2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (2024)

2-D line plot

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  • 2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (1)

Syntax

plot(X,Y)

plot(X,Y,LineSpec)

plot(X1,Y1,...,Xn,Yn)

plot(X1,Y1,LineSpec1,...,Xn,Yn,LineSpecn)

plot(Y)

plot(Y,LineSpec)

plot(tbl,xvar,yvar)

plot(tbl,yvar)

plot(ax,___)

plot(___,Name,Value)

p = plot(___)

Description

Vector and Matrix Data

example

plot(X,Y) creates a 2-D line plot of the data in Y versus the corresponding values in X.

  • To plot a set of coordinates connected by line segments, specify X and Y as vectors of the same length.

  • To plot multiple sets of coordinates on the same set of axes, specify at least one of X or Y as a matrix.

plot(X,Y,LineSpec) creates the plot using the specified line style, marker, and color.

example

plot(X1,Y1,...,Xn,Yn) plots multiple pairs of x- and y-coordinates on the same set of axes. Use this syntax as an alternative to specifying coordinates as matrices.

example

plot(X1,Y1,LineSpec1,...,Xn,Yn,LineSpecn) assigns specific line styles, markers, and colors to each x-y pair. You can specify LineSpec for some x-y pairs and omit it for others. For example, plot(X1,Y1,"o",X2,Y2) specifies markers for the first x-y pair but not for the second pair.

example

plot(Y) plots Y against an implicit set of x-coordinates.

  • If Y is a vector, the x-coordinates range from 1 to length(Y).

  • If Y is a matrix, the plot contains one line for each column in Y. The x-coordinates range from 1 to the number of rows in Y.

If Y contains complex numbers, MATLAB® plots the imaginary part of Y versus the real part of Y. If you specify both X and Y, the imaginary part is ignored.

plot(Y,LineSpec) plots Y using implicit x-coordinates, and specifies the line style, marker, and color.

Table Data

plot(tbl,xvar,yvar) plots the variables xvar and yvar from the table tbl. To plot one data set, specify one variable for xvar and one variable for yvar. To plot multiple data sets, specify multiple variables for xvar, yvar, or both. If both arguments specify multiple variables, they must specify the same number of variables. (since R2022a)

example

plot(tbl,yvar) plots the specified variable from the table against the row indices of the table. If the table is a timetable, the specified variable is plotted against the row times of the timetable. (since R2022a)

Additional Options

example

plot(ax,___) displays the plot in the target axes. Specify the axes as the first argument in any of the previous syntaxes.

example

plot(___,Name,Value) specifies Line properties using one or more name-value arguments. The properties apply to all the plotted lines. Specify the name-value arguments after all the arguments in any of the previous syntaxes. For a list of properties, see Line Properties.

example

p = plot(___) returns a Line object or an array of Line objects. Use p to modify properties of the plot after creating it. For a list of properties, see Line Properties.

Examples

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Create Line Plot

Open Live Script

Create x as a vector of linearly spaced values between 0 and 2π. Use an increment of π/100 between the values. Create y as sine values of x. Create a line plot of the data.

x = 0:pi/100:2*pi;y = sin(x);plot(x,y)

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (2)

Plot Multiple Lines

Open Live Script

Define x as 100 linearly spaced values between -2π and 2π. Define y1 and y2 as sine and cosine values of x. Create a line plot of both sets of data.

x = linspace(-2*pi,2*pi);y1 = sin(x);y2 = cos(x);figureplot(x,y1,x,y2)

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (3)

Create Line Plot From Matrix

Open Live Script

Define Y as the 4-by-4 matrix returned by the magic function.

Y = magic(4)
Y = 4×4 16 2 3 13 5 11 10 8 9 7 6 12 4 14 15 1

Create a 2-D line plot of Y. MATLAB® plots each matrix column as a separate line.

figureplot(Y)

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (4)

Specify Line Style

Plot three sine curves with a small phase shift between each line. Use the default line style for the first line. Specify a dashed line style for the second line and a dotted line style for the third line.

x = 0:pi/100:2*pi;y1 = sin(x);y2 = sin(x-0.25);y3 = sin(x-0.5);figureplot(x,y1,x,y2,'--',x,y3,':')

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (5)

MATLAB® cycles the line color through the default color order.

