Reputation: 103
I am trying to make a graph with two different contourf subplots that use completely different colormaps. However with the code I currently have (which creates a custom colormap for one of the subplots), the subplots come out with the same colormap. Any ideas how to fix this?
h = figure;
subplot(2,1,1)
title('GEFS 20 Member Mean Vorticity');
axesm('eqdcylin','maplonlimit',[-180 179],'maplatlimit',[0 90]);
%eqdcylin
contourm(gLat, gLon, squeeze(meanhx(x,:,:))', 16,'Color',[0.05 0.05 0.05],'LineWidth',2);
hold on
contourfm(gLat, gLon, squeeze(vmeanx(x,:,:))', 30, 'LineStyle', 'none');
shading flat;
lm=worldlo('POline');
for i=1:length(lm);
lm(i).otherproperty = {'color','m','LineWidth',1.5};
end
displaym(lm);
gridm on;
tightmap;
set(h, 'Position', [1 1 2200 1100]);
colormap(b2r(-5*10^-5, 5*10^-5));
freezeColors;
cbfreeze(colorbar)
%caxis([-5*10^-5 5*10^-5])
colorbar;
subplot(2,1,2)
title('GEFS 20 Member Vorticity Variance');
axesm('eqdcylin','maplonlimit',[-180 179],'maplatlimit',[0 90]);
%eqdcylin
contourm(gLat, gLon, squeeze(meanhx(x,:,:))', 16,'Color',[0.05 0.05 0.05],'LineWidth',2);
hold on
contourfm(gLat, gLon, squeeze(vvarx(x,:,:))', 30, 'LineStyle', 'none');
shading flat;
lm=worldlo('POline');
for i=1:length(lm);
lm(i).otherproperty = {'color','m','LineWidth',1.5};
end
displaym(lm);
gridm on;
tightmap;
set(h, 'Position', [1 1 2200 1100]);
mycmap = [
0.9961 0.9961 0.9961;
0.6641 0.6641 0.9974;
0.3320 0.3320 0.9987;
0 0 1.0000;
0 0.2500 1.0000;
0 0.5000 1.0000;
0 0.7500 1.0000;
0 1.0000 1.0000;
0.2000 1.0000 0.8000;
0.4000 1.0000 0.6000;
0.6000 1.0000 0.4000;
0.8000 1.0000 0.2000;
1.0000 1.0000 0;
1.0000 0.9333 0;
1.0000 0.8667 0;
1.0000 0.8000 0;
1.0000 0.7333 0;
1.0000 0.6667 0;
1.0000 0.6000 0;
1.0000 0.5333 0;
1.0000 0.4667 0;
1.0000 0.4000 0;
1.0000 0.3333 0;
1.0000 0.2667 0;
1.0000 0.2000 0;
1.0000 0.1333 0;
1.0000 0.0667 0;
1.0000 0 0;
0.9854 0 0;
0.9708 0 0;
0.9561 0 0;
0.9415 0 0;
0.9269 0 0;
0.9123 0 0;
0.8977 0 0;
0.8830 0 0;
0.8684 0 0;
0.8538 0 0;
0.8392 0 0;
0.8246 0 0;
0.8099 0 0;
0.7953 0 0;
0.7807 0 0;
0.7661 0 0;
0.7515 0 0;
0.7368 0 0;
0.7222 0 0;
0.7092 0 0;
0.6961 0 0;
0.6830 0 0;
0.6699 0 0;
0.6569 0 0;
0.6438 0 0;
0.6307 0 0;
0.6176 0 0;
0.6046 0 0;
0.5915 0 0;
0.5784 0 0;
0.5654 0 0;
0.5523 0 0;
0.5392 0 0;
0.5261 0 0;
0.5131 0 0;
0.5000 0 0;
];
colormap(mycmap);
freezeColors;
cbfreeze(colorbar);
set(gcf, 'renderer', 'zbuffer');
Upvotes: 9
Views: 3990
Reputation: 148
If you upgrade to MATLAB 2017a, you can assign a colormap to each axes object using the syntax colormap(axesHandle, cMap)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1832
EDIT: it seems, that the documentation is wrong! See comments!
By using the second argument of the colormap function, one should be able to assign a specific colormap to a specific (sub-)plot or axes, if you want to call it like that:
Referring to TMW: colormap:
Be aware that the first argument is the handle to the axes!
colormap(ax,map)
sets the colormap for the axes specified by ax. Each axes within a figure can have a unique colormap. After you set an axes colormap, changing the figure colormap does not affect the axes.
How to get the handle of the axes?:
when plotting with plot(x,y..) you get it as the return-value. Catch it with:
ax = plot(x,y..)
For other plot-functions, as you seem to use, you should find some info about that within the doku.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3574
If you have the Image Processing toolbox, you can use the function subimage
to display images with their respective colormaps:
X1=imread('http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5c/Burosch_Blue-Only_Test_pattern.jpg');
X2=imread('http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ea/Romsey_River_Test.jpg');
subplot(1,2,1), subimage(X1)
subplot(1,2,2), subimage(X2)
Result:
Edit there is a more complete answer to this question here.
Upvotes: 0