Plot with bar side by side and with two y axes

2 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Rachele Franceschini
Rachele Franceschini le 18 Août 2022
Réponse apportée : dpb le 18 Août 2022
I have this script to obtain subplot with bar, but I would rather that the bars were side by side and with two y axes. How can I do? I have in this case the bars one above the other. The result is shown in figure below.
% Create figure
figure1 = figure('NumberTitle','off','Name','Figure','Color',[1 1 1]);
%bar plot e scatter 2011
subplot1=subplot(3,2,1,'Parent',figure1)
x1 = (1:5)';
y1 = tweetsvsnewsS3.somma_1_2;
y2 = tweetsvsnewsS3.tweets_1;
yyaxis left
p1 = bar(x1,y1, 'BarWidth', 0.25);
p1(1).FaceColor = [0.56 0.10 0.74];
yyaxis right
p12=bar(x1,y2,'BarWidth', 0.25)
p12(1).FaceColor = [0.41 0.28 0.79];
box(subplot1,'on');
hold(subplot1,'off');
set(subplot1,'XGrid','on','XMinorGrid','on','XMinorTick','on','YGrid','on',...
'YMinorGrid','on','YMinorTick','on');
set(gca,'xtick',1:12,...
'xticklabel',{'Nov 24','Nov 25','Nov 26','Nov 27','Nov 28'})
ylabel('count');
title('Data','FontSize',12)
I tried also this script but I didn't have the second y axis. In figure there is the result.
% Create figure
figure1 = figure('NumberTitle','off','Name','Figure','Color',[1 1 1]);
%bar plot e scatter 2011
subplot1=subplot(3,2,1,'Parent',figure1)
x1 = (1:5)';
y1 = tweetsvsnewsS3.somma_1_2;
y2 = tweetsvsnewsS3.tweets_1;
p1 = bar(x1,[y1,y2],'BarWidth', 0.80);
p1(1).FaceColor = [0.56 0.10 0.74];
p1(2).FaceColor = [0.41 0.28 0.79];
box(subplot1,'on');
hold(subplot1,'off');
set(subplot1,'XGrid','on','XMinorGrid','on','XMinorTick','on','YGrid','on',...
'YMinorGrid','on','YMinorTick','on');
set(gca,'xtick',1:12,...
'xticklabel',{'Nov 24','Nov 25','Nov 26','Nov 27','Nov 28'})
ylabel('count');
title('Data','FontSize',12)

Réponse acceptée

dpb
dpb le 18 Août 2022
You can't have two overlaying axes with the same x value and use bar with only a single variable because then the bars will always be at the same location on the x axis. I suppose one could get very clever about setting the xlim values on the two, but that would be tricky at best...
The solution to your dilemma is the magic of NaN -- create a dummy variable for each of the two variables in turn and plot the both as if they were grouped as your last plot --
x=datetime(2022,11,24:28).';
y1=randi(20,size(x));
y2=randi(500,size(x));
hB1=bar(x,[ y1 nan(size(x))]);
yyaxis right
hB2=bar(x,[nan(size(x)) y2]);
But, while this does what you wanted, I'd contend it is misleading owing to the scaling on separate axes makes the two variables appear to be nearly the same in amplitude.
Sometimes, "just because you CAN do something doesn't mean you SHOULD!"

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