Specify Line Style, Color, and Marker

Open Live Script

Plot three sine curves with a small phase shift between each line. Use a green line with no markers for the first sine curve. Use a blue dashed line with circle markers for the second sine curve. Use only cyan star markers for the third sine curve.

x = 0:pi/10:2*pi;y1 = sin(x);y2 = sin(x-0.25);y3 = sin(x-0.5);figureplot(x,y1,'g',x,y2,'b--o',x,y3,'c*')

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (6)

Display Markers at Specific Data Points

Open Live Script

Create a line plot and display markers at every fifth data point by specifying a marker symbol and setting the MarkerIndices property as a name-value pair.

x = linspace(0,10);y = sin(x);plot(x,y,'-o','MarkerIndices',1:5:length(y))

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Specify Line Width, Marker Size, and Marker Color

Open Live Script

Create a line plot and use the LineSpec option to specify a dashed green line with square markers. Use Name,Value pairs to specify the line width, marker size, and marker colors. Set the marker edge color to blue and set the marker face color using an RGB color value.

x = -pi:pi/10:pi;y = tan(sin(x)) - sin(tan(x));figureplot(x,y,'--gs',... 'LineWidth',2,... 'MarkerSize',10,... 'MarkerEdgeColor','b',... 'MarkerFaceColor',[0.5,0.5,0.5])

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (8)

Add Title and Axis Labels

Open Live Script

Use the linspace function to define x as a vector of 150 values between 0 and 10. Define y as cosine values of x.

x = linspace(0,10,150);y = cos(5*x);

Create a 2-D line plot of the cosine curve. Change the line color to a shade of blue-green using an RGB color value. Add a title and axis labels to the graph using the title, xlabel, and ylabel functions.

figureplot(x,y,'Color',[0,0.7,0.9])title('2-D Line Plot')xlabel('x')ylabel('cos(5x)')

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (9)

Plot Durations and Specify Tick Format

Open Live Script

Define t as seven linearly spaced duration values between 0 and 3 minutes. Plot random data and specify the format of the duration tick marks using the 'DurationTickFormat' name-value pair argument.

t = 0:seconds(30):minutes(3);y = rand(1,7);plot(t,y,'DurationTickFormat','mm:ss')

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Plot Coordinates from a Table

Open Live Script

Since R2022a

A convenient way to plot data from a table is to pass the table to the plot function and specify the variables to plot.

Read weather.csv as a timetable tbl. Then display the first three rows of the table.

tbl = readtimetable("weather.csv");tbl = sortrows(tbl);head(tbl,3)
 Time WindDirection WindSpeed Humidity Temperature RainInchesPerMinute CumulativeRainfall PressureHg PowerLevel LightIntensity ____________________ _____________ _________ ________ ___________ ___________________ __________________ __________ __________ ______________ 25-Oct-2021 00:00:09 46 1 84 49.2 0 0 29.96 4.14 0 25-Oct-2021 00:01:09 45 1.6 84 49.2 0 0 29.96 4.139 0 25-Oct-2021 00:02:09 36 2.2 84 49.2 0 0 29.96 4.138 0 

Plot the row times on the x-axis and the RainInchesPerMinute variable on the y-axis. When you plot data from a timetable, the row times are plotted on the x-axis by default. Thus, you do not need to specify the Time variable. Return the Line object as p. Notice that the axis labels match the variable names.

p = plot(tbl,"RainInchesPerMinute");

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To modify aspects of the line, set the LineStyle, Color, and Marker properties on the Line object. For example, change the line to a red dotted line with point markers.

p.LineStyle = ":";p.Color = "red";p.Marker = ".";

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Plot Multiple Table Variables on One Axis

Open Live Script

Since R2022a

Read weather.csv as a timetable tbl, and display the first few rows of the table.

