No transparency in Livescript

5 views (last 30 days)
Duijnhouwer
Duijnhouwer on 21 Feb 2021
Edited: Duijnhouwer on 11 Apr 2023
Hi,
I use RBGA values to get transparency in plots using Matlab 2020a.
This works fine in regular code but I noticed that in Livescript, the color renders as completely opaque no matter what I set the opacity value A too. This example code,
plot([0 1],[0 1],'-','Color',[1 0 0 .25],'LineWidth',20);
hold on
plot([0 1],[1 0],'-','Color',[1 0 0 .25],'LineWidth',20);
title(sprintf("renderer = %s",get(gcf,'renderer')))
when run as regular code from the draws two red bars with transparency visible where they cross (Figure 1).
However, when run it as a Livescript it produces two 100%-opaque bars, (Figure 2). Is this a know shortcoming? Is there a workaround?
  6 Comments
Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 23 Feb 2021
Edited: Adam Danz on 4 Apr 2023
-------------------------- old response as a user------------------------
I have the same results (windows 10, r2020b update 4) using opengl hardward and software. I see expected behavior outside of mlx but no transparency within mlx.
Keep in mind this style of line transparency is undocumented so that challenges the notion of expected behavior.
The three (undocumented) properties that control transparency of line objects appear to be set correctly when produced in an mlx file. Even when I set those values after the lines are rendered, there is no effect.
h(1) = plot([0 1],[0 1],'-','Color',[1 0 0 .25],'LineWidth',20);
drawnow
h(1).Edge.ColorBinding
% ans =
% 4×1 uint8 column vector
% 255
% 0
% 0
% 64
h(1).Edge.ColorType
% ans =
% 'truecoloralpha'
h(1).Edge.ColorBinding
% ans =
% 'object'
Noam A
Noam A on 4 Apr 2023
still having this problem in Windows 2022b, very annoying

Sign in to comment.

Answers (1)

Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 4 Apr 2023
Edited: Adam Danz on 7 Apr 2023
The RGBA color definition for lines is undocumented and does not work with MLX files. The line transparency also will not appear in regular figures if you save and load the figure.
A workaround is to use patch. Here's an anonymous function you can adapt to work like plot() or line().
lineAlphaFcn = @(x,y,style,width,color,alpha) patch('XData',[x(:);nan],'YData',[y(:);nan],'EdgeColor',color,'EdgeAlpha',alpha,'LineStyle',style,'LineWidth',width);
% x: vector of x data
% y: vector of y data
% style: linestyle (e.g. '-')
% width: linewidth (e.g. 1)
% color: color (e.g. 'r' | [1 0 0])
% alpha: transparency level 0:1
%
% Example
% h = lineAlphaFcn(x, y, '-', 2, 'r', 0.3);
Applied to OP's demo,
lineAlphaFcn([0 1],[0 1],'-',20,[1 0 0], 0.25);
hold on
lineAlphaFcn([0 1],[1 0],'-',20,[1 0 0], 0.25);
box on
Another example,
th = linspace(0,2*pi,150)';
r = linspace(0,3,10);
n = numel(r);
color = cool(n);
figure()
hold on
for i = 1:n
h = lineAlphaFcn(th, sin(th+r(i)), '-', 12, color(i,:), 0.25);
end
This is the same approach I used to generate the 10,000 partially transparent line segments using a single patch object in this polar plot of pi
  5 Comments
Noam A
Noam A on 5 Apr 2023
Ok the following code seems to do what I want and work in livescript, thank you!
color = [0 0 1 0.5];
t = linspace(0, 2*pi);
r = 10;
x = r*cos(t) + 5;
y = r*sin(t) + 5;
figure;
patch('XData',x,'YData',y,'EdgeColor',color(1:3),'FaceColor',color(1:3),'FaceAlpha',color(4));
color = [1 0 0 0.5];
x = r*cos(t) + 3;
y = r*sin(t) + 3;
patch('XData',x,'YData',y,'EdgeColor',color(1:3),'FaceColor',color(1:3),'FaceAlpha',color(4));
Duijnhouwer
Duijnhouwer on 11 Apr 2023
Edited: Duijnhouwer on 11 Apr 2023
Nice, @Adam Danz! I did not know use of RGBA is undocumented. So it's fair enough it doesn't work in Live Editor. I'll use patch objects in future. Thanks!

Sign in to comment.

Categories

Find more on Specifying Target for Graphics Output in Help Center and File Exchange

Products


Release

R2020a

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!