Making two different color maps in 2014b

10 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
John
John le 18 Nov 2014
Commenté : Serena le 4 Mar 2025
I'm trying to figure out how to use two different color maps in 2014b and use multiple color bars. Specifically I want to plot some image data and on top of that plot a set of contours.
Basically in the past I used freezecolors and cbfreeze. The same method behind freezecolors still works, changing the CData of your image to RGB values, but the colorbar is still a problem. CBfreeze doesn't seem to work any more because the colorbar objects are no long structs and now are specific objects.
I want to have separate colorbars for both the image data and contours but I can't seem to figure out the issue with the colorbars.
Thanks,
John
  3 commentaires
Jorge Ramirez
Jorge Ramirez le 18 Nov 2014
I have the same question/problem. I am attaching a figure of what I could do before 2014b using freezeColors and cbfreeze. However, cbfreeze does not seem to work in 2014b. Thank you.
Adam
Adam le 19 Nov 2014
Wow, I'd never noticed R2014b snuck in that change. It's something I've wanted for quite a while, but must have missed in the changes listings!

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Réponse acceptée

Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski le 18 Nov 2014
Modifié(e) : Sean de Wolski le 18 Nov 2014
You can still use the freezecolors approach or one like I use in my meshCanopy function (same idea). You'll need to set the 'Limits' property of the colorbar to the range you want (and perhaps the tick/ticklabel etc.). For example:
I = imread('cameraman.tif');
n = 64;
meshCanopy(I,stdfilt(I),parula(n),80);
h = colorbar;
%%Now compare
h.Limits = [256 256+n];

Plus de réponses (4)

Nash Chu
Nash Chu le 23 Sep 2016
Modifié(e) : Nash Chu le 23 Sep 2016
Actually you just need to add 'gca' when you define your colormap. like this:
figure
subplot(2,1,1)
pcolor(x,y,pxy);shading interp;
colormap(gca,jet);
colorbar;
subplot(2,1,2)
pcolor(x,y,pxy);shading interp;
colormap(gca,autumn);
colorbar;
  1 commentaire
Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 23 Sep 2016
I recommend avoiding using gca in your program files. When experimenting in the Command Window it's okay, but inside a function (and especially inside a GUI) it's too easy for the current axes to change without you realizing it. [As one example you create an axes intending to manipulate it using gca but before you can your user gets a little bored and clicks on a different axes.]
Instead, call subplot with an output argument (which will be the handle of the subplot axes) and pass that handle into colormap.
h = subplot(2, 1, 1);
% stuff
colormap(h, jet);

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Jorge Ramirez
Jorge Ramirez le 19 Nov 2014
Thank you, Sean. However, the problem is how to add two different colorbars corresponding to the two different colormaps. Your example shows only one colorbar. I am attaching an example graph of what I mean. I produced the attached graph with Matlab 2013b using freezecolors and cbfreeze. However, as I said, cbfreeze does not work anylonger on Matlab 2014b.
Thank you.
Jorge
  2 commentaires
Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski le 19 Nov 2014
Modifié(e) : Sean de Wolski le 19 Nov 2014
In that case just call colorbar twice and change the position as necessary:
I = imread('cameraman.tif');
meshCanopy(I,stdfilt(I),parula(64),80);
ax = gca;
h = colorbar('peer',ax);
h.Limits = [1 256];
h.Ticks = [];
h.Position(1) = h.Position(1)-0.1;
h = colorbar('peer',ax);
h.Limits = [256 256+64];
h.Ticks = [];
John
John le 19 Nov 2014
Modifié(e) : John le 19 Nov 2014
Hi Sean,
I think you got it, thanks for the help! The only thing I'm going to have to watch out for is if the two data sources here are in the same range. It looks like you get around that by adding an offset to the data in the manifold right? I believe you can work around this by changing the labeling on the colorbar. I'll post a piece of example code if I get it working to show what I'm talking about.

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Raul
Raul le 17 Fév 2015
Still isn't clear how to use two different colormaps. How do you change the colormap?

Chad Greene
Chad Greene le 16 Août 2015
I made a solution to this for a problem I was working on. It's called newcolorbar.
  2 commentaires
Zhengwei Lai
Zhengwei Lai le 3 Déc 2015
thanks for your suggest
Serena
Serena le 4 Mar 2025
I am trying to create a surface plot which uses two different inputs so two different colorbars etc.
I have tried freezecolors but this function keeps the different colormaps for plots but not the colorbars.
I tried your function but when I ran the newcolorbar command the data in the plot dissappeared, and I had both colormaps with an empty plot. Is there a command I must add to fix this?
Thanks

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