tbl = readtimetable("weather.csv");head(tbl,3)
 Time WindDirection WindSpeed Humidity Temperature RainInchesPerMinute CumulativeRainfall PressureHg PowerLevel LightIntensity ____________________ _____________ _________ ________ ___________ ___________________ __________________ __________ __________ ______________ 25-Oct-2021 00:00:09 46 1 84 49.2 0 0 29.96 4.14 0 25-Oct-2021 00:01:09 45 1.6 84 49.2 0 0 29.96 4.139 0 25-Oct-2021 00:02:09 36 2.2 84 49.2 0 0 29.96 4.138 0 

Plot the row times on the x-axis and the Temperature and PressureHg variables on the y-axis. When you plot data from a timetable, the row times are plotted on the x-axis by default. Thus, you do not need to specify the Time variable.

Add a legend. Notice that the legend labels match the variable names.

plot(tbl,["Temperature" "PressureHg"])legend

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (13)

Specify Axes for Line Plot

Open Live Script

Starting in R2019b, you can display a tiling of plots using the tiledlayout and nexttile functions. Call the tiledlayout function to create a 2-by-1 tiled chart layout. Call the nexttile function to create an axes object and return the object as ax1. Create the top plot by passing ax1 to the plot function. Add a title and y-axis label to the plot by passing the axes to the title and ylabel functions. Repeat the process to create the bottom plot.

% Create data and 2-by-1 tiled chart layoutx = linspace(0,3);y1 = sin(5*x);y2 = sin(15*x);tiledlayout(2,1)% Top plotax1 = nexttile;plot(ax1,x,y1)title(ax1,'Top Plot')ylabel(ax1,'sin(5x)')% Bottom plotax2 = nexttile;plot(ax2,x,y2)title(ax2,'Bottom Plot')ylabel(ax2,'sin(15x)')

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (14)

Modify Lines After Creation

Open Live Script

Define x as 100 linearly spaced values between -2π and 2π. Define y1 and y2 as sine and cosine values of x. Create a line plot of both sets of data and return the two chart lines in p.

x = linspace(-2*pi,2*pi);y1 = sin(x);y2 = cos(x);p = plot(x,y1,x,y2);

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (15)

Change the line width of the first line to 2. Add star markers to the second line. Use dot notation to set properties.

p(1).LineWidth = 2;p(2).Marker = '*';

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (16)

Plot Circle

Open Live Script

Plot a circle centered at the point (4,3) with a radius equal to 2. Use axis equal to use equal data units along each coordinate direction.

r = 2;xc = 4;yc = 3;theta = linspace(0,2*pi);x = r*cos(theta) + xc;y = r*sin(theta) + yc;plot(x,y)axis equal

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (17)

Input Arguments

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Xx-coordinates
scalar | vector | matrix

x-coordinates, specified as a scalar, vector, or matrix. The size and shape of X depends on the shape of your data and the type of plot you want to create. This table describes the most common situations.

Type of PlotHow to Specify Coordinates
Single point

Specify X and Y as scalars and include a marker. For example:

plot(1,2,"o")
One set of points

Specify X and Y as any combination of row or column vectors of the same length. For example:

plot([1 2 3],[4; 5; 6])
Multiple sets of points
(using vectors)

Specify consecutive pairs of X and Y vectors. For example:

plot([1 2 3],[4 5 6],[1 2 3],[7 8 9])
Multiple sets of points
(using matrices)

If all the sets share the same x- or y-coordinates, specify the shared coordinates as a vector and the other coordinates as a matrix. The length of the vector must match one of the dimensions of the matrix. For example:

plot([1 2 3],[4 5 6; 7 8 9])
If the matrix is square, MATLAB plots one line for each column in the matrix.

Alternatively, specify X and Y as matrices of equal size. In this case, MATLAB plots each column of Y against the corresponding column of X. For example:

plot([1 2 3; 4 5 6],[7 8 9; 10 11 12])

Data Types: single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64 | categorical | datetime | duration

Yy-coordinates
scalar | vector | matrix

y-coordinates, specified as a scalar, vector, or matrix. The size and shape of Y depends on the shape of your data and the type of plot you want to create. This table describes the most common situations.

