Dears, am plotting the response of an sensor with one curve in real time, and i want to plot this curve with two colors, depending on the values of the returned data, when data<500 the curve is plotted in "red" when data>=500 the curve is plotted in "green" so i need to plot one curve with two colors. best regards

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Star Strider
Star Strider le 16 Jan 2015
Modifié(e) : Star Strider le 16 Jan 2015

1 vote

There may be more efficient methods, but this works:
t = linspace(0, 3*pi, 500);
y = 200*sin(t) + 400;
ygidx = (y >= 500); % Define ‘Green’ Regions
tg = t;
yg = y;
yg(ygidx == 0) = NaN;
tg(ygidx == 0) = NaN;
figure(1)
plot(t, y, '-r')
hold on
plot(tg, yg, '-g')
hold off
You may have to experiment with it to get the result you want.

2 commentaires

gregor alexander
gregor alexander le 16 Jan 2015
thnx alot
Star Strider
Star Strider le 16 Jan 2015
My pleasure!

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Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney le 16 Jan 2015

1 vote

If you plot with a patch rather than a line, you can get the color change. Depending on how much the y-values oscillate across the boundaries, you may need to upsample your data first to get a clean color transition (this particular example needed a lot of upsampling, since the values switch back and forth so much... a smoother curve won't need that):
x = 1:100;
y = rand(1,100)*1000;
xi = linspace(x(1), x(end), 5000);
yi = interp1(x,y,xi);
ci = yi < 500;
h = patch([xi NaN], [yi NaN], [ci NaN]);
set(h, 'edgecolor', 'interp');
colormap([0 1 0; 1 0 0]);

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