plot too many lines

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Elias de Korte
Elias de Korte on 4 Feb 2019
Commented: Elias de Korte on 5 Feb 2019
Why does MATLAB plot so many dashed lines when I am plotting just one for the 95% confidence intervals?
xd = bindex_total2_nonan(:,9); % depth
yd = bindex_total2_nonan(:,6); % pos
% poly fit
[pd,Sd] = polyfit(xd,yd,1);
[y_fitd,deltad] = polyval(pd,xd,Sd);
conf1 = y_fitd+2.*deltad;
conf2 = y_fitd-2.*deltad;
figure('Renderer', 'painters', 'Position', [10 10 900 600]);
scatter(bindex_total2(:,9),bindex_total2(:,6),'+','k');
hold on;
plot(xd,y_fitd,'color','k')
plot(xd(1:2:54),conf1(1:2:54),'r--')
plot(xd(1:2:54),conf2(1:2:54),'r--')
  6 Comments
YT
YT on 4 Feb 2019
Edited: YT on 4 Feb 2019
I was also looking at this problem, and if it's not the dimensions of xd/yfit that causes the problem maybe its indeed like @Walter Roberson suggested. Also maybe its a good practice to close figures (close all;) and clear workspace variables (clear;) at the start of the script.
Elias de Korte
Elias de Korte on 4 Feb 2019
I have used clear and close all for every run and this does not solve the problem. I have added hold off as wel, without result

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Accepted Answer

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 4 Feb 2019
Try
xu = unique(xd); %unique and sorted
[y_fitd,deltad] = polyval(pd,xu,Sd);
and then
plot(xu, y_fitd, 'color','k');
I suspect that you will not need to skip every second point for the other plots.
  2 Comments
Elias de Korte
Elias de Korte on 5 Feb 2019
yes, unique values solves the problem visually. But the problem is this:
for x- values i have 54 unique values, for example values concerning 3 months within the year. For the other y-variable i have only got yearly values, which is why some of the same y-values are assigned to different x-values. The solution would be to average the x-values for each year I guess.
Elias de Korte
Elias de Korte on 5 Feb 2019
Now i expected a linear confidence interval, but this is not the case. I can't find how to change the settings correctly

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More Answers (1)

Rik
Rik on 4 Feb 2019
You should not use clear on its own. If you want to, you can use
clear variables
As to your actual problem, is your xd not sorted? That would cause the line to jump back and forth, making it look like you have a lot of different lines.
  3 Comments
Rik
Rik on 4 Feb 2019
Maybe I worded it a bit too strongly, but when people read the advice to use clear, they will often understand it to use this
clc,close all,clear all
This means that not just the variables are cleared, but also loaded functions and clases, slowing code down. You can read the options in the doc for clear.
Literally typing
clear variables
seems to do the same as only using clear, but this way you show your intent as well preventing misunderstandings.
Also, you can use wildcards and/or regular expressions to specify groups of variables you might want to clear.
YT
YT on 4 Feb 2019
Ah okay good to know. Thanks for the clarification.

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