How do I guage plotting speed when using the plot function?
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I'm using the plot function to produce an XY plot of altitude versus time. The total number of data points is 21,834. Using the tic and toc commands, it is taking 227 seconds to plot all of these points. This seems a bit excessive. However, in reading the MATLAB documentation, as well as several other questions regarding this topic, I'm a bit confused as to what a reasonable expectation of plot time would actually be.
Is this a reasonable amount of time given the number of data points.
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  Mike Garrity
    
 le 16 Sep 2015
        Measuring graphics performance is kind of a rich topic. There are a couple of different variables which are important to consider. I've been writing introductions to some of these on the MATLAB Graphics blog:
Perhaps one of those posts would be a good starting point for you.
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  Mike Garrity
    
 le 16 Sep 2015
				Then that's probably the case I talked about in Number of graphics objects. There are a number of possible workarounds in there. Be sure to check out the first comment on that post by Yair Altman for more good suggestions.
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  Kirby Fears
      
 le 16 Sep 2015
        
      Modifié(e) : Kirby Fears
      
 le 16 Sep 2015
  
      Below is a simple test to show that plotting 21 thousand observations does not take long. The below plot is done in 0.005 seconds.
 x=1:21834;
 y=rand(1,21834);
 plot(x,y)
Are you calling the plot function repeatedly? If you show some of your code, you may get help speeding up plot performance.
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  Steven Lord
    
      
 le 17 Sep 2015
				Try calling SCATTER instead of PLOT multiple times. You can specify the colors of the points to be displayed as a vector, which is used to map to the colormap, or as a matrix of RGB triplets.
 rgbTriplets = dec2bin(0:7, 3) == '1';
 colorIndices = randi([1 size(rgbTriplets, 1)], 10, 1);
 colorOfEachPoint = rgbTriplets(colorIndices, :);
This generates 10 random point "categories" and creates a matrix with the corresponding color for each point's category in that point's row. All the points with index 1 should be black [0 0 0], 2 should be blue [0 0 1], etc.
 [colorIndices, colorOfEachPoint]
Now use colorOfEachPoint as the C input to SCATTER.
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