Type of PlotHow to Specify Coordinates
Single point

Specify X and Y as scalars and include a marker. For example:

plot(1,2,"o")
One set of points

Specify X and Y as any combination of row or column vectors of the same length. For example:

plot([1 2 3],[4; 5; 6])

Alternatively, specify just the y-coordinates. For example:

plot([4 5 6])
Multiple sets of points
(using vectors)

Specify consecutive pairs of X and Y vectors. For example:

plot([1 2 3],[4 5 6],[1 2 3],[7 8 9])
Multiple sets of points
(using matrices)

If all the sets share the same x- or y-coordinates, specify the shared coordinates as a vector and the other coordinates as a matrix. The length of the vector must match one of the dimensions of the matrix. For example:

plot([1 2 3],[4 5 6; 7 8 9])
If the matrix is square, MATLAB plots one line for each column in the matrix.

Alternatively, specify X and Y as matrices of equal size. In this case, MATLAB plots each column of Y against the corresponding column of X. For example:

plot([1 2 3; 4 5 6],[7 8 9; 10 11 12])

Data Types: single | double | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64 | categorical | datetime | duration

LineSpecLine style, marker, and color
string scalar | character vector

Line style, marker, and color, specified as a string scalar or character vector containing symbols. The symbols can appear in any order. You do not need to specify all three characteristics (line style, marker, and color). For example, if you omit the line style and specify the marker, then the plot shows only the marker and no line.

Example: "--or" is a red dashed line with circle markers.

Line StyleDescriptionResulting Line
"-"Solid line

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (18)

"--"Dashed line

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":"Dotted line

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"-."Dash-dotted line

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (21)

MarkerDescriptionResulting Marker
"o"Circle

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"+"Plus sign

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"*"Asterisk

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (24)

"."Point

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (25)

"x"Cross

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (26)

"_"Horizontal line

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (27)

"|"Vertical line

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (28)

"square"Square

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"diamond"Diamond

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (30)

"^"Upward-pointing triangle

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"v"Downward-pointing triangle

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">"Right-pointing triangle

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"<"Left-pointing triangle

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"pentagram"Pentagram

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"hexagram"Hexagram

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (36)

Color NameShort NameRGB TripletAppearance
"red""r"[1 0 0]

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"green""g"[0 1 0]

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"blue""b"[0 0 1]

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"cyan" "c"[0 1 1]

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"magenta""m"[1 0 1]

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"yellow""y"[1 1 0]

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"black""k"[0 0 0]

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"white""w"[1 1 1]

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tblSource table
table | timetable

Source table containing the data to plot, specified as a table or a timetable.

xvarTable variables containing x-coordinates
string array | character vector | cell array | pattern | numeric scalar or vector | logical vector | vartype()

Table variables containing the x-coordinates, specified using one of the indexing schemes from the table.

Indexing SchemeExamples

Variable names:

  • A string, character vector, or cell array.

  • A pattern object.

  • "A" or 'A' — A variable named A

  • ["A","B"] or {'A','B'} — Two variables named A and B

  • "Var"+digitsPattern(1) — Variables named "Var" followed by a single digit

Variable index:

  • An index number that refers to the location of a variable in the table.

  • A vector of numbers.

  • A logical vector. Typically, this vector is the same length as the number of variables, but you can omit trailing 0 or false values.

  • 3 — The third variable from the table

  • [2 3] — The second and third variables from the table

  • [false false true] — The third variable

Variable type:

  • A vartype subscript that selects variables of a specified type.

  • vartype("categorical") — All the variables containing categorical values

The table variables you specify can contain numeric, categorical, datetime, or duration values. If xvar and yvar both specify multiple variables, the number of variables must be the same.

Example: plot(tbl,["x1","x2"],"y") specifies the table variables named x1 and x2 for the x-coordinates.

Example: plot(tbl,2,"y") specifies the second variable for the x-coordinates.

