Break title into multiple lines?

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Bob Li
Bob Li on 16 Jan 2012
Moved: Dyuman Joshi on 11 Sep 2023
Hi, When I am adding a title to a graph, is there a way to break the title into multiple lines if it is too long to be fit in just one line?
title('1st line\n2ndline')
I found the usual \n sequence in C/C++ is not useful here, nor does
title('1st line{\n}2ndline')
which I used {} brace to attempt a TEX interpretation. Could anyone tell me how multi-line title can be achieved?
Bob
  2 Comments
Kunal Bhatt
Kunal Bhatt on 27 Dec 2016
In case of ylabel into multiple lines (3-lines or more) use following code ylabel({'line1', 'line2','line3'},)

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Accepted Answer

the cyclist
the cyclist on 29 Aug 2023
Edited: MathWorks Support Team on 29 Aug 2023
You can create a multiline tile using either a cell array or a string array. Each element in the array corresponds to a separate line of text. Here’s how to do it with a cell array:
plot(1:10)
title({'You can do it','with a cell array'})
Here’s how to do it with a string array:
plot(1:10)
title(["You can do it","with a string array too"])
If you’re looking to create a subtitle, then starting in R2020b, you can pass a second line of text to the title function to create a subtitle.
title('A Nifty Title','A Clever Subtitle')
Or you can call the title and subtitle functions separately. 
title('A Nifty Title') subtitle('A Clever Subtitle')
Refer to the documentation for an example of a multiline title:
  8 Comments
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco
Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco on 11 Jun 2021
Edited: Giuseppe Degan Di Dieco on 11 Jun 2021
Dear The Cyclist,
thanks for your tip, still useful in 2021.
It is really impressive how many things can be done with cell arrays.
It helped me in producing the attached graph, best!
Paulo Providencia
Paulo Providencia on 25 May 2023
Note the bug in your sugestion above for the subtitle option (the extra ] close to the end).

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More Answers (3)

Aryan Ritwajeet Jha
Aryan Ritwajeet Jha on 29 Oct 2019
Adding to the above answer(s) as I was having problems with inserting variables in multiline plot titles.
This code snippet:
title({
['Partial Discharge Magnitudes in Time Domain predicted for' ]
['n = ' num2str(npotential) ' and i = ' num2str(ipotential) ]
['Actual values being n = ' num2str(nactual) ' and i = ' num2str(iactual)]
});
will generate a title like in the given image:
untitled.jpg
  3 Comments
Aryan Ritwajeet Jha
Aryan Ritwajeet Jha on 5 Nov 2019
Sivateja Maturu, you're most welcome!
Bor Kos
Bor Kos on 26 Mar 2021
or you could use sprintf in this context:
multilineTitleWithData={sprintf('First line x=%f',a),sprintf('SecondLine n=%f j=%f',n,j)}

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Josef
Josef on 6 May 2023
Edited: Josef on 6 May 2023
The quickest way to insert a newline is to use. I hope this was helpful
title("My exquisite title \newline and my beautiful variable" + num2str(var1) + ".")

Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 6 May 2023
If you're not sure where to break the line of text, you can use the textwrap function.
s is a long-ish title, 97 characters long.
s = "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. " + ...
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times"
s = "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times"
strlength(s)
ans = 97
How does it look if we use s on its own as the title of a plot?
figure
plot(1:10, 1:10);
title(s)
Not so good. The title is cut off at the beginning and end. Let's break it into roughly 40 character long chunks.
figure
plot(1:10, 1:10);
t = title(textwrap(s, 40));
How long are each of those lines?
s2 = t.String
s2 = 3×1 cell array
{'The quick brown fox jumped over the ' } {'lazy dog. It was the best of times, it '} {'was the worst of times' }
strlength(s2)
ans = 3×1
36 39 22
The first two lines are pretty close to 40 characters long, and the last line has the rest of the characters.

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