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plotting two parametric functions in same figure

9 vues (au cours des 30 derniers jours)
Danny Van Elsen
Danny Van Elsen le 6 Oct 2019
Commenté : Star Strider le 6 Oct 2019
I was trying to plot a parametric function, and its inverse, like this:
t= linspace (-30, +30);
x= t;
y= (t.^5) + t + 1;
plot(x,y)
hold on
% t= linspace (-30, +30); <-- no difference
xx= (t.^5) + t + 1;
yy= t;
plot(xx,yy)
but this gives an empty plot, just showing axes with a far larger range than -30:30
what would I be doing wrong?
regards,D.

Réponse acceptée

Danny Van Elsen
Danny Van Elsen le 6 Oct 2019
ah, yes, I see.
adding
ylim([-10 10])
xlim([-10 10])
gives other results
thanks for your patience there...
  1 commentaire
Star Strider
Star Strider le 6 Oct 2019
You never mentioned that you just wanted to limit the axes ranges.

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Plus de réponses (1)

Star Strider
Star Strider le 6 Oct 2019
You are not doing anything wrong, you are simply misinterpreting the results. The first function would plot with ‘t’ on the x-axis, going from (-30,30). The second function does the reverse of this, and so the plot adapts to the largest range on both axes, going from to .
(Also, the plot is not empty when I plot it.)
  2 commentaires
Star Strider
Star Strider le 6 Oct 2019
Danny Van Elsen‘s Answer moved here —
thank you for your response!
but my output is consistently empty:
I get the expected result when entering either of the two functions alone, but nothing when entering both?
regards, D.
Star Strider
Star Strider le 6 Oct 2019
My pleasure!
It is not empty. It shows the two functions crossing each other. The lines are not the plot axes. The blue line is the plot of (x,y), and the red line is the plot of (xx,yy).

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