How can i replace this code to fast up?

for i=1:500,
subplot(23,23,i);
x=vishid(:,i);
imagesc(reshape(x,imagesize));
colormap gray;
end
Here,vishid is 784*500 matrix, imagesize=28*28

2 Comments

Subha - the above code is trying to create 500 subplots within the figure, so it may take some time! :) Adding a drawnow command after the colormap gray line shows how the first 30-40 subplots get drawn relatively quickly, but over time, it takes longer and longer to add the newest subplot to the figure. Even just doing the above with something as simple as
for k=1:500
h = subplot(23,23,k);
set(gca,'XLim',[0 1]);
drawnow;
end
takes a long time (this was just to see if the bottleneck had to do with the reshape and imagesc - not the case).
Is there a need to show all 500 subplots on the same figure, or could you break it into two figures of 250?
Thanks for your post. Its not necessary to show all 500 plots in a same figure, But it will be better, if it is in same.
If time reduce by implementing this in more than one figure, i am happy about it

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Answers (3)

Jan
Jan on 5 Aug 2014
Do you really need 500 images with separate axes objects? You can draw 500 im ages in one axes, when wet the coordinates appropriately. This would be much faster.

3 Comments

I totally agree. 500 subplots is absurd. Most of the space will be taken up be white space and you won't see the images.
Whether it's worthwhile depends on how well you need to see the images. Thumbnail views have their uses.

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Making the figure invisible until all subplots have been established might help,
h=figure;
set(h,'Visible','off')
for i=1:500,
subplot(23,23,i);
x=vishid(:,i);
imagesc(reshape(x,imagesize));
colormap gray;
end
set(h,'Visible','on')

2 Comments

Thanks.Actually, in my case, already my figure appears only after it plots all the 500 plots. so, i am not sure, this will help. Let me try again and come back to u
I have done . But no difference with speed

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If you have enough memory, use the montage() function. Or else just use regular indexing. Are the images grayscale or color?

6 Comments

They are greyscale
OK. So did you try what I suggested? What happened?
I go with regular indexing method first.. can you please help me to understand and use regular indexing to plot these values.
I want to plot an image. So i used imagesc func, want to plot in grayscale, so used colormap. since i have a matrix, i have to use for loop. i have to take column wise , so used inc= 1:c, i need them to appear in 28 *28 pixel, so reshaped each column into 28*28. next my aim is i want plot this each column as one image. so i will have no of images = no of columns. i have to plot each column as one element of matrix. so, assigned k(inc) as an image. each k(inc ) will have one image. but result is not as i asked in this question.. just showing some randomn pixels..
could u please help to solve this.
function []= imageout(x);
[r,c]=size(x);
for inc=1:c,
l= x(:,inc);
l= reshape(l, [28,28]);
k(i)=imagesc(k(i),[0,1]);
end
colormap(gray); end
Seems like a weird thing to do, but I did it. Run the mfile attached below the image. I'll say one thing, it creates some interesting animation as it scans along the columns. Here is the final image it ends up with:
subha
subha on 25 Sep 2014
Edited: subha on 25 Sep 2014
thanks a lot for your interesting animation ..
Does it do what you want? I thought it did what you said to do. If it does, please mark it "Accepted".

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Asked:

on 5 Aug 2014

Edited:

on 25 Sep 2014

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