How do I make a plot background black?

I have two vectors.
x=[1 2 3 4 5];
y=[10 20 30 40 50];
I plotted the vectors
plot(x,y)
The default background of the plot is white. How do I change the plot background to black?

 Accepted Answer

This works:
plot(x,y)
set(gca,'Color','k')

4 Comments

Side note, because I just ran into this:
The axes 'color' property only has effect if the axes 'visible' property is set 'on'.
In particular if you set the axes visible 'off' in order to hide the box and ticks and tick labels, then the axes background color will not be drawn.
Did you find a solution ? Maybe i can plot a square into the background, but i have no idea how to acomplish that :)
@Markus: Do you mean a solution where the axes is invisible? If so, then something like this will work:
x=[1 2 3 4 5];
y=[10 20 30 40 50];
h = plot(x,y);
xl = xlim();
yl = ylim();
p = patch(xl([1 2 2 1 1]),yl([1 1 2 2 1]),'k');
set(gca(),'Children',[h;p],'Visible','off')
On the other hand, if you want the axes to be visible, then you just have to set its color as in the Accepted Answer.
The original approach still works.
x = (0:9).';
y = [sin(2*pi*x/9) cos(2*pi*x/9)];
figure
plot(x, y, 'LineWidth',2.5)
Ax = gca;
Ax.Color = 'k';
.

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More Answers (2)

x=[1 2 3 4 5];
y=[10 20 30 40 50];
plot(x,y)
set(gca,'color',[0 0 0])

2 Comments

how to set quiver background color black? Hi, I use quiver function to figure vector. I want to set the background black and vector in green. Please how to set the background color? I have tried to use set(gca,'color','k'), but it doesn't work. Any comments and advise are very appreciated.
Using set(gca, 'color', 'k') worked fine in a test I just did.

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See this demo to show you how you can change just about everything by referring to it properly.
% Demo to make a black graph with red Y axis, green X axis, and yellow grid. Markers are magenta with green lines between them.
% Initialization steps:
clc; % Clear the command window.
close all; % Close all figures (except those of imtool.)
clearvars;
workspace; % Make sure the workspace panel is showing.
format long g;
format compact;
fontSize = 24;
% Create sample data.
X = 1 : 20;
Y = rand(1, 20);
% Plot green lines between the markers.
plot(X, Y, 'g-', 'LineWidth', 3);
hold on;
% Plot magenta markers.
plot(X, Y, 'ms', 'LineWidth', 3, 'MarkerSize', 15);
grid on;
title('Y vs. X, Font Size 20', 'FontSize', 20, 'Color', 'b', 'FontWeight', 'bold');
% Make labels for the two axes.
xlabel('X Axis, Font Size 18');
ylabel('Y axis, Font Size 24');
yticks(0 : 0.2 : 1);
% Get handle to current axes.
ax = gca
ax =
Axes (Y vs. X, Font Size 20) with properties: XLim: [0 20] YLim: [0 0.9] XScale: 'linear' YScale: 'linear' GridLineStyle: '-' Position: [0.13 0.11 0.775 0.796812954621955] Units: 'normalized' Use GET to show all properties
% Now let's have fun changing all kinds of things!
% This sets background color to black.
ax.Color = 'k';
ax.YColor = 'r';
% Make the x axis dark green.
darkGreen = [0, 0.6, 0];
ax.XColor = darkGreen;
% Make the grid color yellow.
ax.GridColor = 'y';
ax.GridAlpha = 0.9; % Set's transparency of the grid.
% Set x and y font sizes.
ax.XAxis.FontSize = 18;
ax.YAxis.FontSize = 24;
% Make the axes tick marks and bounding box be really thick.
ax.LineWidth = 3;
% Let's have the tick marks go outside the graph instead of poking inwards
ax.TickDir = 'out';
% The below would set everything: title, x axis, y axis, and tick mark label font sizes.
% ax.FontSize = 34;
% Bold all labels.
ax.FontWeight = 'bold';
hold off
% Now do stuff with the figure, as opposed to the axes control that is ON the figure.
% Maximize the figure
g = gcf; % Get handle to the current figure.
g.WindowState = 'maximized'; % Make it full screen.
g.Name = 'Demo by Image Analyst'; % Put a custom string into the titlebar.
g.NumberTitle = 'off'; % Don't have it put "Figure 1" before the name.
g.MenuBar = 'figure'; % or 'none'
g.ToolBar = 'figure'; % or 'none'

Categories

Find more on Creating, Deleting, and Querying Graphics Objects in Help Center and File Exchange

Asked:

Bob
on 15 Dec 2014

Edited:

on 20 Dec 2023

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