I am plotting my data using subplot. since the legend is a bit long, I want to put a horzontal legend in top of each two sub plots.I can create a legend for each subplot but don't know how to create one at the top of each two plots. I apperciate your help.
x=1:80;
y=rand(15,80);
j=1;
legend={'LC1','LC2','LC3','LC4','LC5','LC6','LC7'};
for ii=1:4
for i=1:4
subplot(2,2,i)
hold on;
row = 0;
row = row+1;
plot(x(j:j+4),y(row,j:j+4))
end
j=j+5;
end

 Risposta accettata

Hassan
Hassan il 6 Mag 2011

0 voti

I found another way. First I created a subplot with a legend, then placed the legend on the appropriate place on the plot, I created a M-code from the plot and got the position of the legend, then used the position for all subplots. . . .
end
leg1=legend(legend);
set(leg1,'Position',[p1 p2 p3 p4]);
j=j+5;
end

2 Commenti

Dan Po
Dan Po il 30 Set 2016
Modificato: Dan Po il 30 Set 2016
subplot(121);
peaks
legend('peaks');
subplot(122);
plot(1:10);
legend('1:10')
Simon Mwakitabu
Simon Mwakitabu il 16 Gen 2024
This results to individual legend on each subplot. Not a common one on top of the figure including all plots.
New versions of Matlab since 2019 has tiled_layout with incredible features.

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Più risposte (2)

Adam Danz
Adam Danz il 29 Set 2020

3 voti

Update
Since this thread continues to get 500+ views per month 9 years later, here's an updated solution for Matlab r2020b or later.
Using TiledLayout, legends can be positioned relative to figure edges and can contain graphics objects from different subplots or tiles.
Examples:
Laura Proctor
Laura Proctor il 5 Mag 2011

0 voti

You cannot have a legend that pulls data from more than one subplot. However, you can plot all the data in one subplot, then set the visibility to off and create a legend that will capture everything. Here's an example:
figure
subplot(211)
plot(1:10)
hold on
hi = plot(sin(1:10),'mx-');
legend('one','two','Location','NorthOutside')
set(hi,'Visible','Off')
subplot(212)
plot(sin(1:10),'mx-');

6 Commenti

Hassan
Hassan il 5 Mag 2011
thanks Laura for the comment. the legend is the same for all the plots and I can not put the all plots in one subplot since it becomes very small. Maybe the way you said is the way but I still don't know how to use your code for my work.
Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney il 6 Mag 2011
You cannot have a legend that pulls data from more than one subplot
Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney il 6 Mag 2011
Hmm, my comment got cut off. I mean to quote that statement, then say... Sure you can [label multiple subplots in one legend]. Just pass the handles of the lines/objects to be labeled.
Hassan
Hassan il 6 Mag 2011
all my subplots have the same axis and legend, so I just found the right position for the legend and then used it for all subplots.
Johanna
Johanna il 6 Set 2023
Modificato: Adam Danz il 6 Set 2023
If I use the solution proposed by Laura Proctor, the word "two" in the legend is somewhat transparent even if I try to force it to be black. Any ideas?
figure
subplot(211)
plot(1:10)
hold on
hi = plot(sin(1:10),'mx-');
h_legend= legend('one','two','Location','NorthOutside')
h_legend =
Legend (one, two) with properties: String: {'one' 'two'} Location: 'northoutside' Orientation: 'vertical' FontSize: 7.2000 Position: [0.4556 0.8493 0.1235 0.0704] Units: 'normalized' Show all properties
set(h_legend,'TextColor','k')
set(hi,'Visible','Off')
subplot(212)
plot(sin(1:10),'mx-');
It's because of this line
set(hi,'Visible','Off')
You are setting the 2nd line in the first axes to Visible=off so it is not displayed. Therefore, it's grayed out in the legend.
Instead, use object handles to specify what should go in the legend.

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