Explicitly specifying line colors when plotting a matrix

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Knut
Knut el 30 de Oct. de 2011
Comentada: Image Analyst el 25 de Sept. de 2023
x = 1:3;
y = [1 2 3; 42 40 34];
plot(x,y,'Color', [0.5 0.5 0.5; 1 0 0])
produce an error:
Error using plot
Color value must be a 3 element numeric vector
Same with:
plot(x,y,'rg')
Error using plot
Error in color/linetype argument
This has bugged me for years, but I have circumvented it by unrolling the matrix into a number of vectors that I plot one at a time using whatever color I prefer. But is there no way to tell MATLAB (in a compact, readable form) what colors I would like it to use for whatever number of lines it will plot?
  1 comentario
ELTH
ELTH el 16 de Ag. de 2016
You can make a for loop and specify each line's colour based on the RGB code:
x = 1:3;
y = [22 20 18; 32 30 24; 42 40 34];
figure
hold on
for k=1:size(y,1)
p(k)=plot(x,y(k,1:end),'LineWidth',2);
set(p(k),'Color',[(size(y,1)-k+1)/size(y,1) k/size(y,1) 0.1]);
end

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Respuesta aceptada

Kelly Kearney
Kelly Kearney el 10 de En. de 2017
An alternative method would be to save the handles of the plotted data and set the colors via the array option of set. I find this method a lot less hassle than messing with ColorOrder and hold states:
x = 1:3;
y = [1 2 3; 42 40 34];
h = plot(x,y);
set(h, {'color'}, {[0.5 0.5 0.5]; [1 0 0]});
I often use the shortcut of using a colormap with num2cell to get the desired list of colors:
set(h, {'color'}, num2cell(jet(2),2));
  7 comentarios
Simon Silge
Simon Silge el 26 de Nov. de 2021
Editada: Simon Silge el 26 de Nov. de 2021
Since 2019 there is an easier way to do this by setting your own color order by using the colororder command.
x = 1:3;
y = [1 2 3; 42 40 34];
colororder([0 0 1; 0.5 0.6 0])
plot(x,y)
Aaron Drews
Aaron Drews el 13 de Jun. de 2023
Building on @Simon Silge's response, one can also use colororder with the preset colors (e.g., 'k', 'r', 'b', etc) if they're provided as a cell array:
x = 1:3;
y = [1 2 3; 42 40 34];
colororder({'r', 'b'})
plot(x, y)

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Más respuestas (3)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 30 de Oct. de 2011
In the help it says this:
"plot automatically chooses colors and line styles in the order specified by ColorOrder and LineStyleOrder properties of current axes. ColorOrder : m-by-3 matrix of RGB values
Colors to use for multiline plots. Defines the colors used by the plot and plot3 functions to color each line plotted. If you do not specify a line color with plot and plot3, these functions cycle through the ColorOrder property to obtain the color for each line plotted. To obtain the current ColorOrder, which might be set during startup, get the property value:
get(gca,'ColorOrder')
Note that if the axes NextPlot property is replace (the default), high-level functions like plot reset the ColorOrder property before determining the colors to use. If you want MATLAB to use a ColorOrder that is different from the default, set NextPlot to replacechildren. You can also specify your own default ColorOrder."
co = get(gca,'ColorOrder') % Initial
% Change to new colors.
set(gca, 'ColorOrder', [0.5 0.5 0.5; 1 0 0], 'NextPlot', 'replacechildren');
co = get(gca,'ColorOrder') % Verify it changed
% Now plot with changed colors.
x = 1:3;
y = [1 2 3; 42 40 34];
plot(x,y, 'LineWidth', 3);
The things I put in the set() command are especially important.
  6 comentarios
Cici Ma
Cici Ma el 9 de En. de 2017
A note for subplot: need to put the set line before each plot command
x = 1:3;
y1 = [1 2 3; 42 40 34];
y2 = [3 5 8; 11 17 29];
subplot(2,1,1);
set(gca, 'ColorOrder', [0.5 0.5 0.5; 0.2 0.2 0.2],'NextPlot', 'replacechildren');
plot(x,y1, 'LineWidth', 3);
subplot(2,1,2);
set(gca, 'ColorOrder', [0.5 0.5 0.5; 0.2 0.2 0.2],'NextPlot', 'replacechildren');
plot(x,y2, 'LineWidth', 3);
And much appreciated to Image Analyst!
KAE
KAE el 10 de En. de 2017
And if you need to restore the color order to the defaults, use reset(gca).

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Daniele Maddaluno
Daniele Maddaluno el 8 de Dic. de 2017
Editada: Daniele Maddaluno el 8 de Dic. de 2017
I can solve your problem with something like this:
x = 1:5;
y = [x; x.^2; x.^3; x.^4; x.^5];
n = size(y, 1);
colors = hsv(n);
h = plot(x, y);
set(h, {'color'}, num2cell(colors, 2));
  2 comentarios
rosa agliata
rosa agliata el 20 de Dic. de 2017
just great! thanks a lot!
Vivek Bhardwaj
Vivek Bhardwaj el 14 de Feb. de 2019
Hi, works perfectly, thank you. I have a follow-up question to this. Is it possible that I can have the colors based on a different data set? i.e. I use X and Y only for plotting but the colors of the plot are based on data set, say P (Pressures).

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Joakim Wang Erlandsson
Joakim Wang Erlandsson el 19 de Sept. de 2018
It is beyond me how matlab manages to be so unintuitive in the most simple sitiations. Luckily there is a smart community that can find workarounds for all of these shortcomings. Someone above stated happily that this answer is still helping people years after it was asked, too me this is just sad, that Mathworks haven't improved this in all of that time.
  3 comentarios
Jolanda Müller
Jolanda Müller el 25 de Sept. de 2023
I agree with you, Joakim. I think by now it should be possible to do something like "plot(x,Y, 'color', C), where Y is a matrix, and C contains as many colors as there will be lines.
Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 25 de Sept. de 2023
@Jolanda Müller you simply need to call the colororder function first before calling plot, instead of passing your colors into plot. It's hardly a horrendous hassle or even a "workaround". It's just a different way of doing things and only requires one line of code to tell it to use your custom colors.
numCurves = 20;
numPointsPerCurve = 10;
% Create matrix of data. Individual curves are in columns.
M = rand(numCurves, numPointsPerCurve);
% Create matrix of custom colors for each curve.
C = rand(numCurves, 3); % Just random colors.
colororder(C); % Tell MATLAB to use these custom colors.
% Plot 20 curves, each with it's own unique custom color.
plot(M, '.-', 'LineWidth', 2)

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