How do I add transparency to a plot in the Live Editor?
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Hey all,
if I use the following code in the Command Window, I get a very transparent, red X:
plot([0, 1],[0, 1; 1, 0], 'Color', [1 0 0 .1])
Yet, if I use the same line in the live editor, I get a non-transparent X. How do I add transparency to a plot in the Live Editor?
Best regards,
Martin
2 Comments
Accepted Answer
Adam Danz
on 18 Feb 2024
Edited: Adam Danz
on 1 Mar 2024
When using RGBA values, the alpha value is not saved so when the figure loads, the color will lack transparency. Due to how figures in a live script work, this limitation prevents the use of undocumented RGBA color-alpha values in the live editor.
The workaround is to use a patch object which supports EdgeAlpha but it may not be intuitive how to arrangement inputs to patch() so that it forms a line.
See this answer for an anonymous function that's a wrapper to patch but creates lines with specified color and transparency (alpha). This will work in live editor figures.
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More Answers (3)
Walter Roberson
on 17 Feb 2024
Unfortunately, the hack of using a 4-element Color does not work in LiveScript.
The work-around is to set the figure Visible property to 'on', which will result in the figure popping out to be plotted out-of-line.
0 Comments
Matt J
on 17 Feb 2024
Edited: Matt J
on 17 Feb 2024
The syntax of giving an RGBA color setting seems to be a very old and undocumented feature,
which means you cannot rely on it, especially not for newer environments like the Live Editor.
You can fake a transparency effect by rendering the line as a dense scatter plot, e.g.,
x=linspace(0,1,1e4);
y=x.^2;
scatter(x,y,'r','filled','MarkerFaceAlpha',0.015, 'MarkerEdgeColor','none', 'SizeData',1)
1 Comment
Walter Roberson
on 17 Feb 2024
Using RGBA for color is new as of HG2, and it's use has been expanded as time goes on. But it is undocumented and so not reliable.
Catalytic
on 17 Feb 2024
Edited: Catalytic
on 17 Feb 2024
I find that this makes the lines dim in the Live Editor, like they appear in your post -
plot([0, 1],[0, 1; 1, 0], 'Color', [1 0.8 0.8])
But, making the lines dim is not the same as making them transparent. You won't see objects behind the lines any better if you were to overlay the plot on something else, for example.
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