within the grid of a tiled chart layout, set the Tile and TileSpan properties on the TiledChartLayoutOptions object. For example, consider a 3-by-3 tiled chart layout. The layout has a grid of tiles in the center, and four tiles along the outer edges. In practice, the grid is invisible and the outer tiles do not take up space until you populate them with axes or charts.

Diagram of a 3-by-3 tiled chart layout.

This code places the axes ax in the third tile of the grid.

ax.Layout.Tile = 3;

To make the axes span multiple tiles, specify the TileSpan property as a two-element vector. For example, this axes spans 2 rows and 3 columns of tiles.

ax.Layout.TileSpan = [2 3];

To place the axes in one of the surrounding tiles, specify the Tile property as 'north', 'south', 'east', or 'west'. For example, setting the value to 'east' places the axes in the tile to the right of the grid.

ax.Layout.Tile = 'east';

To place the axes into a layout within an app, specify this property as a GridLayoutOptions object. For more information about working with grid layouts in apps, see uigridlayout.

If the axes is not a child of either a tiled chart layout or a grid layout (for example, if it is a child of a figure or panel) then this property is empty and has no effect.

View

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Azimuth and elevation of view, specified as a two-element vector of the form [azimuth elevation] defined in degree units. Alternatively, use the view function to set the view.

Note

Setting the azimuth and elevation angles might reset other camera-related properties. For best results, set the azimuth and elevation angles before setting other camera-related properties.

Example: ax.View = [45 45]

Type of projection onto a 2-D screen, specified as one of these values:

  • 'orthographic' — Maintain the correct relative dimensions of graphics objects regarding the distance of a given point from the viewer, and draw lines that are parallel in the data parallel on the screen.

  • 'perspective' — Incorporate foreshortening, which enables you to perceive depth in 2-D representations of 3-D objects. Perspective projection does not preserve the relative dimensions of objects. Instead, it displays a distant line segment smaller than a nearer line segment of the same length. Lines that are parallel in the data might not appear parallel on screen.

Camera location, or the viewpoint, specified as a three-element vector of the form [x y z]. This vector defines the axes coordinates of the camera location, which is the point from which you view the axes. The camera is oriented along the view axis, which is a straight line that connects the camera position and the camera target. For an illustration, see Camera Graphics Terminology.

If the Projection property is set to 'perspective', then as you change the CameraPosition setting, the amount of perspective also changes.

Alternatively, use the campos function to set the camera location.

Example: ax.CameraPosition = [0.5 0.5 9]

Data Types: single | double

Selection mode for the CameraPosition property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically set CameraPosition along the view axis. Calculate the position so that the camera lies a fixed distance from the target along the azimuth and elevation specified by the current view, as returned by the view function. Functions like rotate3d, zoom, and pan, change this mode to 'auto' to perform their actions.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the value. To specify the value, set the CameraPosition property.

Camera target point, specified as a three-element vector of the form [x y z]. This vector defines the axes coordinates of the point. The camera is oriented along the view axis, which is a straight line that connects the camera position and the camera target. For an illustration, see Camera Graphics Terminology.

Alternatively, use the camtarget function to set the camera target.

Example: ax.CameraTarget = [0.5 0.5 0.5]

Data Types: single | double

Selection mode for the CameraTarget property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Position the camera target at the centroid of the axes plot box.

  • 'manual' — Use the manually specified camera target value. To specify a value, set the CameraTarget property.

Vector defining upwards direction, specified as a three-element direction vector of the form [x y z]. For 2-D views, the default value is [0 1 0]. For 3-D views, the default value is [0 0 1]. For an illustration, see Camera Graphics Terminology.

Alternatively, use the camup function to set the upwards direction.

Example: ax.CameraUpVector = [sin(45) cos(45) 1]

Selection mode for the CameraUpVector property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically set the value to [0 0 1] for 3-D views so that the positive z-direction is up. Set the value to [0 1 0] for 2-D views so that the positive y-direction is up.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the vector defining the upwards direction. To specify a value, set the CameraUpVector property.

Field of view, specified as a scalar angle greater than 0 and less than or equal to 180. Changing the camera view angle affects the size of graphics objects displayed in the axes, but does not affect the degree of perspective distortion. The greater the angle, the larger the field of view and the smaller objects appear in the scene. For an illustration, see Camera Graphics Terminology.

