Matlab Plots Very Small dots

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Pourya saber
Pourya saber el 16 de Feb. de 2013
Comentada: HYEWON HWANG el 28 de Jul. de 2017
Hi
I am facing this problem and it is getting quite annoying at the moment. Basically my matlab plots dots that are very small, it is so small that makes it hard to even see them. I used markersize property with value 10,20,10000.... and doesn't make any difference. Anyone knows what could have gone wrong ?
plot(data(i,1),data(i,2),'blue','markersize',200);
See if you can even spot it in this image :D
  1 comentario
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 16 de Feb. de 2013
I see you edited the question, but the current version of the question is the same as what I remember the original being.
Your edit was after my Answer. Did you try the steps in my Answer?

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Respuesta aceptada

Jan
Jan el 17 de Feb. de 2013
Editada: Jan el 17 de Feb. de 2013
The MarkerSize matters only, when a marker is used:
plot(1, 1, 'Marker', 'o', 'MarkerSize', 4, ...
'MarkerFaceColor', 'b', 'MarkerEdgeColor', 'b');
The size of a single dot does not depend on the LineWidth:
axes('NextPlot', 'add', 'YLim', [0, 3]);
plot(1, 1, 'LineWidth', 4);
plot([0.5, 1.5], [2, 2], 'LineWidth', 4)

Más respuestas (2)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 16 de Feb. de 2013
Try
set(gcf, 'Renderer', 'painters')
and also
set(gcf, 'Renderer', 'opengl')
if opengl is the one that fails, then try
opengl software
and see if it works then
  3 comentarios
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 17 de Feb. de 2013
Ah. Your problem is that you are not specifying any marker, and the default is to use no markers.
HYEWON HWANG
HYEWON HWANG el 28 de Jul. de 2017
Thank you so much

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 17 de Feb. de 2013
I don't know why you're just plotting one data point, and you're not using the format description like I would. Try taking it out of your loop over i and plotting it after the loop like this:
plot(data(:,1), data(:,2), 'bo-','MarkerSize', 15);
For me, this certainly does let you change the marker size. You can leave it in the loop if you use hold on:
for k = 1 : size(data, 1)
plot(data(k,1), data(k,2), 'bo-','MarkerSize', 15);
if k == 1
hold on;
end
end
though this is less efficient/slower.
  2 comentarios
Pourya saber
Pourya saber el 17 de Feb. de 2013
I am actually plotting a whole dataset like this
for i = 1 : 20
if i < 11
rnd = mvnrnd(Mu1,Sigma1);
data(i,1) = rnd(1,1);
data(i,2) = rnd(1,2);
data(i,3) = 1;
plot(data(i,1),data(i,2),'red','markersize',20);
hold on;
else
rnd = mvnrnd(Mu2,Sigma2);
data(i,1) = rnd(1,1);
data(i,2) = rnd(1,2);
data(i,3) = -1;
plot(data(i,1),data(i,2),'blue','markersize',20);
hold on;
end
end
I want to be able to distinguish between two set of data through their colors.
Interestingly this
plot(data(:,1), data(:,2), 'bo-','MarkerSize', 15);
allow me to change the size of those circles which is good. How can I add color to this ?
Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 17 de Feb. de 2013
Editada: Image Analyst el 17 de Feb. de 2013
Add the input parameter pair
, 'Color', [r g b]
where r, g, and b are numbers in the range 0-1. Alternatively if you want standard colors (r, g, b, y, m, c, k) you can just put those in instead of b (blue) in the 'bo-' argument, or after the 'Color' argument. You can also choose different standard markers (e.g. d=diamond, s = square, etc.) instead of o (for circles).

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