I want to change the color of the markers in scatter plot which are below the function line
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Haseeb Hashim
el 11 de Abr. de 2022
Comentada: Star Strider
el 11 de Abr. de 2022
I have the following code
clc
clear
close all
d = 4;
N = 1000;
X = linspace(0,d,N);
func = @(X) 2*X.*cos(X.^2).*exp(sin(X.^2)) + 14;
limit = func(X);
x = 4*rand(1,N);
y = 25*rand(1,N);
figure(1),hold on
h = scatter(x,y,10,'markerfacecolor','b');
plot(X,limit,'k-','linew',1.3)
for i = 1:N
if any(y(i) < limit)
set(h,'YData','MarkerFaceColor','r','Markeredgecolor','r')
end
end
but it keeps giving the following error
Error using matlab.graphics.chart.primitive.Scatter/set
Invalid parameter/value pair arguments.
Any help would be appreciated
2 comentarios
Respuesta aceptada
Star Strider
el 11 de Abr. de 2022
d = 4;
N = 1000;
X = linspace(0,d,N);
func = @(X) 2*X.*cos(X.^2).*exp(sin(X.^2)) + 14;
limit = func(X);
x = 4*rand(1,N);
y = 25*rand(1,N);
figure(1)
hold on
scatter(x,y,10,'markerfacecolor','b');
Lv = y < func(x); % Logical Vector Based On 'func' Value At Each 'x'
scatter(x(Lv),y(Lv),10,'MarkerFaceColor','r','Markeredgecolor','r')
plot(X,limit,'k-','linew',1.3)
.
2 comentarios
Star Strider
el 11 de Abr. de 2022
Thank you!
Sure!
The ‘Lv’ variable is a logical vector that calculates the value of ‘func’ at each ‘x’ value and compares that result with the corresponding ‘y’ value. If that ‘y’ value is less than ‘func(x)’, that value of ‘Lv’ is set to true. (It definitely helps that ‘func’ is an anonymous function in your original code, making this straightforward.)
The scatter call just after that uses ‘Lv’ to refer to the individual ‘x’ and ‘y’ values, plotting only those that are true as defined by ‘Lv’.
Más respuestas (1)
MJFcoNaN
el 11 de Abr. de 2022
You can try this:
clc
clear
close all
d = 4;
N = 1000;
X = linspace(0,d,N);
func = @(X) 2*X.*cos(X.^2).*exp(sin(X.^2)) + 14;
limit = func(X);
x = 4*rand(1,N);
y = 25*rand(1,N);
ind_r = y < limit;
c=zeros(N,3);
% red
c(ind_r, 1)=1;
% blue
c(~ind_r, 3)=1;
figure(1),hold on
h = scatter(x,y,10,c);
plot(X,limit,'k-','linew',1.3)
2 comentarios
MJFcoNaN
el 11 de Abr. de 2022
Why do you make both x and y random?
If your task allows one random value, for example x=X, it may give out a more "reasonable" result, which achieves the same algorithm as the other answer.
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