Example: ax.CameraViewAngle = 15

Data Types: single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64 | logical

Selection mode for the CameraViewAngle property, specified as one of these values:

  • 'auto' — Automatically select the field of view as the minimum angle that captures the entire scene, up to 180 degrees.

  • 'manual' — Manually specify the field of view. To specify a value, set the CameraViewAngle property.

Interactivity

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Data exploration toolbar, which is an AxesToolbar object. The toolbar appears at the top-right corner of the axes when you hover over it.

Axes toolbar that includes buttons for exporting content, data brushing, pinning data tips, rotating 3-D views, panning, zooming, and restoring the original view.

The toolbar buttons depend on the contents of the axes, but typically include zooming, panning, rotating, data tips, data brushing, and restoring the original view. You can customize the toolbar buttons using the axtoolbar and axtoolbarbtn functions.

If you do not want the toolbar to appear when you hover over the axes, set the Visible property of the AxesToolbar object to 'off'.

ax = gca;
ax.Toolbar.Visible = 'off';

For more information, see AxesToolbar Properties.

Interactions, specified as an array of interaction objects or an empty array. The interactions you specify are available within your chart through gestures. You do not have to select any axes toolbar buttons to use them. For example, a panInteraction object enables dragging to pan within a chart. For a list of interaction objects, see Control Chart Interactivity.

The default set of interactions depends on the type of chart you are displaying. You can replace the default set with a new set of interactions, but you cannot access or modify any of the interactions in the default set. For example, this code replaces the default set of interactions with the panInteraction and zoomInteraction objects.

ax = gca;
ax.Interactions = [panInteraction zoomInteraction];

To remove all interactions from the axes, set this property to an empty array. To temporarily disable the current set of interactions, call the disableDefaultInteractivity function. You can reenable them by calling the enableDefaultInteractivity function.

Note

Interaction objects are not returned by findobj or findall, and they are not copied by copyobj.

State of visibility, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

  • 'on' — Display the axes and its children.

  • 'off' — Hide the axes without deleting it. You still can access the properties of an invisible axes object.

Note

When the Visible property is 'off', the axes object is invisible, but child objects such as lines remain visible.

This property is read-only.

Location of mouse pointer, returned as a 2-by-3 array. The CurrentPoint property contains the (x,y,z) coordinates of the mouse pointer with respect to the axes. The returned array is of the form:

[xfront yfront zfront
 xback  yback  zback]

The two points indicate the location of the last mouse click. However, if the figure has a WindowButtonMotionFcn callback defined, then the points indicate the last location of the mouse pointer. The figure also has a CurrentPoint property.

The values of the current point when using perspective projection can be different from the same point in orthographic projection because the shape of the axes volume can be different.

Orthogonal Projection

When using orthogonal projection, the values depend on whether the click is within the axes or outside the axes.

  • If the click is inside the axes, the two points lie on the line that is perpendicular to the plane of the screen and that passes through the pointer. The coordinates are the points where this line intersects the front and back surfaces of the axes volume (which is defined by the axes x, y, and z limits). The first row is the point nearest to the camera position. The second row is the point farthest from the camera position. This is true for both 2-D and 3-D views.

  • If the click is outside the axes, but within the figure, then the points lie on a line that passes through the pointer and is perpendicular to the camera target and camera position planes. The first row is the point in the camera position plane. The second row is the point in the plane of the camera target.

Perspective Projection

Clicking outside of the Axes object in perspective projection returns the front point as the current camera position. Only the back point updates with the coordinates of a point that lies on a line extending from the camera position through the pointer and intersecting the camera target at that point.

Context menu, specified as a ContextMenu object. Use this property to display a context menu when you right-click the object. Create the context menu using the uicontextmenu function.

Note

If the PickableParts property is set to 'none' or if the HitTest property is set to 'off', then the context menu does not appear.

Selection state, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

  • 'on' — Selected. If you click the object when in plot edit mode, then MATLAB sets its Selected property to 'on'. If the SelectionHighlight property also is set to 'on', then MATLAB displays selection handles around the object.