Example: plot(tbl,vartype("numeric"),"y") specifies all numeric variables for the x-coordinates.

yvarTable variables containing y-coordinates
string array | character vector | cell array | pattern | numeric scalar or vector | logical vector | vartype()

Table variables containing the y-coordinates, specified using one of the indexing schemes from the table.

Indexing SchemeExamples

Variable names:

  • A string, character vector, or cell array.

  • A pattern object.

  • "A" or 'A' — A variable named A

  • ["A","B"] or {'A','B'} — Two variables named A and B

  • "Var"+digitsPattern(1) — Variables named "Var" followed by a single digit

Variable index:

  • An index number that refers to the location of a variable in the table.

  • A vector of numbers.

  • A logical vector. Typically, this vector is the same length as the number of variables, but you can omit trailing 0 or false values.

  • 3 — The third variable from the table

  • [2 3] — The second and third variables from the table

  • [false false true] — The third variable

Variable type:

  • A vartype subscript that selects variables of a specified type.

  • vartype("categorical") — All the variables containing categorical values

The table variables you specify can contain numeric, categorical, datetime, or duration values. If xvar and yvar both specify multiple variables, the number of variables must be the same.

Example: plot(tbl,"x",["y1","y2"]) specifies the table variables named y1 and y2 for the y-coordinates.

Example: plot(tbl,"x",2) specifies the second variable for the y-coordinates.

Example: plot(tbl,"x",vartype("numeric")) specifies all numeric variables for the y-coordinates.

axTarget axes
Axes object | PolarAxes object | GeographicAxes object

Target axes, specified as an Axes object, a PolarAxes object, or a GeographicAxes object. If you do not specify the axes, MATLAB plots into the current axes or it creates an Axes object if one does not exist.

To create a polar plot or geographic plot, specify ax as a PolarAxes or GeographicAxes object. Alternatively, call the polarplot or geoplot function.

Name-Value Arguments

Specify optional pairs of arguments as Name1=Value1,...,NameN=ValueN, where Name is the argument name and Value is the corresponding value. Name-value arguments must appear after other arguments, but the order of the pairs does not matter.

Example: plot([0 1],[2 3],LineWidth=2)

Before R2021a, use commas to separate each name and value, and enclose Name in quotes.

Example: plot([0 1],[2 3],"LineWidth",2)

Note

The properties listed here are only a subset. For a complete list, see Line Properties.

ColorLine color
[0 0.4470 0.7410] (default) | RGB triplet | hexadecimal color code | "r" | "g" | "b" | ...

Line color, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, a color name, or a short name.

For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.

  • An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue components of the color. The intensities must be in the range [0,1], for example, [0.4 0.6 0.7].

  • A hexadecimal color code is a string scalar or character vector that starts with a hash symbol (#) followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range from 0 to F. The values are not case sensitive. Therefore, the color codes "#FF8800", "#ff8800", "#F80", and "#f80" are equivalent.

Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.

Color NameShort NameRGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
"red""r"[1 0 0]"#FF0000"

2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (45)

"green""g"[0 1 0]"#00FF00"

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"blue""b"[0 0 1]"#0000FF"

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"cyan" "c"[0 1 1]"#00FFFF"

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"magenta""m"[1 0 1]"#FF00FF"

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"yellow""y"[1 1 0]"#FFFF00"

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"black""k"[0 0 0]"#000000"

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"white""w"[1 1 1]"#FFFFFF"

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"none"Not applicableNot applicableNot applicableNo color

Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.

RGB TripletHexadecimal Color CodeAppearance
[0 0.4470 0.7410]"#0072BD"

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[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980]"#D95319"

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[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250]"#EDB120"

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[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560]"#7E2F8E"

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[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880]"#77AC30"

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[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330]"#4DBEEE"

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[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840]"#A2142F"

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Example: "blue"

Example: [00 1]

Example: "#0000FF"

DatetimeTickFormatFormat for datetime tick labels
character vector | string

Format for datetime tick labels, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of "DatetimeTickFormat" and a character vector or string containing a date format. Use the letters A-Z and a-z to construct a custom format. These letters correspond to the Unicode® Locale Data Markup Language (LDML) standard for dates. You can include non-ASCII letter characters such as a hyphen, space, or colon to separate the fields.

