Why the imaginary part of the points p1,p2,p3 isn't zero in the plane?
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Giuseppe Alfieri
on 16 Jul 2018
Commented: Giuseppe Alfieri
on 16 Jul 2018
p1=1;
p2=3;
p3=4;
plot([p1,p2,p3],'x')
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Accepted Answer
Steven Lord
on 16 Jul 2018
When called with one data input, the plot function behaves differently depending on whether that data input is real or complex. From the documentation:
"plot(Y) creates a 2-D line plot of the data in Y versus the index of each value.
If Y is a vector, then the x-axis scale ranges from 1 to length(Y).
...
If Y is complex, then the plot function plots the imaginary part of Y versus the real part of Y, such that plot(Y) is equivalent to plot(real(Y),imag(Y))."
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Jesus Sanchez
on 16 Jul 2018
You are not plotting a Real vs Imag plot, but just the normal one. The 'x' makes the plotted data to be represented as an x marker, but that is all. When you execute that code, MATLAB shows the corresponding value in y-axis and the index of that value in x-axis. That is why your first value appears in the position "1" in x-axis, your second in "2" etc etc
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