Add title
title(
adds the specified
title to the current axes or standalone visualization. Reissuing the
titletext
)title
command causes the new title to replace the old
title.
title(
adds a subtitle underneath the title.titletext
,subtitletext
)
title(___,
modifies the title appearance using one or more name-value pair arguments. For
example, Name,Value
)'FontSize',12
sets the font size to 12 points. Specify
name-value pair arguments after all other input arguments. Modifying the title
appearance is not supported for all types of charts.
returns the
object used for the title. Use t
= title(___)t
to make future modifications to
the title.
Create a figure and display a title in the current axes.
plot((1:10).^2)
title('My Title')
You also can call title
with a function that returns text. For example, the date
function returns text with today's date.
title(date)
MATLAB® sets the output of date
as the axes title.
Create a plot. Then create a title and a subtitle by calling the title
function with two character vectors as arguments. Use the 'Color'
name-value pair argument to customize the color for both lines of text. Specify two return arguments to store the text objects for the title and subtitle.
plot([0 1]) [t,s] = title('Straight Line','Slope = 1, y-Intercept = 0','Color','blue');
Change the font size for the title to 16
, and change the font angle for the subtitle to 'italic'
.
t.FontSize = 16;
s.FontAngle = 'italic';
Include the value of variable c
in a title.
figure plot((1:10).^2) f = 70; c = (f-32)/1.8; title(['Temperature is ',num2str(c),' C'])
Use the color modifier \color
to change the color of characters following it from the previous color.
plot((1:10).^2) title(['\fontsize{16}black {\color{magenta}magenta '... '\color[rgb]{0 .5 .5}teal \color{red}red} black again'])
Use the Name,Value
pair 'Color','m'
to set the color of the title to magenta.
figure plot((1:10).^2) title('Case number # 3','Color', 'm')
Use TeX markup to include Greek symbols in a title.
t = (0:0.01:0.2); y = exp(-25*t); figure plot(t,y) title('y = \ite^{\lambda t}','Color','b')
The 'Interpreter'
property must be 'tex'
(the default).
figure
plot((1:10).^2)
title('\alpha^2 and X_1')
The superscript character, "^", and the subscript character, "_", modify the character or substring defined in braces immediately following.
Create a multiline title using a multiline cell array.
figure plot((1:10).^2) title({'First line';'Second line'})
Set the Interpreter
property as 'none'
so that the text X_1
is displayed in the figure as typed, without making 1
a subscript of X
.
plot((1:10).^2) title('X_1','Interpreter','none')
Starting in R2019b, you can display a tiling of plots using the tiledlayout
and nexttile
functions. Call the tiledlayout
function to create a 2-by-1 tiled chart layout. Call the nexttile
function to create the axes objects ax1
and ax2
. Then plot data into each axes.
tiledlayout(2,1) ax1 = nexttile; plot(ax1,(1:10).^2) ax2 = nexttile; plot(ax2,(1:10).^3)
Add a title to each axes by passing ax1
and ax2
to the title
function.
title(ax1,'Top Plot') title(ax2,'Bottom Plot')
Add a title to a plot and return the text object.
plot((1:10).^2)
t = title('My Title');
Set the color of the title to red. Use dot notation to set properties.
t.Color = 'red';
Create a plot with a title. Get the current axes, and then align the title to the left edge of the plot box by setting the TitleHorizontalAlignment
property of the axes to 'left'
.
plot([0 2],[1 5]) title('Straight Line') ax = gca; ax.TitleHorizontalAlignment = 'left';
Center the title setting the TitleHorizontalAlignment
property on the axes to 'center'
.
ax.TitleHorizontalAlignment = 'center';
titletext
— Title text''
(default) | character vector | cell array of character vectors | string array | categorical array | numeric valueTitle text, specified as a character vector, cell array of character vectors, string array, categorical array, or numeric value. Specify a value according to how you want the text to appear. This table lists the most common situations.
