how to plot a function on each axis in matlab?

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Ahmad Ahmatto
Ahmad Ahmatto el 23 de Ag. de 2019
Comentada: Walter Roberson el 24 de Ag. de 2019
Dear All,
I've been having difficulty with this one. All the examples refer to making a meshgrid with x, y , then those last two gets mapped onto the function z(x,y)
however I want to do something totally different. I'd like to plot each function
1st Axis X: 1st function g(t,u) where t on [0 : tstep: 10] , u = [-10: ustep : 10] ;
% do we just do a meshgrid for those two ranges first off?
2nd Axis Y: 2nd function log10(g(t,u)) for log defined on [-1 :logstep: 1]
3rd Axis Z: time progression t from [0 : tstep: 10]
I need to study the function g(t,u) in respect of its Log10 as time progresses, hopefully it would make more sense with the following pseudo code:
define g(t,u) on [-10:gstep:10] , t on [0 : tstep: 10] , u = [-10: ustep : 10] ;
define log10(g(t,u)) on [-1 :logstep: 1]
define t on [0 : tstep: 10]
plot3D ( g(t,u) , log10(g(t,u)) , t) ; % that's the Target End Result
  5 comentarios
Ahmad Ahmatto
Ahmad Ahmatto el 24 de Ag. de 2019
view would be helpful, thank you.
However that does not help in visualizing the relationship between g(t,u) & log10(g(t,u)) ( with t)
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 24 de Ag. de 2019
The relationship between g(t,u) and log10(g(t,u)) is log10.
You could create two plots, one log10 and the other not log.
If you want to plot log10(g) and g as if they are two independent variables, then you will need to explain how you want to collapse all of the differences caused by u onto a single axes. For example, is it acceptable to plot t, max(g(t,u) over u), log10(max(g(t,u) over u)) -- a "maximum intensity projection" ?

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