why can I not create 3 subplots?

1 vue (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Matthias Pospiech
Matthias Pospiech le 21 Fév 2012
This code deletes the second subplot when the third is created:
clc
figure(1); clf;
sp(1) = subplot(1,3,1, 'Parent', hfig);
set(sp(1),'Position',[0.02 0.05 0.30 0.80]);
sp(2) = subplot(1,3,2, 'Parent', hfig);
set(sp(2),'Position',[0.32 0.15 0.60 0.80]);
sp(3) = subplot(1,3,3, 'Parent', hfig);
set(sp(3),'Position',[0.22 0.25 0.50 0.80]);
But why???

Réponse acceptée

Matt Tearle
Matt Tearle le 21 Fév 2012
subplot deletes any axes that are already where you're trying to put the new one. If you're going to set the position property of the axes manually anyway, why bother with subplot at all? Just use axes:
clc, figure(1); clf;
sp(1) = axes('Parent', hfig);
set(sp(1),'Position',[0.02 0.05 0.30 0.80]);
sp(2) = axes('Parent', hfig);
set(sp(2),'Position',[0.32 0.15 0.60 0.80]);
sp(3) = axes('Parent', hfig);
set(sp(3),'Position',[0.22 0.25 0.50 0.80]);
  4 commentaires
Matthias Pospiech
Matthias Pospiech le 21 Fév 2012
I do not want overlapping axis, I just did it to show the effect. Actually I wanted to create 3 plots with equal width side by side. But once I create the third one the second is deleted.
Jiro Doke
Jiro Doke le 21 Fév 2012
Oh I see. The actual axes bounds go beyond the position (since there needs to be space for the axes tick labels), so that's why "subplot" thinks they are overlapping even if you place them side by side.
So you're better off just using the axes function. If you think about it, the first 3 arguments of subplots are meant for axes placement. If you're going to change the placement position, then subplot probably isn't the right choice.

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