Box Plots for Vectors of Varying Length
2 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
Hello! I have 3 data sets named DailyTMAX_1, DailyTMAX_2, and DailyTMAX_3. Each one of them have maximum temperature data. DailyTMAX_1 from years 1931-1960, DailyTMAX_2 from 1961-1990, and DailyTMAX_3 from 1991 to 2020.
The three of them have varying lenghts. DailyTMAX_1 is 10321, DailyTMAX_2 is 11243 and DailyTMAX_3 is 10792.
I want to create a boxplot but every time I run it I get this message:
"Error: File: ClimateDataProcessor.m Line: 107 Column: 14
Invalid text character. Check for unsupported symbol, invisible character, or pasting of non-ASCII characters."
Line 107 Column 14 corresponds to g1 on the attached code
x = [DailyTMAX_1; DailyTMAX_2; DailyTMAX_3];
g1 = repmat({‘1931-1960’},10321,1);
g2 = repmat({‘1961-1990’},11243,1);
g3 = repmat({‘1991-2020’},10792,1);
g = [g1; g2; g3];
boxplot(x,g)
Hope anyone can help me with this
Thank you!
0 Comments
Accepted Answer
Joel Lynch
on 22 Jun 2021
Edited: Joel Lynch
on 22 Jun 2021
The proximate error is that the symbols around the year-range string
‘1931-1960’
are not apostrophes, so MATLAB doesn't know what to do with them. They should appear in pink:
'1931-1960'
But that is a moot point, because you don't need to use the "g" argument in boxplot for this problem. The g argument is used to group heterogenous elements of each column in x together in seperate boxplots. You're data is already homogenous in each vector, so you can just pass three columns in x to get three boxplots. The trick is to handle their unequal lengths, which you can do by filling a just-large-enough NaN matrix x. The extra elements in each column are ignored by boxplot.
N = max( [ numel(DailyTMAX_1), numel(DailyTMAX_2), numel(DailyTMAX_3) ] ); % Longest length
x = NaN(N,3); % 3 columns large enough to fit longest vector
x(1:numel(DailyTMAX_1),1) = DailyTMAX_1;
x(1:numel(DailyTMAX_2),2) = DailyTMAX_2;
x(1:numel(DailyTMAX_3),3) = DailyTMAX_3;
boxplot(x);
You can greatly simplify this by storing "DailyTMAX_X" vectors natively in a NaN-padded x matrix.
Note: this won't add the year-labels, you can do that manually by:
set( gca, 'XTickLabel', {'1931-1960', '1961-1990', '1991-2020'} );
4 Comments
Joel Lynch
on 23 Jun 2021
The symbol you are using appears to be the prime symbol, not the apostrophe; you'll want to check your system's keyboard layout to make sure you know which you're using.
One trick is to click on your matlab script, hit cntrl+h, and replace all ’ with '. That should remove all the bad characters from your script.
More Answers (0)
See Also
Categories
Find more on Data Distribution Plots 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!