Effacer les filtres
Effacer les filtres

Change colour of points in plot3 with increasing z value

87 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Mahi Nazir
Mahi Nazir le 10 Fév 2016
Modifié(e) : Mahi Nazir le 10 Fév 2016
Hi I have a set of x values, set of y values and for each x,y I have a z value. I have to plot them as shown in the attached figure. I am using plot3 to plot that graph. I want to change the colour of the points according to the value of z. The more the value of z, more is the intensity. Any help will be appreciated.

Réponses (2)

Mike Garrity
Mike Garrity le 10 Fév 2016
No, plot3 only supports a single color. You can use other graphics functions. The "traditional" one for this purpose is actually rather surprising. It's the patch function, which is designed for drawing filled polygons.
Consider this example:
x = cos(theta);
y = sin(theta);
z = theta;
plot3(x,y,z)
I can draw it colored by Z like this:
cla
patch([x nan],[y nan],[z nan],[z nan],'EdgeColor','interp','FaceColor','none')
What's going on here is the following:
  • The 4th arg says to use Z for color data
  • The EdgeColor=interp says to interpolate the color data as the edge color
  • The FaceColor=none says to not fill the polygon. Just draw the edges
  • The nans say not to connect the last point to the first point.
There are a couple of other options, but that's probably what most old-school MATLAB programmers use.
  1 commentaire
Mahi Nazir
Mahi Nazir le 10 Fév 2016
Thanks Mike. I want discrete data points in z, so I use plot3(x, y, z, '*') How will I get these discrete points using patch?

Connectez-vous pour commenter.


Steven Lord
Steven Lord le 10 Fév 2016
Based on the picture, which did not have lines connecting the points, I think SCATTER3 is the function you're looking for.
  2 commentaires
Mike Garrity
Mike Garrity le 10 Fév 2016
Yes, Steve's right. That's the better bet.
That'll teach me to not look at the picture!
Mahi Nazir
Mahi Nazir le 10 Fév 2016
Modifié(e) : Mahi Nazir le 10 Fév 2016
Thank you Steven. How to set the colour intensity based on the value of z. If say, z= 8 for both (x1, y1) and say (x3, y3), z should be plotted in the same colour when z has the same value. So that the plot is colour coded. Can you cite an example with the kind of data I have please. My x is (nx1), y is (nx1) and z obviously is (nx1).

Connectez-vous pour commenter.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by