flipped indexes in 3D array

10 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
VALENTINA CARMONA MONGUA
VALENTINA CARMONA MONGUA le 20 Déc 2021
I'm defining a constant value for a grid point in a 3D matrix, when I plot it it takes the x value as y and the y value as x:
%define the axis
x=[0:10]
y=[0:10]
a=length(x)
%create 3D array of zeros
T=zeros(a,a,a)
%T(x=4,y=8,k=1)=100 a cosntant value for a grid point with position 4,8 in the slice 1 of T
T(4,8,1)=100
%plotting all values of x ,y and the 1st slice of T
surf(x,y,T(:,:,1))
xlabel('x')
ylabel('y')
%%END OF CODE
the graph is the following:
the value 100 is being given to a point in x=8 and y=4, meaning a flip indexing of T, T(y,x,k) why could this be happen?
Also, the matrix is:

Réponse acceptée

Image Analyst
Image Analyst le 20 Déc 2021
Arrays are indexed at M(row, column, slice), or M(y, x, slice). A common mistake is to put x first in the index list like M(x, y, slice). That is not correct. Row is y, NOT x, so row/y comes first, not x.
Also you might experiment around with calling
axis xy
or
axis ij
after you call a display or plotting function. This will flip the vertical axis so that the origin is at the top or bottom - whichever place you want it at.

Plus de réponses (1)

Voss
Voss le 20 Déc 2021
Modifié(e) : Voss le 20 Déc 2021
Notice the documentation for surf states that input argument X is "x-coordinates, specified as a matrix the same size as Z, or as a vector with length n, where [m,n] = size(Z)" and Y is "y-coordinates, specified as a matrix the same size as Z or as a vector with length m, where [m,n] = size(Z)".
In other words, when using vector inputs as X and Y, the number of elements of X must be the same as the number of columns of Z and the number of elements of Y must be the same as the number of rows of Z. So surf interprets Z as having Y along the first dimension (down) and X along the second dimension (across).
In this case, the number of elements of X and Y are the same, so it's not obvious, but if you try it with say, x = [0:5]; y = [0:10]; surf(x,y,zeros(6,11)); you'll get an error because the third argument must be of size 11-by-6, i.e., you must do surf(x,y,zeros(11,6)); in that case.
All that is to say: transpose your matrix in the call to surf, and it'll work:
surf(x,y,T(:,:,1).')

Catégories

En savoir plus sur Line Plots dans Help Center et File Exchange

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!

Translated by