Mplot

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Revision as of 19:56, 2 September 2008 by imported>Jeremy (Importing text file)
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Purpose

Automatic creation of subplots and plotting.

Synopsis

[rows,cols] = mplot(n,options)
[rows,cols] = mplot([rows cols],options)
[rows,cols] = mplot(rows,cols,options)
[rows,cols] = mplot(y,options)
[rows,cols] = mplot(x,y,options)

Description

Inputs can be one of four forms: (1) the number of subplots requested n, "best fit" onto the figure (2) the number of rows and columns for the subplot array [rows cols] (3) or data to plot y with or without reference data for the x-axis x. Each column of y is plotted in a single subplot on the figure. Outputs are the number of rows rows and columns cols used for the subplots.

Examples

Example 1. To automatically create a "best fit" of four empty subplots

mplot(4)

Example 2. To automatically create four subplots in a 4 x 1 arrangement

mplot([4 1])

Example 3. To automatically plot three random columns, each in its own subplot

mplot(rand(100,3))

Options

  • center: [ {'no'} | 'yes' ] governs centering of "left-over" plots at
  • bottom of figure (when an uneven number of plots are to be fit onto the screen,
  • axismode : [ {} | 'tight' ] governs axis settings

Algorithm

When mplot is doing the "best fit", it attempts to keep the number of rows and columns as close as possible in size (Except for n=3 which is done as a 3x1 figure). Thus, the plot progression is: 1x1, 2x1, 3x1, 2x2, 3x2, 3x3, 4x3, etc.

See Also

plotgui, subplot