Displaying exponential notation with num2str?

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I have a value that I want to display within a textbox in a figure. The value hoewer needs to be in exponential notation.
Example:
lambda = 2.4321;
vD = 3.2e5;
fighandle = figure(1);
fighandle.Color = [1,1,1];
fighandle.Position = [10,50,600,400];
fighandle.Name = 'Test';
xlabel('t [min]','FontSize',12,'Interpreter','latex');
ylabel('Temperatur [$^\circ$C]','FontSize',12,'Interpreter','latex');
annotation('textbox', [0.66, 0.15, 0.1, 0.1], ...
'String', {['$\lambda$ = ' num2str(round(lambda,3),'%.3f') ' W/mK'], ...
['$v_D$ = ' num2str(round(vD,1),'%.1f') ' m/s']}, ...
'BackgroundColor', 'White', ...
'Interpreter','latex');
The result looks like this:
But i want the variable b to look like this:
Any ideas? Thank you very much for the help!

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 24 Aug 2022
I wrote a little utility program to do that sort of thing a few years ago.
Try this —
Q1 = [-pi*1000; 0; pi*100];
expstr = @(x) [x(:).*10.^ceil(-log10(abs(x(:)+(x==0)))) floor(log10(abs(x(:)+(x==0))))]; % Updated: 2021 05 04
Result = sprintf('%+.4fe%+04d\n', expstr(Q1).')
Result =
'-3.1416e+003 +0.0000e+000 +3.1416e+002 '
V = expstr(Q1)
V = 3×2
-3.1416 3.0000 0 0 3.1416 2.0000
Create the sprintf format string (that I use here) to give the result you want.
.
  2 Comments
Michael
Michael on 24 Aug 2022
Edited: Michael on 24 Aug 2022
Thank you very much! That did, what I was looking for :)
I implemented it this way within the annotation textbox:
vD_expstr = expstr(vD);
% ...
['$v_D$ = ' num2str(round(vD_expstr(1),1),'%.1f') ' $\cdot$ 10' num2str(vD_expstr(2),'$^{%.0f}$') ' m/s']
Star Strider
Star Strider on 24 Aug 2022
As always, my pleasure!
That will work, since num2str allows format strings, although sprintf might be an easier way to implement it.
I created ‘expstr’ precisely for the purpose you’re using it!

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More Answers (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 24 Aug 2022
Another function that might be of interest to you is formattedDisplayText, if you want to capture how the variable would be displayed in MATLAB using a certain display format.
x = pi
x = 3.1416
y1 = formattedDisplayText(x)
y1 =
" 3.1416 "
format longeng
x
x =
3.14159265358979e+000
y2 = formattedDisplayText(x)
y2 =
" 3.14159265358979e+000 "

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