  • 'off' — Not selected.

Display of selection handles when selected, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

  • 'on' — Display selection handles when the Selected property is set to 'on'.

  • 'off' — Never display selection handles, even when the Selected property is set to 'on'.

Callbacks

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Mouse-click callback, specified as one of these values:

  • Function handle

  • Cell array containing a function handle and additional arguments

  • Character vector that is a valid MATLAB command or function, which is evaluated in the base workspace (not recommended)

Use this property to execute code when you click the object. If you specify this property using a function handle, then MATLAB passes two arguments to the callback function when executing the callback:

  • Clicked object — Access properties of the clicked object from within the callback function.

  • Event data — Empty argument. Replace it with the tilde character (~) in the function definition to indicate that this argument is not used.

For more information on how to use function handles to define callback functions, see Create Callbacks for Graphics Objects.

Note

If the PickableParts property is set to 'none' or if the HitTest property is set to 'off', then this callback does not execute.

Object creation function, specified as one of these values:

  • Function handle.

  • Cell array in which the first element is a function handle. Subsequent elements in the cell array are the arguments to pass to the callback function.

  • Character vector containing a valid MATLAB expression (not recommended). MATLAB evaluates this expression in the base workspace.

For more information about specifying a callback as a function handle, cell array, or character vector, see Create Callbacks for Graphics Objects.

This property specifies a callback function to execute when MATLAB creates the object. MATLAB initializes all property values before executing the CreateFcn callback. If you do not specify the CreateFcn property, then MATLAB executes a default creation function.

Setting the CreateFcn property on an existing component has no effect.

If you specify this property as a function handle or cell array, you can access the object that is being created using the first argument of the callback function. Otherwise, use the gcbo function to access the object.

Object deletion function, specified as one of these values:

  • Function handle.

  • Cell array in which the first element is a function handle. Subsequent elements in the cell array are the arguments to pass to the callback function.

  • Character vector containing a valid MATLAB expression (not recommended). MATLAB evaluates this expression in the base workspace.

For more information about specifying a callback as a function handle, cell array, or character vector, see Create Callbacks for Graphics Objects.

This property specifies a callback function to execute when MATLAB deletes the object. MATLAB executes the DeleteFcn callback before destroying the properties of the object. If you do not specify the DeleteFcn property, then MATLAB executes a default deletion function.

If you specify this property as a function handle or cell array, you can access the object that is being deleted using the first argument of the callback function. Otherwise, use the gcbo function to access the object.

Callback Execution Control

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Callback interruption, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

This property determines if a running callback can be interrupted. There are two callback states to consider:

  • The running callback is the currently executing callback.

  • The interrupting callback is a callback that tries to interrupt the running callback.

MATLAB determines callback interruption behavior whenever it executes a command that processes the callback queue. These commands include drawnow, figure, uifigure, getframe, waitfor, and pause.

If the running callback does not contain one of these commands, then no interruption occurs. MATLAB first finishes executing the running callback, and later executes the interrupting callback.

If the running callback does contain one of these commands, then the Interruptible property of the object that owns the running callback determines if the interruption occurs:

  • If the value of Interruptible is 'off', then no interruption occurs. Instead, the BusyAction property of the object that owns the interrupting callback determines if the interrupting callback is discarded or added to the callback queue.

  • If the value of Interruptible is 'on', then the interruption occurs. The next time MATLAB processes the callback queue, it stops the execution of the running callback and executes the interrupting callback. After the interrupting callback completes, MATLAB then resumes executing the running callback.

Note

Callback interruption and execution behave differently in these situations:

  • If the interrupting callback is a DeleteFcn, CloseRequestFcn, or SizeChangedFcn callback, then the interruption occurs regardless of the Interruptible property value.

  • If the running callback is currently executing the waitfor function, then the interruption occurs regardless of the Interruptible property value.

  • If the interrupting callback is owned by a Timer object, then the callback executes according to schedule regardless of the Interruptible property value.

Note

When an interruption occurs, MATLAB does not save the state of properties or the display. For example, the object returned by the gca or gcf command might change when another callback executes.

Callback queuing, specified as 'queue' or 'cancel'. The BusyAction property determines how MATLAB handles the execution of interrupting callbacks. There are two callback states to consider:

  • The running callback is the currently executing callback.

