SURF plot: Data dimensions must agree
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Azeem Singh Kahlon
on 25 May 2020
Commented: Hélène Parisot-Dupuis
on 28 Nov 2023
I am trying to plot the magnetic field on a rectangular surface (having x and y coordinates). Hence i have a total of 3 values x,y and B (magnetic field). I have tried plotting the surface plot using normal and transposed datasheet in excel but both of them give me the same data dimensions error. Please help me withi this. I am using the following code till now:
dataset=xlsread('import.xlsx');
x = dataset(:,1);
y = dataset(1,:)
Z = dataset(2:end,2:end)
surf(x,y,Z)
Please see the attached image for clarification.
thank you
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Accepted Answer
Walter Roberson
on 25 May 2020
dataset=xlsread('import.xlsx');
x = dataset(2:end,1);
y = dataset(1,2:end);
Z = dataset(2:end,2:end);
surf(x, y, Z.', 'edgecolor', 'none')
3 Comments
More Answers (1)
Hélène Parisot-Dupuis
on 28 Nov 2023
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 28 Nov 2023
Hello,
I have the kind of problem with my code and I don't understand why:
for it=1:2
xt(it,1)=it
for jt=1:3
yt(1,jt)=jt
zt(it,jt)=it+(jt-1)
end
end
figure;
surf(xt,yt,zt,'EdgeColor', 'None', 'facecolor', 'interp');
view(2);
colormap(jet(256));
c = colorbar;
Could you help me to find my error please?
Thanks in advance!
3 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 28 Nov 2023
There are two competing standards for array notation.
- When using x and y coordinates, western mathematics tends to put the x first (as rows) and then the y (as columns) -- so in terms of standard Cartesian coordinates, horizontal distance first then vertical distance
- When using tables of data, such as a table of costs or a table of trigonmetric values, western mathematics tends to refer to row first and then column -- for example you would look on the row for 1983 and then the column for month -- so vertical distance listed first and then horizontal distance
Any programming language that choses one particular representation (rows mean horizontal distance, rows mean vertical distance) will fail on the other one. So the problem is not a "bug" in MATLAB, or a "mis-design": the problem is competing conventions that cannot both be satisfied.
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