how to let a "plot" immune on any later " hold off" once this "plot" is created.
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I am a Matlab fan.
pls review my Matlab script file below:
clear;clc;
r=10;
plot([-35,35], [0,0], 'r-.' )
axis equal
hold on
for h=linspace(0,10,10)
theta=linspace(0,2*pi);
x=r*cos(theta);
y=30+h+r*sin(theta);
plot(x,y);
xlim([-50,50]);
ylim([-50,50]);
pause(0.1)
end
if I don't add " hold off" in the " for-end" statement, then the circle creates many ones when it is moving.
if I do add " hold off" in the " for-end" statement, then the horizontal red line is disappeared.
I expect :
1) the horizontal red line is kept once it is ploted before the the " for-end" statement.
2) only one circle is occuring when it is moving.
may you give me a guide?
Thanks in advance!
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
DGM
on 7 Apr 2024
Edited: DGM
on 7 Apr 2024
Here's one idea.
r=10;
plot([-35,35], [0,0], 'r-.' )
axis equal
hold on
% just create a dummy plot object to be used in the loop
hp = plot(0,0);
for h=linspace(0,10,10)
theta=linspace(0,2*pi);
x=r*cos(theta);
y=30+h+r*sin(theta);
% update the plot object with xy data
hp.XData = x;
hp.YData = y;
xlim([-50,50]);
ylim([-50,50]);
pause(0.1)
end
There are other ways. I'd try to pull more stuff outside the loop.
% these don't need to be inside the loop
r = 10;
h = linspace(0,10,10);
theta = linspace(0,2*pi);
plot([-35,35], [0,0], 'r-.' )
axis equal
hold on
% these probably don't need to be inside the loop either
xlim([-50,50]);
ylim([-50,50]);
for k = 1:numel(h)
x = r*cos(theta);
y = 30 + h(k) + r*sin(theta);
if k == 1
% create a new plot object on the first iteration
hp = plot(x,y);
else
% update the plot object with xy data on subsequent passes
hp.XData = x;
hp.YData = y;
end
pause(0.1)
end
4 Comments
DGM
on 17 May 2024
I'm not sure what you're asking for.
If you want to create a bunch of handles to graphics objects, use an array, and not numbered variables like that. You can use gobjects() to preallocate an array which can be populated with handles inside a loop of some sort.
In the given example, there are only ever two line objects: the dashed line and the circle. The second object simply gets its properties updated, so there isn't a new handle to store.
It's possible you intend to capture the axes/figure as a raster image and store those -- for example, to output as an animated GIF or something. For example:
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