Drawing X and Y axis on 2D plot

Hi everyone,
I have been searching for an easy way to draw the x and y axis on a plot but cannot seem to do it. For example, if I have a plot that has range [-2 10] for x and [-200 400] for y, I would like to be able to draw a line along x = 0 and y = 0. I have looked at certain functions such as axescenter but this draws the axes in the exact center so it does not work for me. The style is great but I can't get it along the axes. Anyone have any ideas?

 Respuesta aceptada

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 12 de Jun. de 2012

6 votos

xL = xlim;
yL = ylim;
line([0 0], yL); %x-axis
line(xL, [0 0]); %y-axis

10 comentarios

David Polcari
David Polcari el 12 de Jun. de 2012
That works great! Any chance I could get the line color to be black? And what if I want to make the line bolder?
Kevin Holst
Kevin Holst el 12 de Jun. de 2012
see the documentation under "line"
"Examples
This example uses the line function to add a shadow to plotted data. First, plot some data and save the line's handle:
t = 0:pi/20:2*pi;
hline1 = plot(t,sin(t),'k');
Next, add a shadow by offsetting the x-coordinates. Make the shadow line light gray and wider than the default LineWidth:
hline2 = line(t+.06,sin(t),'LineWidth',4,'Color',[.8 .8 .8]);"
Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski el 12 de Jun. de 2012
xL = xlim;
yL = ylim;
line(xL, [0 0],'color','k','linewidth',10) %x-axis
line([0 0], yL,'color','k','linewidth',10) %y-axis
And for more info
>>doc line
David Polcari
David Polcari el 12 de Jun. de 2012
Great! Thanks a lot for the help guys!
I believe the comments about %x-axis and %y-axis are reversed and should be:
xL = xlim;
yL = ylim;
line([0 0], yL); %y-axis
line(xL, [0 0]); %x-axis
surya chandra gulipalli
surya chandra gulipalli el 12 de Mayo de 2019
great. Thank you
Emon Baroi
Emon Baroi el 26 de Sept. de 2019
thank you very much ...it can help me a lot
Cody Roman
Cody Roman el 18 de Feb. de 2021
Very helpful
Zhao Lu
Zhao Lu el 10 de Ag. de 2022
Thanks so much
Sidharth A Narayanan
Sidharth A Narayanan el 22 de Mzo. de 2023
I think you interchanged the x-axis and y-axis ...

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Más respuestas (3)

Brian Russell
Brian Russell el 30 de Abr. de 2021

25 votos

Why does everyone give such complicated answers to this question? The answer is xline(0) and yline(0).

4 comentarios

Elie Marouani
Elie Marouani el 18 de Mayo de 2021
Editada: Elie Marouani el 18 de Mayo de 2021
This is exactly what i needed here, thank you
Sajib Biswas Shuvo
Sajib Biswas Shuvo el 21 de Jun. de 2021
This answer should be at the top. Thanks btw.
Brian Russell
Brian Russell el 21 de Jun. de 2021
Thanks, Sajib, but I don't know how to move it to the top. I think an administrator has to do that. I think that in an earlier version of MATLAB, the answer at the top was the correct one, but the answer I gave must be a new feature.
Alex Henderson
Alex Henderson el 23 de Feb. de 2023
"Why does everyone give such complicated answers to this question?"
Probably because these functions only appeared in R2018b. Still, useful to know they're there now.

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Steven Lord
Steven Lord el 1 de Sept. de 2016

5 votos

As of release R2015b you can set the axes XAxisLocation and YAxisLocation properties to 'origin' to get the axes lines to cross at the origin.
Kajeen Hassan
Kajeen Hassan el 28 de En. de 2020

0 votos

A parametric equation to plot the function x= 1.5 sin(5t), y= 1.5 cos(3t) , plot the function for 0<=t<=2* pi. Format the plot such that the both axes will range from -2 to 2.

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