Appearance of Text | Description of Value | Example |
---|---|---|
One line of text | Character vector or string scalar. | txt = 'My Text' txt = "My Text" |
Multiple lines of text | Cell array of character vectors or string array. | txt = {'First line','Second line'}; txt = ["First line", "Second line"]; |
Text that includes a numeric variable | Array that includes the number converted to a
char array. Use num2str
to convert the value. |
x = 42;
txt = ['The value is ',num2str(x)]; |
Text that includes special characters such as Greek letters or mathematical symbols | Array that includes TeX markup. For a list of
supported markup, see the
Interpreter property. |
txt = 'x ranges from 0 to 2\pi' |
Note
The words default
,
factory
, and remove
are reserved words that do not appear in text when quoted as
normal characters. To display any of these words individually,
precede them with a backslash, such as
'\default'
or
'\remove'
.
If you specify this property as a categorical array, MATLAB® uses the values in the array, not the categories.
If you specify text that contains only a numeric value, the
value is converted using sprintf('%g',value)
.
For example, 12345678
displays as
1.23457e+07
.
subtitletext
— Subtitle text''
(default) | character vector | cell array of character vectors | string array | categorical array | numeric valueSubtitle text, specified as a character vector, cell array of character vectors, string array, categorical array, or numeric value. Specify a value according to how you want the text to appear. This table lists the most common situations.
Appearance of Text | Description of Value | Example |
---|---|---|
One line of text | Character vector or string scalar. | txt = 'My Text' txt = "My Text" |
Multiple lines of text | Cell array of character vectors or string array. | txt = {'First line','Second line'}; txt = ["First line", "Second line"]; |
Text that includes a numeric variable | Array that includes the number converted to a
char array. Use num2str
to convert the value. |
x = 42;
txt = ['The value is ',num2str(x)]; |
Text that includes special characters such as Greek letters or mathematical symbols | Array that includes TeX markup. For a list of
supported markup, see the
Interpreter property. |
txt = 'x ranges from 0 to 2\pi' |
Note
The words default
,
factory
, and remove
are reserved words that do not appear in text when quoted as
normal characters. To display any of these words individually,
precede them with a backslash, such as
'\default'
or
'\remove'
.
If you specify this property as a categorical array, MATLAB uses the values in the array, not the categories.
If you specify text that contains only a numeric value, the
value is converted using sprintf('%g',value)
.
For example, 12345678
displays as
1.23457e+07
.
target
— Target for titleTarget for the title, specified as one of the following:
Any type of axes: an Axes
,
PolarAxes
, or GeographicAxes
object.
Any type of legend: a Legend
or BubbleLegend
object.
A TiledChartLayout
object.
A standalone visualization that has a Title
property. For example, you can add a title to a HeatmapChart
object.
An array of graphics objects from the preceding list. The
objects must belong to the same class. To determine the class,
use the class
function.
If you do not specify the target for the title, then the title
function
adds the title to the graphics object returned by the gca
command.
Note
Some charts do not support modifying the title appearance, such as the color, or returning the text object as an output argument.
Specify optional
comma-separated pairs of Name,Value
arguments. Name
is
the argument name and Value
is the corresponding value.
Name
must appear inside quotes. You can specify several name and value
pair arguments in any order as
Name1,Value1,...,NameN,ValueN
.
'Color','red','FontSize',14
adds
a title with red, 14-point font.In addition to the following, you can specify other text object
properties using Name,Value
pair arguments. See Text Properties.
'FontSize'
— Font size11
(default) | scalar value greater than 0Font size, specified as a scalar value greater than 0
in point units. One point equals 1/72 inch. To change the font units, use the FontUnits
property.
If you add a title or subtitle to an axes object, then the font size property for the axes
also affects the font size for the title and subtitle. The title and subtitle font sizes
are the axes font size multiplied by a scale factor. The FontSize
property of the axes
contains the axes font size. The TitleFontSizeMultiplier
property of the axes contains the scale factor.
By default, the axes font size is 10 points and the scale factor is 1.1, so the title
and subtitle each have a font size of 11 points.