If you do not specify a value for "DatetimeTickFormat", then plot automatically optimizes and updates the tick labels based on the axis limits.

Example: "DatetimeTickFormat","eeee, MMMM d, yyyy HH:mm:ss" displays a date and time such as Saturday, April 19, 2014 21:41:06.

The following table shows several common display formats andexamples of the formatted output for the date, Saturday, April 19,2014 at 9:41:06 PM in New York City.

Value of DatetimeTickFormatExample
"yyyy-MM-dd"2014-04-19
"dd/MM/yyyy"19/04/2014
"dd.MM.yyyy"19.04.2014
"yyyy年 MM月 dd日"2014年 04月 19日
"MMMM d, yyyy"April 19, 2014
"eeee, MMMM d, yyyy HH:mm:ss"Saturday, April 19, 2014 21:41:06
"MMMM d, yyyy HH:mm:ss Z"April 19, 2014 21:41:06 -0400

For a complete list of valid letter identifiers, see the Format property for datetime arrays.

DatetimeTickFormat is not a chart line property.You must set the tick format using the name-value pair argument whencreating a plot. Alternatively, set the format using the xtickformat and ytickformat functions.

The TickLabelFormat property of the datetimeruler stores the format.

DurationTickFormatFormat for duration tick labels
character vector | string

Format for duration tick labels, specified as the comma-separated pair consisting of "DurationTickFormat" and a character vector or string containing a duration format.

If you do not specify a value for "DurationTickFormat", then plot automatically optimizes and updates the tick labels based on the axis limits.

To display a duration as a single number that includes a fractionalpart, for example, 1.234 hours, specify one of the values in thistable.

Value of DurationTickFormat Description
"y"Number of exact fixed-length years. A fixed-length year isequal to 365.2425 days.
"d"Number of exact fixed-length days. A fixed-length day is equalto 24 hours.
"h"Number of hours
"m"Number of minutes
"s"Number of seconds

Example: "DurationTickFormat","d" displays duration values in terms of fixed-length days.

To display a duration in the form of a digital timer, specifyone of these values.

  • "dd:hh:mm:ss"

  • "hh:mm:ss"

  • "mm:ss"

  • "hh:mm"

In addition, you can display up to nine fractionalsecond digits by appending up to nine S characters.

Example: "DurationTickFormat","hh:mm:ss.SSS" displays the milliseconds of a duration value to three digits.

DurationTickFormat is not a chart line property.You must set the tick format using the name-value pair argument whencreating a plot. Alternatively, set the format using the xtickformat and ytickformat functions.

The TickLabelFormat property of the durationruler stores the format.

Tips

  • Use NaN and Inf valuesto create breaks in the lines. For example, this code plots the firsttwo elements, skips the third element, and draws another line usingthe last two elements:

    plot([1,2,NaN,4,5])
  • plot uses colors and line styles based on the ColorOrder and LineStyleOrder properties of the axes. plot cycles through the colors with the first line style. Then, it cycles through the colors again with each additional line style.

    You can change the colors and the line styles after plotting by setting the ColorOrder or LineStyleOrder properties on the axes. You can also call the colororder function to change the color order for all the axes in the figure. (since R2019b)

Extended Capabilities

Version History

Introduced before R2006a

expand all

Create plots by passing a table to the plot function followed by the variables you want to plot. When you specify your data as a table, the axis labels and the legend (if present) are automatically labeled using the table variable names.

See Also

Functions

  • title | xlabel | ylabel | xlim | ylim | legend | hold | gca | yyaxis | plot3 | loglog

Properties

  • Line Properties

Topics

  • Plot Dates and Times
  • Plot Categorical Data
  • Plots That Support Tables

External Websites

  • MATLAB PlotGallery

MATLAB Command

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2-D line plot - MATLAB plot (62)

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