Split legend of figure into multiple columns ?

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Aravin
Aravin el 1 de En. de 2012
Comentada: Marcus Oliveira el 22 de Feb. de 2021
Dear All,
I have one figure which have many curves. I can't show my legend inside the figure so I have to show them outside. There are two possible layouts(orientation) of legends:
  1. Vertical
  2. Horizontal
In both orientation, legend gets too big to display. It can be displayed properly if and only if I could split legend into multiple columns. Like in first column I show 10 curves name and in second column I show next 10. I could not figure it either it is possible or not?
Any suggestion will be highly appreciated.

Respuesta aceptada

Jan
Jan el 1 de En. de 2012
See:
Lookinf in the FileExschange is always a good idea.
  1 comentario
Aravin
Aravin el 1 de En. de 2012
Thank you so much. This is exactly what I wanted :-)

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Más respuestas (3)

MattF
MattF el 25 de Ag. de 2017
Editada: MattF el 25 de Ag. de 2017
Hi!
I was also using columnlegend which is a great tool. However, I found myself another solution that might be useful to somebody and I will give you a short example here for a two rows legend:
Let's say you define your plots as array like this
h(i) = plot(x,y,<options>);
And your legend as cell
legendInfo = {'item1','item2',...,'itemN'};
Then you can define a legend object as follows
hL1 = legend(h(1:l), legendInfo(1:l), <options>);
hL2 = legend(h(l+1:end), legendInfo(l+1:end), <options>);
where in options you might be willing to set e.g. the orientation as 'horizontal'. Then you can define a position and the units for this
newPosition1 = [a b c d];
newPosition2 = [e f g h];
newUnits = 'normalized';
where actually 'c' and 'd' are the same as 'g' and 'h'. Eventually, you can set your legend as
set(hL1, 'Position', newPosition1, 'Units', newUnits);
set(hL2, 'Position', newPosition2, 'Units', newUnits);
  1 comentario
Marcus Oliveira
Marcus Oliveira el 22 de Feb. de 2021
Thanks, MattF!
How could I write these lines in a single box?

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Jessica
Jessica el 4 de En. de 2019
MattF - thanks for offering this alternate solution! I'm using Matlab version 2018a, and it doesn't seem to work for me.
When I create the first legend, hL1 has type matlab.graphics.illustration.Legend. Then when I create hL2, it has the same type, and appears to simply overwrite hL1, even though both stay in my variable space.
I then tried to assign them different locations, but the last-created legend just moves around - the first legend appears to have been over-written. I'm guessing that this is a Matlab version issue, but wanted to know if I was missing something, perhaps in those <options>.
  3 comentarios
ahmad eldeeb
ahmad eldeeb el 30 de En. de 2019
It doesn't work for 2017b but works for 2018b with me as :
set(legend, 'NumColumns' ,3)
Praveen Teleti
Praveen Teleti el 10 de Abr. de 2019
To avoid first legend object being overwritten, save a copy of figure object just before you create second legend object, example:
hL1 = legend(h(1:l), legendInfo(1:l), <options>);
set(hL1, 'Position', [0.7 0.4 0.1 0.4]);
a=axes('position',get(gca,'position'),'visible','off');
hL2 = legend(a,h(l+1:end), legendInfo(l+1:end), <options>);
set(hL2, 'Position', [0.78 0.4 0.1 0.4]);
This process can be repeated any number of times to create any number of legend objects. Hope it helps!

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Camilo Malagon Nieto
Camilo Malagon Nieto el 14 de Ag. de 2017
Can some one explain this commands better... because for example the columnlegend gives "Undefined function 'columnlegend' for input arguments of type 'cell'." ????
  1 comentario
Jan
Jan el 14 de Ag. de 2017
This is not a problem of the command, but you did not install in in a folder, which is contained in your Matlab path. See:
help addpath

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