How do I vary color along a 2D line?
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Kathryn McCormick
le 8 Avr 2011
Modifié(e) : Adam Danz
le 31 Jan 2023
I am plotting the x,y position of a point over time. I have the data in two vectors, xpos and ypos, and I plot the path of this point using plot(xpos,ypos).
I would like to have this line change color gradually, representing the time axis ( or the index of the x, y vectors).
Is there an easy way to do this?
1 commentaire
Rajiv
le 10 Fév 2014
Can be show line plot with different color, if not to use the surface plot as Matt did.
Réponse acceptée
Matt Fig
le 8 Avr 2011
Modifié(e) : Adam Danz
le 31 Jan 2023
This is one of the classic 'tricks' of MATLAB graphics.
x = 0:.05:2*pi;
y = sin(x);
z = zeros(size(x));
col = x; % This is the color, vary with x in this case.
surface([x;x],[y;y],[z;z],[col;col],...
'facecol','no',...
'edgecol','interp',...
'linew',2);
EDIT
Changed edgecolor to interp and linewidth to 2. This looks less ragged on my machine.
11 commentaires
Image Analyst
le 19 Jan 2021
Adding the plot so we can actually see what it looks like:
x = linspace(0, 2*pi, 1920); % HDTV resolution.
y = sin(x);
z = zeros(size(x));
lineColor = x; % This is the color, it varies with x in this case.
% Plot the line with width 8 so we can see the colors well.
surface([x;x], [y;y], [z;z], [lineColor;lineColor],...
'FaceColor', 'no',...
'EdgeColor', 'interp',...
'LineWidth', 8);
grid on;

Roy Goodman
le 17 Mai 2021
Modifié(e) : Roy Goodman
le 17 Mai 2021
I tried this for something I'm working on, and am getting a weird artifact:
Each of the 6 edges of this tetrahedron are computed using the line
surface([x1 x1]',[x2 x2]',[x3 x3]',[y y]',...
'facecolor','none','edgecolor','interp','linewidth',6);
where the arrays x1, x2, x3 parameterize a straight line in 3D space, and y is constant on three of the edges and a monotonically varying sigmoidal function on the other three edges. As you can see from this image, the color index looks very non-monotonic and even noisy on the three edges where the solution varies.
The included graphic was created using the print command, but this is how it appears on the screen as well.
I've tried a few tricks to fix it, neither of which helped
- reducing the number of colors in the colormap
- changing the 'edgecolor' to 'flat'

Plus de réponses (3)
KSSV
le 18 Fév 2022
x = 0:.05:2*pi;
y = sin(x);
z = y;
patch([x nan],[y nan],[z nan],[z nan], 'edgecolor', 'interp');
colorbar;colormap(jet);
1 commentaire
Daniel Refy
le 7 Mar 2015
N=1 numel(data(:,1)) for a=1:N:numel(data(:,1))-N plot(data(a:a+N,1),data(a:a+N,2),'.','Color',[(a/numel(data(:,1))),0,0] ) hold on end
this will change color of the line from black to red
1 commentaire
Ariel Szklanny
le 2 Déc 2018
Modifié(e) : Ariel Szklanny
le 2 Déc 2018
This worked great for me, thanks!
Paulo Silva
le 8 Avr 2011
Something similar to this:
plot(xpos(1:10),ypos(1:10)) %first points in blue
plot(xpos(11:20),ypos(11:20),'g') %green ones
plot(xpos(21:end),ypos(21:end),'r') %final points in red
another way, the hold all function makes the plots with different color (until the list of available colors ends and after it start from the first one again)
clf
hold all
plot(xpos(1:10),ypos(1:10))
plot(xpos(11:20),ypos(11:20))
plot(xpos(21:31),ypos(21:31))
... %more plots until the end of the indexes
You can insert the code inside a for loop
clf
hold all
N=7; %every N points change color
for a=1:N:numel(xpos)-N
plot(xpos(a:a+N),ypos(a:a+N))
end
2 commentaires
Paulo Silva
le 8 Avr 2011
You can change the order of the colors and give the impression of it being continously.
axes
MyColorOrder=get(gca,'ColorOrder'); %RGB combinations per row
%make your own color order, you can even add more row (more possible colors)
set(gca,'ColorOrder',MyColorOrder); %RGB combinations per row
hold all
N=7; %every N points change color
for a=1:N:numel(xpos)-N
plot(xpos(a:a+N),ypos(a:a+N))
end
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