How to insert image in MatLab

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Emily Smith
Emily Smith on 3 Oct 2016
Commented: DGM on 15 Nov 2024 at 6:29
I want to insert an image at (0,0) on a plot. How would I do this and how can I determine the size? And also do I need to convert the image to a png?
Thanks!

Answers (3)

Jakub Rysanek
Jakub Rysanek on 4 Oct 2016
imread() can import whole bunch of graphical data types, including .jpg and .png. Conversion to .png, as you ask, is not necessary.
img = imread('filename.png');
image(img);
To alter the size/positioning of the image within your figure, you can touch the underlying axes object:
x = 0;
y = 0;
width = 0.5;% measured relative to the figure width
height = 0.5;% measured relative to the figure height
set(gca,'units','normalized','position',[x y width height])

Gareth Thomas
Gareth Thomas on 3 Oct 2016

DGM
DGM on 20 Feb 2023
Edited: DGM on 20 Feb 2023
There are a lot of views on this vague question, so maybe I should put an answer here that might be more complete.
% some data in a plot
t = linspace(0,pi,100);
y = sin(2*t);
plot(t,y); hold on; grid on
% an image
FG = imread('cameraman.tif');
% i'm going to expand the image to make sure it's RGB
% this avoids issues dealing with colormapped objects in the same axes
if size(FG,3) == 1
FG = repmat(FG,[1 1 3]);
end
% the origin of an image is the NW corner
% so in order for both the plot and image to appear right-side up, flip the image
FG = flipud(FG);
% insert an image in a particular region in the current axes
% this uses image(); similar can be done with imshow()/imagesc()
image(FG,'xdata',[0 pi/4],'ydata',[0 pi/4])
axis equal
To find the size of an image, use size(), or see this thread.
To save an image, use imwrite(). To save a screenshot of a figure as an image, use saveas(), exportgraphics(), or a combination of getframe(), frame2im(), and imwrite(). Again, if the image you want to save is already in the workspace, save it using imwrite(), not by taking a screenshot of it.
% save a screenshot of the plot with overlaid image
saveas(gcf,'myplot.png')
% save a copy of the modified foreground image
imwrite(FG,'mycman.png')
Avoid using JPG for anything, especially saving figures.
  5 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 14 Nov 2024 at 19:40
Check to see if it is something-by-something-by-2 . If it is, then likely it is grayscale + alpha.
Gray = Grayscale_plus_alpha(:,:,1);
Alpha = im2double(Grayscale_plus_alpha(:,:,2));
image(Gray, 'AlphaData', Alpha)
DGM
DGM on 15 Nov 2024 at 6:29
You might be able to save it as an SVG, but even with third-party SVG import tools, only a subset of the possible object types in an SVG file can be read.
As Walter points out, image() (which is what's used internally by imagesc() and imshow()) only accepts MxN arrays (of numeric or logical class) or MxNx3 arrays (of float or unsigned integer numeric class). It's possible to get MxNx4 or MxNx1xF arrays from imread() without any special syntax or options.
If you can attach the image file and/or the code used to replicate the issue, we can tell you why.

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