Lettering a Bar Chart

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ALEXANDER MOUNTAIN
ALEXANDER MOUNTAIN on 17 Mar 2021
Edited: the cyclist on 18 Mar 2021
I want to create a bar chart and label my XAxis in letters for as many bars as there are. For example if I have 4 bars I want them to be individually labeled A, B, C, D and I want it to work for any amount of bars. I know using sprintf with %d will do what I want with numbers and I thought that using %s or %c would do what I wanted with letters, but it's just returning empty character boxes. What do I have to change to print letters instead?
yData = [10, 25,15,10,25,20]
myFig = gcf;
myAx = axes(myFig);
myPlot = bar(myAx, yData);
myAx.Title.String = 'Data Visualization';
myAx.YLabel.String = 'Value';
myAx.XLabel.String = 'Category';
myAx.YLim = [0 30];
endAt = length(myAx.XAxis.TickLabels);
for i = 1:endAt
myAx.XAxis.TickLabels{i} = sprintf ('%d' , i)
end

Accepted Answer

the cyclist
the cyclist on 17 Mar 2021
Edited: the cyclist on 17 Mar 2021
Here is one way, closely based on yours:
yData = [10, 25,15,10,25,20];
myFig = gcf;
myAx = axes(myFig);
myPlot = bar(myAx, yData);
myAx.Title.String = 'Data Visualization';
myAx.YLabel.String = 'Value';
myAx.XLabel.String = 'Category';
myAx.YLim = [0 30];
endAt = length(myAx.XAxis.TickLabels);
for i = 1:endAt
myAx.XAxis.TickLabels{i} = sprintf ('%s' , char(i-1+'A'));
end
Note my changes inside sprintf.
But you don't need a for loop for the labeling:
set(gca,'XTickLabel',char((0:endAt-1) + 'A')')

More Answers (1)

Adam Danz
Adam Danz on 17 Mar 2021
It's better to avoid setting tick labels when possible.
Instead, use a categorical variable (xCats) for x, defined by letters starting with A to however many values are in yData.
yData = [10, 25,15,10,25,20];
xCats = categorical(num2cell(char((0:numel(yData)-1)+'A')));
myFig = gcf;
myAx = axes(myFig);
myPlot = bar(myAx, xCats, yData);
  1 Comment
the cyclist
the cyclist on 18 Mar 2021
Edited: the cyclist on 18 Mar 2021
@Adam Danz makes a great philosophical programming point. Since 'A', 'B' , etc are presumably referencing the data themselves, it is better to reflect that in the data, not just the labels.
It's a little bit of a lazy quirk of MATLAB (and other languages) that it allows the programmer to make a bar chart by specifying only the y-data -- and then adds the probably-wrong numeric x-labels automatically.
It's a shame that the creation of the vector {'A','B', ..., arbitrary length} is a bit awkward, because this is truly the better way to go.

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