How to plot 2 outputs on same graph, challenge is both of them has different xlim and ylim's.
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Please open the attached PDF, i have attached the plots and code in there.
5 Comments
Adam
on 12 Nov 2018
Edited: Adam
on 12 Nov 2018
Yes, I understood that your data has different x and y limits. That is why I asked the question. It clearly makes no sense to combine them without additional knowledge that isn't included here. If they have some sense in which they can be overlaid onto each other to make sense as you seem to suggest (though the data in your recently attached plot looks very different from the first) then you can always scale them mathematically to be in the same range before you plot them.
Your attached graph.png implies there is some clear mapping from one to the other so since you know what that mapping is just apply it. Otherwise you would just be arbitrarily positioning one on top of the other based on some contrived limits anyway - e.g. the 2nd plot has values upto ~2700 but the range by default is up to 3000. Where do you expect your -0.2 to 1.2 range to map to this to plot them together. Should 1.2 be mapped onto 2700 or onto 3000 or somewhere else?
Answers (1)
madhan ravi
on 11 Nov 2018
yyaxis left
plot(...)
xlim...
ylim...
yyaxis right
plot (...)
xlim...
ylim...
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