Alternative to "drawnow" to plot real time data inside while loop

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Paul Pogba
Paul Pogba le 12 Sep 2019
Modifié(e) : Adam Danz le 13 Sep 2019
I'm reading data from ADC in real time (while loop) and I'm trying to plot in real time. Now, I can't use
pause on; hold on; etc
Because it interferes with ADC's API and how it samples the data. My code looks something like that and it does plot in real time.
while true %sampling from ADC
%read data from ADC and update
a = datafromADC;
plot3(t, real(datafromADC), imag(datafromADC))
drawnow;
end
It works but I notice that when I increase sampling rate above certain value, ADC's API crashes, giving me an error pointing to .NET library that stopped working. When I increase sampling rate but comment plot3 and drawnow,
while true %sampling from ADC
%read data from ADC and update
a = datafromADC;
%plot3(t, real(datafromADC), imag(datafromADC))
%drawnow;
end
This code works and I can plot it later but without ability to plot in real time. My theory is that ADC's API and "drawnow" compete for resources and cause API to crash.
Are there alternatives to "drawnow" to plot complex data in real time? Right now my only option is to sample data and store it, terminate "while" loop and run a different script to display it.
  3 commentaires
Adam Danz
Adam Danz le 12 Sep 2019
Paul Pogba's answer moved here as a comment.
I think the problem is that I'm plotting too fast. I'll try to change the code and comment here if it helped.
Bruno Luong
Bruno Luong le 12 Sep 2019
Modifié(e) : Bruno Luong le 12 Sep 2019
You can't plot to fast believe me, using PLOT3 and DRAWNOW.
To plot faster you must use SET(...) + DRAWNOW.
But I bet you can still update your plot faster than 100 Hz, which is slow for a computer.

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Adam Danz
Adam Danz le 12 Sep 2019
Modifié(e) : Adam Danz le 13 Sep 2019
"Are there alternatives to "drawnow" to plot complex data in real time?"
I can think of two things to try.
1) instead of calling plot3() and dealing with all of its overhead on each iteration, just plot it once and update the X/Y/ZData properties.
2) instead of executing drawnow on each iteration, use a timer to update the plot every so often.
Here are those suggestions quasi -implemented; you can fit it to your needs.
% set up drawnow timer
t = timer;
t.StartDelay = 1;
t.TimerFcn = @(~,~)drawnow;
t.Period = 1; %update every 1 sec.
h = plot3(nan,nan,nan); % Plot empty 3D line
start(t) % start drawnow timer
while true %sampling from ADC
%read data from ADC and update
a = datafromADC;
h.XData(end+1) = t; % ?
h.YData(end+1) = real(datafromADC);
h.ZData(end+1) = imag(datafromADC);
end
stop(t) %stop timer
*Not tested
[addendum]
3) before plotting this figure, clear all other figures. Every time drawnow() is executed it will update all graphics which could easily cause a bottleneck.
  4 commentaires
Paul Pogba
Paul Pogba le 12 Sep 2019
Modifié(e) : Paul Pogba le 12 Sep 2019
What I have right now is kinda working. Before I would plot every time I capture data and it appears to be too fast. Now I plot once every 10 times I capture data and it works OK. However, I noticed that when I point my mouse to the points on the graph, it freezez a little and API crashes so I still believe that plotting 40000 points in one graph and sampling at the same times causes the problem.
Adam Danz
Adam Danz le 13 Sep 2019
Modifié(e) : Adam Danz le 13 Sep 2019
If you're still calling the plot3() function every time you want to update the figure rather than updating the X/Y/ZData, there's still too much overhead (see how that's done in my answer).
If you think the number of points on the graph is slowing things down, you could plot every x samples or, better yet, the mean of every x samples.

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