Does line() function works in matlab R2015b ?
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Bachtiar Muhammad Lubis
on 29 Dec 2018
Commented: Bachtiar Muhammad Lubis
on 31 Dec 2018
i had run code that used line() function. and then i got error in line() function.
Error using line
vectors must be the same length
Error in file_name (line 45)
line(h, [thisX, thisX], ylim(h), 'Color', 'r');
h is subplot(4, 12, 1:12).
both of thisX variables off course had the same length.
So. does MATLAB R2015B support line() function ? or was i just wrong while placing the arguments ?
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Accepted Answer
Walter Roberson
on 29 Dec 2018
ylim(h) is going to be a row vector of length 2. If your thisX is not scalar then the X values you construct would not be the same length .
you cannot use line() to draw a series of vertical lines. line() can only create one line object per call. plot() can create multiple line objects per call.
5 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 31 Dec 2018
Okay, the problem is that in R2015b, it was not yet permitted to pass an axes as the first parameter. See https://www.mathworks.com/help/releases/R2015b/matlab/ref/line.html
The cure is to use the 'Parent' parameter:
line([thisX, thisX], ylim(h1), 'Parent', h1)
More Answers (2)
Star Strider
on 29 Dec 2018
‘So. does MATLAB R2015B support line() function ?’
The line (link) function was ‘Introduced before R2006a’ according to the documentation, so it should.
‘both of thisX variables off course had the same length.’
True. However you horizontally concatenated two of them.
‘or was i just wrong while placing the arguments ?’
I would agree.
If we see your entire code, we would be able to provide more help.
Jan
on 29 Dec 2018
"h is subplot(4, 12, 1:12)" - this is not clear. Is h a scalar or a vector?
The message is clear: [thisX, thisX] and ylim(h) do not have matching sizes. So use the debugger to examine the problem:
dbstop if error
Type this in the command window and run the code again. When Matlab stops at the error, check the sizes:
size([thisX, thisX])
size(ylim(h))
3 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 29 Dec 2018
Watch out for thisX being row vector vs column vector. With column vector you might get away with it; with row vector you will not, not unless thisX is scalar.
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