How do I make a figure full screen programmatically in MATLAB?
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MathWorks Support Team
el 27 de Jun. de 2009
Editada: MathWorks Support Team
el 2 de Feb. de 2024
I would like to make my figure "full screen" without using the mouse to maximize the figure window.
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MathWorks Support Team
el 4 de Sept. de 2024
Editada: MathWorks Support Team
el 28 de Ag. de 2023
Starting in MATLAB R2018a, you can use the WindowState property to maximize, minimize, or display a figure in full-screen mode.
To make a figure the same size as your screen in previous releases, you may use this command:
figure('units','normalized','outerposition',[0 0 1 1])
Please also see the related solution below for a method of programmatically maximizing, minimizing, and restoring a figure window.
2 comentarios
Elias Gule
el 24 de Mzo. de 2015
I hope this helps:
hFig = figure('Name','25');
MathWorks Support Team
el 4 de Nov. de 2020
Editada: MathWorks Support Team
el 2 de Feb. de 2024
Starting in MATLAB R2018a, you can use the "WindowState" property to maximize, minimize, or display a figure in full-screen mode. Please refer to the following documentation for more information:
Más respuestas (6)
Antonio Javier Barragán Piña
el 6 de Jun. de 2016
set(gcf, 'Position', get(0, 'Screensize'));
3 comentarios
Chuck
el 18 de Oct. de 2017
This one is actually way better than the one verified above. Great job, thanks!
Walter Roberson
el 16 de En. de 2020
You would put it in the code at the point at which you want to force the figure to full screen.
If you want to do it for a GUIDE GUI then you can put it in the *OpenFcn callback code.
Dominik Mattioli
el 20 de Jun. de 2019
Editada: Dominik Mattioli
el 20 de Jun. de 2019
If you want to account for the taskbar (I found this in the comments of some other question):
fh = figure();
fh.WindowState = 'maximized';
2 comentarios
Dominik Mattioli
el 16 de En. de 2020
Not sure what you mean without seeing any code. As long as you’re not reassigning the variable for the specific figure’s handle (fh) in your for loop, this solution should always work.
Steven Lord
el 16 de En. de 2020
If you're creating many figure objects in a loop and want them all to be maximized, you could set that property at creation.
fh = figure('WindowState', 'maximized')
Most if not all settable properties of Handle Graphics objects can be set this way, though sometimes (mainly for properties that interact like Units and Position) you may need to be careful about your input argument ordering.
Bogdan Dzyubak
el 16 de Ag. de 2016
Editada: MathWorks Support Team
el 24 de Jun. de 2021
The proposed methods are simple but make the figure "nearly" full screen which can cause you to close the maximized Matlab session instead of the figure.
For actual maximize you can use the following:
figure;
pause(0.00001);
frame_h = get(handle(gcf),'JavaFrame');
set(frame_h,'Maximized',1);
5 comentarios
Jan
el 26 de Feb. de 2018
Under Windows you can use the API of the OS, see https://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/31437-windowapi :
FigH = figure;
WindowAPI(FigH, 'full'); % fill the current monitor
WindowAPI(FigH, 'work'); % fill the current monitor without taskbar, if there is one
No window border anymore, just the inner position.
0 comentarios
DGM
el 31 de Dic. de 2020
Similar to Jan's answer, it's possible to use system-level tools to maximize windows in Linux. That way, the behavior should be version-agnostic and will resize the window to the geometry that you'd expect if you just clicked the window maximize button manually.
In order to identify the window externally, simply give the figure window an unambiguous title. Then you can just use wmctrl to fetch the windowid and subsequently maximize the window.
windowname='AUTOPLOTTER';
set(myfigurehandle,'numbertitle','off','name',windowname)
pause(1) % wait for the window manager
system(sprintf('winid=$(wmctrl -lx | grep "%s" | cut -d \\ -f 1 | tail -n 1); wmctrl -ir "$winid" -b add,maximized_vert,maximized_horz',windowname))
5 comentarios
DGM
el 3 de En. de 2021
I said it should be (Matlab) version-agnostic. I've only used it on a handful of versions, and nothing particularly new, so I can't guarantee that. I kind of expect that's the default unspoken disclaimer for Matlab code, especially as graphics stuff evolves.
The primary issue is that it's not platform-agnostic. It's not going to work on Windows or if wmctrl isn't installed. That probably means that the majority of users can't use this simplified code out of the box, and I don't feel like relying on everyone to read the FEX description before they download it and get disappointed. If someone else is in a better position to use it as a special case alongside code suited for newer versions or other platforms, I'll leave it to them.
I didn't say it was ideal. It's probably slower than anything else. It's just what I use in my own scripts for generating documentation. I have a habit of using the bludgeon of tools like wmctrl to solve problems when other apps have no means to behave as I expect, so maybe I tend to overuse it out of mere familiarity.
Rik
el 3 de En. de 2021
There are plenty of submissions that sound like they have implemented some revolutionary idea, all while simply setting the Position to the screensize. Looking at the comments in Jan's submission I don't see anyone complaining that it only works on Windows. As long as your description clearly states this requirement, I don't see why it doesn't deserve a FEX page. The chance that it will be found by prospective users here is much smaller.
Do you have a way of programatically checking if wmctrl is working as expected? If so, you could even implement a check (along with isunix&&~ismac) and issue an error. In my humble opinion you shouldn't worry about people who don't bother to read the first two lines of your description.
If I ever decide to implement this, I will put a link to this answer in the comments of the code. If you ever do decide to post this to the FEX I can credit the FEX entry instead.
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