How to add pairs of graphs (generated through a function) to adjacent subplots?

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How to add pairs of graphs (generated through a function) to adjacent subplots?
The function "myfunction" produces two graphs, saved as Fig1 and Fig2. At every iteration of the loop for, i.e. i = 1, 3, 5, I would like to add Fig1 and Fig2 to two adjacent subplots, i.e. subplot(3,2,i) and subplot(3,2,i+1), respectively. I tried to do that with the following code, but it does not perform what I would like:
for i = [1 3 5]
[Fig1,Fig2] = myfunction;
subplot(3,2,i); Fig1;
subplot(3,2,i+1); Fig2;
end
function [Fig1,Fig2] = myfunction
Fig1 = figure; plot(1:10,rand(10,1));
Fig2 = figure; scatter(1:10,rand(10,1));
end
Any suggestion, to get the following (desired) output?
  1 comentario
Sim
Sim el 30 de Oct. de 2023
Editada: Sim el 30 de Oct. de 2023
Obviously, without "myfunction" the subplot does what I want (but I would need to add both Fig1 and Fig2 with "myfunction", as I showed in my post):
for i = [1 3 5]
subplot(3,2,i); plot(1:10,rand(10,1));
subplot(3,2,i+1); scatter(1:10,rand(10,1));
end

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Voss
Voss el 30 de Oct. de 2023
One way is to modify myfunction to take two axes as inputs and plot into those.
figure();
for i = [1 3 5]
ax1 = subplot(3,2,i);
ax2 = subplot(3,2,i+1);
myfunction_new([ax1,ax2]); % myfunction_new defined below
end
If you cannot modify myfunction, then you can use copyobj to copy the contents of each figure's axes into a subplot axes. This won't copy legends or colorbars, but you can try to adapt it. I think modifying myfunction is probably the better idea.
f = figure();
for i = [1 3 5]
[Fig1,Fig2] = myfunction(); % myfunction defined below (same as in your question)
figure(f)
ax1 = subplot(3,2,i);
copyobj(allchild(get(Fig1,'CurrentAxes')),ax1);
ax2 = subplot(3,2,i+1);
copyobj(allchild(get(Fig2,'CurrentAxes')),ax2);
delete([Fig1,Fig2]);
end
function myfunction_new(ax)
if ~nargin || numel(ax) < 2
% If fewer than two axes are given, create two new figures and store
% their axes. (This reproduces the current behavior of myfunction,
% which takes no inputs and always creates two new figures.)
figure()
ax = gca();
figure()
ax(2) = gca();
end
plot(ax(1),1:10,rand(10,1));
scatter(ax(2),1:10,rand(10,1));
end
function [Fig1,Fig2] = myfunction
Fig1 = figure; plot(1:10,rand(10,1));
Fig2 = figure; scatter(1:10,rand(10,1));
end
  7 comentarios
Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi el 30 de Oct. de 2023
You are welcome!
And yes, you can modify the function according to your requirements.
Sim
Sim el 30 de Oct. de 2023
Editada: Sim el 30 de Oct. de 2023
Got it, thank you both @Voss and @Dyuman Joshi! An example:
figure();
for i = [1 3 5]
ax1 = subplot(3,2,i);
ax2 = subplot(3,2,i+1);
new_input = rand(10,1);
myfunction_new([ax1,ax2],new_input);
end
function myfunction_new(ax,new_input)
if ~nargin || numel(ax) < 2
% If fewer than two axes are given, create two new figures and store
% their axes. (This reproduces the current behavior of myfunction,
% which takes no inputs and always creates two new figures.)
figure()
ax = gca();
figure()
ax(2) = gca();
end
% left subplots (left SPs)
hold(ax(1),'on')
yyaxis(ax(1),'left')
plot(ax(1),1:10,new_input,'b-o')
plot(ax(1),1:10,rand(10,1),'r-.o')
ylim(ax(1),[0 1])
ax(1).YAxis(1).Color = 'b';
ax(1).YAxis(2).Color = 'r';
xlabel(ax(1),'X label (left SP)')
ax(1).YAxis(1).Label.String = 'Y1 label (left SP)';
ax(1).YAxis(2).Label.String = 'Y2 label (left SP)';
hold(ax(1),'off')
% right subplots (right SPs)
hold(ax(2),'on')
bar(ax(2),1:10,new_input)
scatter(ax(2),1:10,rand(10,1),"green",'filled')
xlabel(ax(2),'X label (right SP)')
ylabel(ax(2),'Y label (right SP)')
hold(ax(2),'off')
end

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