Data Types: single
| double
| int8
| int16
| int32
| int64
| uint8
| uint16
| uint32
| uint64
'FontWeight'
— Thickness of text characters'normal'
| 'bold'
Thickness of the text characters, specified as one of these values:
'normal'
— Normal weight as defined
by the particular font
'bold'
— Thicker characters
outlines than normal
MATLAB uses the FontWeight
property
to select a font from those available on your system. Not all fonts
have a bold font weight. Therefore, specifying a bold font weight
could still result in the normal font weight.
The TitleFontWeight
property for the associated axes affects
the FontWeight
value for the title. Similarly, the
SubtitleFontWeight
property for the associated axes
affects the FontWeight
value for the subtitle.
Note
The 'light'
and 'demi'
font
weight values have been removed. Use 'normal'
instead.
'FontName'
— Font name'FixedWidth'
Font name, specified as a supported font name or 'FixedWidth'
. To display
and print text properly, you must choose a font that your system supports. The default
font depends on your operating system and locale.
To use a fixed-width font that looks good in any locale, use 'FixedWidth'
.
The fixed-width font relies on the root FixedWidthFontName
property. Setting the root FixedWidthFontName
property causes an
immediate update of the display to use the new font.
'Color'
— Text color[0 0 0]
(default) | RGB triplet | hexadecimal color code | 'r'
| 'g'
| 'b'
| ...Text color, specified as an RGB triplet, a hexadecimal color code, a color name, or a short
name. The default value of [0 0 0]
corresponds to black.
For a custom color, specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code.
An RGB triplet is a three-element row vector whose elements
specify the intensities of the red, green, and blue
components of the color. The intensities must be in the
range [0,1]
; for example, [0.4
0.6 0.7]
.
A hexadecimal color code is a character vector or a string
scalar that starts with a hash symbol (#
)
followed by three or six hexadecimal digits, which can range
from 0
to F
. The
values are not case sensitive. Thus, the color codes
'#FF8800'
,
'#ff8800'
,
'#F80'
, and
'#f80'
are equivalent.
Alternatively, you can specify some common colors by name. This table lists the named color options, the equivalent RGB triplets, and hexadecimal color codes.
Color Name | Short Name | RGB Triplet | Hexadecimal Color Code | Appearance |
---|---|---|---|---|
'red' | 'r' | [1 0 0] | '#FF0000' | |
'green' | 'g' | [0 1 0] | '#00FF00' | |
'blue' | 'b' | [0 0 1] | '#0000FF' | |
'cyan'
| 'c' | [0 1 1] | '#00FFFF' | |
'magenta' | 'm' | [1 0 1] | '#FF00FF' | |
'yellow' | 'y' | [1 1 0] | '#FFFF00' | |
'black' | 'k' | [0 0 0] | '#000000' | |
'white' | 'w' | [1 1 1] | '#FFFFFF' | |
'none' | Not applicable | Not applicable | Not applicable | No color |
Here are the RGB triplets and hexadecimal color codes for the default colors MATLAB uses in many types of plots.
RGB Triplet | Hexadecimal Color Code | Appearance |
---|---|---|
[0 0.4470 0.7410] | '#0072BD' | |
[0.8500 0.3250 0.0980] | '#D95319' | |
[0.9290 0.6940 0.1250] | '#EDB120' | |
[0.4940 0.1840 0.5560] | '#7E2F8E' | |
[0.4660 0.6740 0.1880] | '#77AC30' | |
[0.3010 0.7450 0.9330] | '#4DBEEE' | |
[0.6350 0.0780 0.1840] | '#A2142F' |
Example: 'blue'
Example: [0
0 1]
Example: '#0000FF'
'Interpreter'
— Text interpreter'tex'
(default) | 'latex'
| 'none'
Text interpreter, specified as one of these values:
'tex'
— Interpret characters using a subset of
TeX markup.
'latex'
— Interpret characters using LaTeX
markup.
'none'
— Display literal characters.
By default, MATLAB supports a subset of TeX markup. Use TeX markup to add superscripts and subscripts, modify the font type and color, and include special characters in the text.
Modifiers remain in effect until the end of the text.
Superscripts and subscripts are an exception because they modify only the next character or the
characters within the curly braces. When you set the interpreter to 'tex'
,
the supported modifiers are as follows.