  • The interrupting callback is a callback that tries to interrupt the running callback.

The BusyAction property determines callback queuing behavior only when both of these conditions are met:

  • The running callback contains a command that processes the callback queue, such as drawnow, figure, uifigure, getframe, waitfor, or pause.

  • The value of the Interruptible property of the object that owns the running callback is 'off'.

Under these conditions, the BusyAction property of the object that owns the interrupting callback determines how MATLAB handles the interrupting callback. These are possible values of the BusyAction property:

  • 'queue' — Puts the interrupting callback in a queue to be processed after the running callback finishes execution.

  • 'cancel' — Does not execute the interrupting callback.

Ability to capture mouse clicks, specified as one of these values:

  • 'visible' — Capture mouse clicks only when visible. The Visible property must be set to 'on'. The HitTest property determines if the Axes object responds to the click or if an ancestor does.

  • 'all' — Capture mouse clicks regardless of visibility. The Visible property can be set to 'on' or 'off'. The HitTest property determines if the Axes object responds to the click or if an ancestor does.

  • 'none' — Cannot capture mouse clicks. Clicking the Axes object passes the click to the object below it in the current view of the figure window, which is typically the axes or the figure. The HitTest property has no effect.

If you want an object to be clickable when it is underneath other objects that you do not want to be clickable, then set the PickableParts property of the other objects to 'none' so that the click passes through them.

Response to captured mouse clicks, specified as 'on' or 'off', or as numeric or logical 1 (true) or 0 (false). A value of 'on' is equivalent to true, and 'off' is equivalent to false. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

  • 'on' — Trigger the ButtonDownFcn callback of the Axes object. If you have defined the ContextMenu property, then invoke the context menu.

  • 'off' — Trigger the callbacks for the nearest ancestor of the Axes object that has one of these:

    • HitTest property set to 'on'

    • PickableParts property set to a value that enables the ancestor to capture mouse clicks

Note

The PickableParts property determines if the Axes object can capture mouse clicks. If it cannot, then the HitTest property has no effect.

This property is read-only.

Deletion status, returned as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState.

MATLAB sets the BeingDeleted property to 'on' when the DeleteFcn callback begins execution. The BeingDeleted property remains set to 'on' until the component object no longer exists.

Check the value of the BeingDeleted property to verify that the object is not about to be deleted before querying or modifying it.

Parent/Child

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Parent container, specified as a Figure, Panel, Tab, TiledChartLayout, or GridLayout object.

Children, returned as an array of graphics objects. Use this property to view a list of the children or to reorder the children by setting the property to a permutation of itself.

You cannot add or remove children using the Children property. To add a child to this list, set the Parent property of the child graphics object to the Axes object.

Visibility of the object handle in the Children property of the parent, specified as one of these values:

  • "on" — Object handle is always visible.

  • "off" — Object handle is invisible at all times. This option is useful for preventing unintended changes by another function. Set the HandleVisibility to "off" to temporarily hide the handle during the execution of that function.

  • "callback" — Object handle is visible from within callbacks or functions invoked by callbacks, but not from within functions invoked from the command line. This option blocks access to the object at the command line, but permits callback functions to access it.

If the object is not listed in the Children property of the parent, then functions that obtain object handles by searching the object hierarchy or querying handle properties cannot return it. Examples of such functions include the get, findobj, gca, gcf, gco, newplot, cla, clf, and close functions.

Hidden object handles are still valid. Set the root ShowHiddenHandles property to "on" to list all object handles regardless of their HandleVisibility property setting.

Identifiers

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This property is read-only.

Type of graphics object returned as 'axes'.

Object identifier, specified as a character vector or string scalar. You can specify a unique Tag value to serve as an identifier for an object. When you need access to the object elsewhere in your code, you can use the findobj function to search for the object based on the Tag value.

User data, specified as any MATLAB array. For example, you can specify a scalar, vector, matrix, cell array, character array, table, or structure. Use this property to store arbitrary data on an object.

If you are working in App Designer, create public or private properties in the app to share data instead of using the UserData property. For more information, see Share Data Within App Designer Apps.

Version History

Introduced before R2006a

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