the problem of shifting and pcolor
Show older comments
Hi all, I am doing this code, and it appears that my text pixels are shifted compared to my pcolor output. Any suggestions. Note, my data contains NaN so image() does not work. Also, x and y are both of matrix types, not vectors. Any suggestions would be really appreciated. THANKS!
m_proj('stereographic','lat',90,'radius',60, 'rotateangle',270)
[lat_new,lon_new] = ndgrid(lat,lon);
[x,y] = m_ll2xy(lon_new,lat_new);
h = pcolor(x,y, cor); hold on;axis xy;
shading flat
sz = size(lat_new);
for i=1:sz(1)
for j=1:sz(2)
if prob(i,j)==1
%THESE APPEAR TO BE SHIFTED:(((
g = text(x(i,j),y(i,j),'*');
set(g,'fontsize',[10]);
set(g,'fontweight','bold');
hold on;
%z = text(x(i,j),y(i,j),num2str(cor(i,j)));
end
end
end
Answers (2)
Image Analyst
on 4 Jul 2012
0 votes
Right. We talked about this before. Don't use pcolor. image() and imshow() have no problem handling images with nans in them - I actually tried and verified that. You just have to make sure x and y are in the range of 1 to sz(1) or sz(2)
4 Comments
Image Analyst
on 4 Jul 2012
Edited: Image Analyst
on 4 Jul 2012
I'm not sure why you still insist on pcolor. Let me illustrate. Run this demo:
fontSize = 22;
m =[...
2 1 3 1 3
3 1 3 3 1
2 2 3 2 1
3 1 2 1 1
2 1 1 1 1]
figure(1);
pcolor(m)
shading('Faceted');
title('Faceted', 'FontSize', fontSize);
figure(2);
pcolor(m);
shading('interp');
title('interp', 'FontSize', fontSize);
figure(3);
pcolor(m);
shading('flat');
title('flat', 'FontSize', fontSize);
Do you expect to see a picture of 5 by 5 "pixels" where all the "1" elements have the same color, and all the "2" elements have the same color (but different than the color for 1), and all the "3" elements have the same color (but different than the color for 1 and 2)? That would seem reasonable wouldn't it? Is that how it actually looks? The answer is NO. The 1's DON'T all have the same color and neither do the 2's and 3's. Moreover the picture only has 4 by 4 pixels, not 5 by 5. You're warned about this in the source code for pcolor: " the last row and column of C are not used" Is that what you want? Plus there's the problem you originally asked. So, given all that, plus the fact that I told you image() and imshow() both handle (ignore) nans, can you explain to me why you still want to use pcolor?
jenka
on 4 Jul 2012
jenka
on 4 Jul 2012
Image Analyst
on 4 Jul 2012
I don't have those functions. If they're in the mapping toolbox, I don't have that. You can use a colormap to get rid of the blue, like
imshow(yourArray, []);
colormap(gray(256));
jenka
on 4 Jul 2012
0 votes
2 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 4 Jul 2012
Yes, that is how it is designed, and is the reason not to use pcolor()
Chad Greene
on 1 May 2015
Here's a depiction of some funny effects using pcolor.
Categories
Find more on Red in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!