How do I create a legend and include loop variable values in the labels?
1.000 visualizzazioni (ultimi 30 giorni)
Mostra commenti meno recenti
Doron
il 21 Feb 2012
Commentato: Furkan Sencer Kaçar
il 5 Ott 2023
I created the matrix P with 400 rows, 3 columns (which I call X, Y and Z).
The variables in each row are related by a simple quadratic (Y^2) and intercept term (X):
Z = Y^2 + X
And I created 10 curves, one for each unique value of X with the following code starting by isolating each unique value of X with "PU = unique..."
Please Note: This entire code only takes about 5 seconds to run:
P = [];
for X = 1:1:10
for Y = 0.1:0.1:4
Z = (Y^2) + X;
P = vertcat(P, [X, Y, Z]);
end
end
PU = unique(P(:,1));
PUC = size(PU, 1);
for i = 1:PUC;
Q{i} = P(P(:, 1) == PU(i), :);
q = Q{i};
x = PU(i);
plot(q(:, 2), q(:, 3))
legend(.......which code goes here??...)
hold on
end
hold off
Each line looks the same, and there are no labels. How do I label each line with using the variable x = PU(i) (which runs from 1 to 10) in a legend which will look like: "X = 1", "X=2", "X=3" etc... up to "X = 10", and have a changing colour or line style.
Thanks
D Howard
0 Commenti
Risposta accettata
Kevin Holst
il 21 Feb 2012
Modificato: MathWorks Support Team
il 9 Nov 2018
When you create a plot, you can specify the legend labels by setting the “DisplayName” property as name-value pair. Set the "DisplayName" property to a character vector of the text that you want to include in the legend. To include a variable value in the text, use “num2str”.
For example:
hold on
for k = 1:10
txt = ['X = ',num2str(k)];
plot(rand(10,1),'DisplayName',txt)
end
hold off
legend show
Starting in R2014b, plotted lines cycle through the colors in the color order.
16 Commenti
Nasim Hasanpour
il 21 Lug 2022
Modificato: Nasim Hasanpour
il 21 Lug 2022
Thanks. It was so helpful.
Does anyone know how to change the legends' font in this code? I want to use the plot in Latex.
Più risposte (4)
Kevin Holst
il 21 Feb 2012
Not in the way that you're currently doing it, but if you're not married to the idea of using your P variable how you currently are using it, I'd suggest something like this:
P = (0.1:0.1:4)';
for i = 2:11
P(:,i) = P(:,1).^2 + (i-1);
legendInfo{i-1} = ['X = ' num2str(i-1)];
end
plot(P(:,1),P(:,2:end))
legend(legendInfo)
The problem with this is that Matlab cycles through 7 different colors, but doesn't switch the line type automatically when it gets through the colors. So the first 3 and last 3 curves will be the same colors. This way does speed up your code quite significantly.
3 Commenti
Saad Rabbani
il 1 Nov 2017
Hi, im trying to make a legend for 4 plots that are inside a for loop but then i have an additional plot outside the loop as well. The plot either shows the legend of the 4 plots inside the loop or the one plot i have outside. Im not sure how i can make a legend for all five plots.
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco
il 5 Mag 2021
Dear Kevin,
thanks for your tip, it really helped me in setting the labels of a legend in a for loop.
Hope that in 2021, you're still reading the community updates.
Best.
Elgyii
il 26 Gen 2016
% You can simply store all the handles while you plot, for example:
For i = 1 : 10 h(i) = plot(x,y) end legend(h, names) % names should be what you want to write out on legend
1 Commento
Soroush Shahnia
il 7 Giu 2017
Thanks Eligio. The first solution is killing my laptop and it's very slow. This works much faster for me.
amir king
il 28 Set 2015
I still have problem with the legend. The problem is all the legend are the same line-style. What is missing or what is wrong?please help
this is my code:
for u=1:5 % dfferent U infinity
colorstflex = 'kbgrm';
figure(u); cla; %%for diffrent RE
plotStyle = {'-o','-*','-r.','-s','-^'};
hold on
for k=1:3
Vel_rel(Vel_rel == 0) = NaN;
x_Dmat = repmat(x_D,[5 1]);
plot(x_Dmat,Vel_rel(u,:,k),plotStyle{k},'color',colorstflex(k));hold on
legendInfo{k}=['flex no. ', num2str(k)]); % or whatever is appropriate
legend(legendInfo)
end
end
3 Commenti
Brian Sutton
il 14 Mar 2021
I had a similar problem, to create a legend, but not knowing how many plots I would have. I wanted to set the legend dynamically. I looked at answers using the "DisplayName" property while plotting, but I didn't want to rewrite all of my plotting, and in any case ewasn't sure how to use it with plotyy (probably using hax = plot / semilogy construct). Anyway, I managed to do it by adding to the cell array that contains the legend text in a loop related to how many plotlines I might have. I would have either 5 or 4 to start with (depending on a variable status) and up to "L" plots for v"i" Active followed by up to L plots for v"i" Serious, where "i "would be a label (not a vector component) for each legend item, as follows (I left semicolons off end-of-lines for testing, to print what I was creating). This worked very well. The solution was at https://octave.org/doc/v4.2.2/Basic-Usage-of-Cell-Arrays.html although usually I find MatLab (Octave in my case) documentation too arcane.
if (vac_per_day(1) !=0 || vac_eff(1) != 0) %20210314
legend_text = {['All cases'], ['Healthy'], ['All infected'], ['Deaths'], ['Vaccinated']} %5 items
for i = 1:L
legend_text{5+i} = strcat("v", num2str(i), " Active")
legend_text{5+L+i} = strcat("v", num2str(i), " Serious")
endfor
else
legend_text = {['All cases'], ['Healthy'], ['All infected'], ['Deaths']} %4 items
for i = 1:L
legend_text{4+i} = strcat("v", num2str(i), " Active")
legend_text{4+L+i} = strcat("v", num2str(i), " Serious")
endfor
endif
legend = legend(legend_text, 'location', 'southoutside', 'orientation', 'horizontal');
set(legend, 'Interpreter', 'none') %20201218 to stop underscore being lower case if used
Producing (not a pretty chart but) the legend exactly as I wanted (apart from overflowing the box). You can guess this is all to do with Coronavirus modelling. The model numbers are not the realistic UK model, that uses other input data. This is a test harness for calibrating age related subgroups (in other charts)
0 Commenti
Vedere anche
Categorie
Scopri di più su Legend in Help Center e File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!