Modifier | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
^{ } | Superscript | 'text^{superscript}' |
_{ } | Subscript | 'text_{subscript}' |
\bf | Bold font | '\bf text' |
\it | Italic font | '\it text' |
\sl | Oblique font (usually the same as italic font) | '\sl text' |
\rm | Normal font | '\rm text' |
\fontname{ | Font name — Replace
with the name of
a font family. You can use this in combination with other modifiers. | '\fontname{Courier} text' |
\fontsize{ | Font size —Replace
with a numeric
scalar value in point units. | '\fontsize{15} text' |
\color{ | Font color — Replace
with one of
these colors: red , green ,
yellow , magenta ,
blue , black ,
white , gray ,
darkGreen , orange , or
lightBlue . | '\color{magenta} text' |
\color[rgb]{specifier} | Custom font color — Replace
with a
three-element RGB triplet. | '\color[rgb]{0,0.5,0.5} text' |
This table lists the supported special characters for the
'tex'
interpreter.
Character Sequence | Symbol | Character Sequence | Symbol | Character Sequence | Symbol |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| α |
| υ |
| ~ |
| ∠ |
|
| ≤ | |
|
|
| χ |
| ∞ |
| β |
| ψ |
| ♣ |
| γ |
| ω |
| ♦ |
| δ |
| Γ |
| ♥ |
| ϵ |
| Δ |
| ♠ |
| ζ |
| Θ |
| ↔ |
| η |
| Λ |
| ← |
| θ |
| Ξ |
| ⇐ |
| ϑ |
| Π |
| ↑ |
| ι |
| Σ |
| → |
| κ |
| ϒ |
| ⇒ |
| λ |
| Φ |
| ↓ |
| µ |
| Ψ |
| º |
| ν |
| Ω |
| ± |
| ξ |
| ∀ |
| ≥ |
| π |
| ∃ |
| ∝ |
| ρ |
| ∍ |
| ∂ |
| σ |
| ≅ |
| • |
| ς |
| ≈ |
| ÷ |
| τ |
| ℜ |
| ≠ |
| ≡ |
| ⊕ |
| ℵ |
| ℑ |
| ∪ |
| ℘ |
| ⊗ |
| ⊆ |
| ∅ |
| ∩ |
| ∈ |
| ⊇ |
| ⊃ |
| ⌈ |
| ⊂ |
| ∫ |
| · |
| ο |
| ⌋ |
| ¬ |
| ∇ |
| ⌊ |
| x |
| ... |
| ⊥ |
| √ |
| ´ |
| ∧ |
| ϖ |
| ∅ |
| ⌉ |
| 〉 |
| | |
| ∨ |
| 〈 |
| © |
To use LaTeX markup, set the interpreter to 'latex'
. Use dollar
symbols around the text, for example, use '$\int_1^{20} x^2 dx$'
for inline mode or '$$\int_1^{20} x^2 dx$$'
for display
mode.
The displayed text uses the default LaTeX font style. The
FontName
, FontWeight
, and
FontAngle
properties do not have an effect. To change the
font style, use LaTeX markup.
The maximum size of the text that you can use with the LaTeX interpreter is 1200 characters. For multiline text, this reduces by about 10 characters per line.
For more information about the LaTeX system, see The LaTeX Project website at https://www.latex-project.org/.
t
— Object used for titleObject used for the title, returned as one of these types of objects:
Text object — If you add a title to axes, then
title
returns a text object. Use this
text object to access and modify properties of the title after
it is created. For a list of text object properties, see
Text Properties. You also
can access the title through the Title
property of the axes object.
Legend text object — If you add a title to a legend,
then title
returns a legend text object. Use
this legend text object to access and modify properties of the
title after it is created. For a list of legend text object
properties, see Text Properties.
You also can access the title through the Title
property of the legend object.
s
— Object used for subtitleObject used for the subtitle, returned as a text object. Use this text
object to modify properties of the subtitle after creating it. For a list of
text object properties, see Text Properties. You also can access
the subtitle through the Subtitle
property of the axes
object.
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