Why I can not do this surf?

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Ayob
Ayob on 19 Jan 2014
Edited: Image Analyst on 19 Jan 2014
I have made three matrices X,Y and Z. All of them are 144*1 matrices. I use surf(X,Y,Z), but it doesn't work!
[EDIT] Ayob "Answered" his own question with this, but I moved it up here since it's not an answer:
I have X, Y and Z matrices. How can I change X, Y and Z to the forms that enable me use surf? I have all nodes but in (x,y,z) shape.
  1 Comment
Paul
Paul on 19 Jan 2014
need more info on how those vectors look like. is it like
x= [1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4]'
If the nodes are not equally distributed you'll still need to interpolate like in my other comment.

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Answers (2)

Paul
Paul on 19 Jan 2014
Because Z should be a 144*144 matrix. 1 value for each pair of x and y values.
  2 Comments
Ayob
Ayob on 19 Jan 2014
Edited: Ayob on 19 Jan 2014
This is not exactly what I want. What other function should I use?(I have my vales in x,y,z which are in (X,Y,Z).
Paul
Paul on 19 Jan 2014
Sounds like you have scattered data, need more info on that. You can probably interpolate the data using griddata to a desired grid like this:
[xq,yq] = meshgrid(-2:.2:2, -2:.2:2);
zq = griddata(x,y,z,xq,yq);
surf(xq,yq,zq)
Where xq and yq are the desired interpolation points.

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Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 19 Jan 2014
If you have only a few scattered points here and there, and these are listed in your x,y,z array, then you need to use the griddedInterpolant class. It will estimate z values for the missing coordinate locations and build a complete surface.
  1 Comment
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 19 Jan 2014
Edited: Image Analyst on 19 Jan 2014
If you have older versions of MATLAB, use griddata() or TriScatteredInterp(). These are deprecated (not recommended, and scheduled to be eliminated) and the new recommendation is to use griddedInterpolant.

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