Force tiledlayout('flow') to layout vertically
25 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
The problem I have with tiledlayout('flow') is that it it will often end up arranging the plots in a 2x2 grid, rather than a 4x1.
I understand tiledlayout('flow') tries to keep a 4:3 ratio for plots, but this is not useful for my data.
Tiledlayout(x,1) won't work because I don't know x beforehand.
I had hoped that in the case of tiledlayout(x,1) I could set the GridSize property, but it is read only.
Any suggestions on how to overcome this would be helpful, thank you.
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Dave B
on 17 Mar 2023
Starting in R2023a you can use the 'horizontal' and 'vertical' tile arrangements to accomplish layouts that are dynamically sized but only in one direction. More information available in the tiledlayout documentation.
figure(1)
t=tiledlayout('horizontal');
nexttile
plot(rand(1,10))
nexttile
bar(rand(1,10))
nexttile
scatter(rand(1,10),rand(1,10))
figure(2)
t=tiledlayout('vertical');
nexttile
plot(rand(1,10))
nexttile
bar(rand(1,10))
nexttile
scatter(rand(1,10),rand(1,10))
0 Comments
More Answers (1)
Srivardhan Gadila
on 20 Aug 2020
Based on the above information and the documentation of tiledlayout & nexttile, for this particular problem you can make use of the 'nexttile(span)' syntax as follows:
% Let the max number tiles are maxTiles = 1000 (>>n or just >=n)
maxTiles = 1000;
x = linspace(0,30);
tiledlayout('flow')
n = randi([1 10]);
for i=1:n
nexttile([1 maxTiles])
y = rand(1,numel(x));
plot(x,y)
end
2 Comments
michal.markun
on 26 Aug 2025
Hi,
I have a follow up question. I can't find in Help how to add a scrollbar to a tiledlayout figure. It might be usefull if in your example above n is large, so that the tiles result squeezed.
I would be grateful for your help on this.
Best,
Mike
See Also
Categories
Find more on Introduction to Installation and Licensing in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!