I want draw a graph correctly
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I write code like this
function z = F3(x,y)
z = 4- x.^2- 2*y.^2;
figure(1)
[X,Y] = meshgrid(0:0.1:2);
mesh(X,Y,F3(X,Y))
axis([0 2 0 2 0 6])
and than
graph is came out like this

I don't want to see value of Z under '0'
How can I do that??
Thought I give the value of the Z axis range from 0 to 6, but it is steel came out like this ,,,
3 comentarios
Walter Roberson
el 19 de En. de 2016
I confirm that with that release on Mac I see the same results. The clipping property of the axes is seemingly being ignored.
Respuestas (1)
Thorsten
el 18 de En. de 2016
With your axis command you cut off the z values at 0 (with the third 0 in axis([0 2 0 2 0 6]). Instead, use:
Z = F3(X,Y);
mesh(X,Y,Z);
axis([0 2 0 2 min(Z(:)) max(Z(:))])
3 comentarios
Thorsten
el 19 de En. de 2016
I see. You could set the negative Z values to 0 or NaN:
Z(Z<0) = 0;
or
Z(Z<0) = NaN;
In the first case you have the a mesh at the positions were Z < 0, with NaN the cut-off is ragged. So both solutions may be better than the original plot, but they are not perfect.
Mike Garrity
el 19 de En. de 2016
Editada: Mike Garrity
el 19 de En. de 2016
You're seeing something called
ClippingStyle = 'rectangle'
In that type of clipping, the geometry is clipped at the 2D rectangle that surrounds the axes. That was the only type of clipping that MATLAB Graphics supported until R2014b. Since that release, you have another choice:
ClippingStyle = '3dbox'

And I think that will actually be the default in this case. So if you upgrade to a newer version, you should get what you want.
In newer versions, if you don't like the clipping style that was chosen for you, you can change it like so:
set(gca,'ClippingStyle','3dbox')
or
set(gca,'ClippingStyle','rectangle')
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