Nearly all graphics object properties have predefined values. Predefined values originate from two possible sources:
Default values defined on an ancestor of the object
Factory values defined on the root of the graphics object hierarchy
Users can create default values for an object property, which take precedence over the factory-defined values. Objects use default values when:
Created in a hierarchy where an ancestor defines a default value
Parented into a hierarchy where an ancestor defines a default value
Define a default property value using a character vector with these three parts:
'default' ObjectType PropertyName
The word default
The object type (for example, Line
)
The property name (for example, LineWidth
)
A character vector that specified the default line LineWidth
would
be:
'defaultLineLineWidth'
Use this character vector to specify the default value. For example, to specify a
default value of 2 points for the line LineWidth
property, use the
statement:
set(groot,'defaultLineLineWidth',2)
The character vector defaultLineLineWidth
identifies the property as
a line property. To specify the figure color, use defaultFigureColor
.
set(groot,'defaultFigureColor','b')
In general, you should define a default value on the root level so that all subsequent
plotting functions use those defaults. Specify the root in set
and
get
statements using the groot
function, which returns the handle to the root.
You can define default property values on three levels:
Root — values apply to objects created in current MATLAB® session
Figure — use for default values applied to children of the figure defining the defaults.
Axes — use for default values applied only to children of the axes defining
the defaults and only when using low-level functions (light
, line
, ,patch
, rectangle
, surface
, text
, and the low-level form of
image
).
For example, specify a default figure color only on the root level.
set(groot,'defaultFigureColor','b')
Use get
to determine what default values are
currently set on any given object level:
get(groot,'default')
returns all default values set in your current MATLAB session.
Specifying a property value of 'default'
sets the property to the
first encountered default value defined for that property. For example, these statements
result in a green surface EdgeColor
:
set(groot,'defaultSurfaceEdgeColor','k') h = surface(peaks); set(gcf,'defaultSurfaceEdgeColor','g') set(h,'EdgeColor','default')
Because a default value for surface EdgeColor
exists on the figure
level, MATLAB encounters this value first and uses it instead of the default
EdgeColor
defined on the root.
Specifying a property value of 'remove'
gets rid of user-defined
default values. The statement
set(groot,'defaultSurfaceEdgeColor','remove')
removes the definition of the default surface EdgeColor
from the
root.
Specifying a property value of 'factory'
sets the property to its
factory-defined value. For example, these statements set the EdgeColor
of
surface h
to black (its factory setting), regardless of what default
values you have defined:
set(gcf,'defaultSurfaceEdgeColor','g') h = surface(peaks); set(h,'EdgeColor','factory')
You can list factory values:
get(groot,'factory')
— List all factory-defined property
values for all graphics objects
get(groot,'factory
— List all factory-defined property values for a specific objectObjectType
')
get(groot,'factory
— List factory-defined value for the specified property.ObjectTypePropertyName
')
Setting a property value to default
, remove
, or
factory
produces the effects described in the previous sections. To set
a property to one of these words (for example, a text String
property
set to the word default
), precede the word with the backslash
character:
h = text('String','\default');