Plot legend shows same color for 2 graphs
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I plot a coordinate system with three different graphs (three different colors), but plot legend shows same color for two of them (B and C). This is what I did
figure(1)
plot(t,y3,'r',t,y2,'g',t,y1,'b')
leg=legend('A','B','C',2)
set(leg,'Interpreter','none')
I don't see what's wrong.
4 comentarios
Geoff Hayes
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Ljix - what are the dimensions of t, y3, y2, and y1? If one or more of these variables are not row or column arrays, then you may be plotting more than what you are expecting. See http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/answers/146668-legend-and-graph-doesn-t-have-the-same-color for an idea of what may be going wrong.
Ljix
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Editada: Geoff Hayes
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Geoff Hayes
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
But what are the dimensions? How are y2 and y1 defined? Type the following in your command window
size(y3)
size(y2)
size(y1)
What do you observe?
Ljix
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Editada: Walter Roberson
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Respuestas (2)
Walter Roberson
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
1 voto
Your y2 is 2 x 6000. When you plot t, y2 MATLAB is going to notice that your t is 6000 and will figure that needs to be matched to the 6000 of your y2, so MATLAB will automatically transpose your y2 to be 6000 x 2 . Then it will draw 2 lines for y2, one for each column. Those two lines are throwing off your legend. You are not drawing 3 different graphs, you are drawing 4 different graphs.
6 comentarios
Ljix
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Walter Roberson
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
You do not have three different functions, you have four different functions. Your y2 is defining two different functions in the same variable.
As an example:
t = 1:10;
y = [t.^2;t.^3];
plot(t,y)
This has one variable, y, but stores two different functions in that variable, and the plot produces two different lines.
Ljix
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Walter Roberson
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Your An or Bn might be different sizes than the corresponding matrices you use for y1 or y2.
Ljix
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
Walter Roberson
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
"Solution, returned as a vector, full matrix, or sparse matrix. If A is an m-by-n matrix and B is an m-by-p matrix, then x is an n-by-p matrix, including the case when p==1."
So if your A was something by 2, then you would get a 2 x 1 result instead of a scalar
Kelly Kearney
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
What are the dimensions of your variables? If any are arrays rather than vectors, they will create multiple lines. In that case, you'll need to save the line handles and pass only the first of each color to legend:
t = 1:10;
y1 = rand(10,1); % 1 line
y2 = rand(10,2); % 2 lines
y3 = rand(10,1); % 1 line
figure(1)
h = plot(t,y3,'r',t,y2,'g',t,y1,'b');
leg = legend(h([1 2 4]), 'A','B','C');
1 comentario
Ljix
el 4 de Feb. de 2016
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