Can I place markers on only some of the points of my line plot?
144 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
MathWorks Support Team
on 3 Sep 2013
Edited: MathWorks Support Team
on 14 Apr 2023
I have a plot that has a lot of points, and I would like to visualize it with markers. Placing markers on all the points makes the plot too cluttered; instead of a line made of markers I just get a thick line.
How can I plot only every other marker, or every third marker, or something like that?
Accepted Answer
MathWorks Support Team
on 14 Apr 2023
Edited: MathWorks Support Team
on 14 Apr 2023
You can control the marker positions on a line plot using the 'MarkerIndices' property. With that, you can specify at which indices of the data points you want to display markers.
For example, let us create 1000 points ranging from 0 to 10, and create a sinusoidal function of increasing amplitude.
x = linspace(0,10,1000);
y = exp(x/10).*sin(4*x);
Now, let us plot the function with a solid line and add asterisk markers every tenth data points:
plot(x,y,'-*','MarkerIndices',1:10:length(y))
The result is the following:
You can find more information about creating a line plot with markers here:https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/creating_plots/create-line-plot-with-markers.html
More Answers (1)
Nirajan R
on 24 Sep 2016
Edited: MathWorks Support Team
on 30 Dec 2021
The feature has been added now. You can use MarkerIndices property to achieve this. More info here: https://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/creating_plots/create-line-plot-with-markers.html
1 Comment
Steven Lord
on 4 Jun 2019
When you call plot, omitting part of the data can change the shape of the line that is drawn so to control which markers are plotted you need to use MarkerIndices.
When you call scatter, omitting part of the data does not impact the rest of the points. Therefore you can simply call scatter on only part of your data. If you switch between the two figures created by the example below, the only differences will be the titles and the five points which were omitted in the second figure.
x = rand(1, 25);
y = rand(1, 25);
figure
scatter(x, y)
axis([0 1 0 1])
title('All data')
figure
scatter(x(1:20), y(1:20))
axis([0 1 0 1])
title('Only first 20 points')
See Also
Categories
Find more on 2-D and 3-D Plots in Help Center and File Exchange
Products
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!