I want to plot four sets of data using plotyy. The four sets are two sets of experimental data and the other two are predicted (calculated) values. Therefore, they would have different sizes. Ex, the experimental data for x and y are 13 points, while for predicted value, I have x=0:100:1. Therefore I can not use the plotyy with matrix method. Could anyone help with this? Thanks in advance.

 Réponse acceptée

Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney le 31 Mar 2015

0 votes

So you want one predicted/experimental pair on one axis, and another predicted/experimental pair on the other axis? If so, plot both predicted sets with plotyy, save the handles to the resulting axes, and then plot the experimental datasets:
x{1} = linspace(0,10,13);
y{1} = rand(1,13);
x{2} = linspace(0,10,100);
y{2} = rand(1,100);
x{3} = linspace(0,10,13);
y{3} = rand(1,13) * 100;
x{4} = linspace(0,10,100);
y{4} = rand(1,100) * 100;
[hax, hln(1,1), hln(2,1)] = plotyy(x{1}, y{1}, x{3},y{3});
hold(hax(1), 'on');
hold(hax(2), 'on');
hln(1,2) = plot(hax(1), x{2}, y{2}, 'o');
hln(2,2) = plot(hax(2), x{4}, y{4}, 'x');

Plus de réponses (1)

the cyclist
the cyclist le 31 Mar 2015

0 votes

plotyy is really only needed if your different y values have very different scales (e.g. number of employees and total revenue over time). Because you are doing a fit, I am guessing that your y values are about the same scale.
Therefore, I think you really only need the ability to plot two lines on the same plot (even if they different lengths.) There are several ways to accomplish that. Here is one simple example.
% Pretend data with 13 points
data_x = rand(1,13);
data_y = rand(1,13);
% Pretend fit with 100 points [NOT AN ACTUAL FIT. JUST MADE UP!]
fit_x = linspace(0,1);
fit_y = 0.5*ones(size(fit_x)) + 0.1*fit_x.^2;
% Figure with both data and "fit"
figure
hold on
plot(data_x,data_y,'.')
plot(fit_x,fit_y)

3 commentaires

Jingxin
Jingxin le 31 Mar 2015
Thank you for the reply, but actually I have two y axis. The predicted and experimental values are at the same scale, but there are two sets which have very different scale. Also, I am hoping that to be able to color the y axis in different colors to identify them easily. Any idea? I have been tried to use the line function with four lines, but would not be able to put the legend for all four lines--only the last one would show.
Chad Greene
Chad Greene le 31 Mar 2015
I agree with the cyclist. If you're comparing predicted values to measured values, you should not use plotyy. If the y scales are so vastly different between predicted and measured values, that's probably an issue worth depicting clearly, letting the viewer directly compare the different values. Use
plot(x,predicted_y,'k-')
hold on
plot(x,measured_y,'ro')
Jingxin
Jingxin le 2 Avr 2015
yeah...I kinda have to do that way.

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