Add buttons to axes toolbar
adds a push button to the axes toolbar specified by btn
= axtoolbarbtn(tb
)tb
and returns the
ToolbarPushButton
object.
specifies button properties using one or more name-value pair arguments.btn
= axtoolbarbtn(tb
,style
,Name,Value
)
Add a custom state button for the axes toolbar that turns on and off the axes grid lines.
First, create a program file called mycustomstatebutton.m
. Within
the program file:
Plot random data.
Create a toolbar for the axes with options to zoom in, zoom out, and restore
the view using the axtoolbar
function.
Add an empty state button to the toolbar using the
axtoolbarbtn
function. Return the
ToolbarStateButton
object.
Specify the icon, tool tip, and callback function for the state button by
setting the Icon
, Tooltip
, and
ValueChangedFcn
properties. This example uses the icon, which you must first save as an image file
called
mygridicon.png
on your path.
When you run the program file, click the icon to turn on and off the grid lines.
function mycustomstatebutton plot(rand(5)) ax = gca; tb = axtoolbar(ax,{'zoomin','zoomout','restoreview'}); btn = axtoolbarbtn(tb,'state'); btn.Icon = 'mygridicon.png'; btn.Tooltip = 'Grid Lines'; btn.ValueChangedFcn = @customcallback; function customcallback(src,event) switch src.Value case 'off' event.Axes.XGrid = 'off'; event.Axes.YGrid = 'off'; event.Axes.ZGrid = 'off'; case 'on' event.Axes.XGrid = 'on'; event.Axes.YGrid = 'on'; event.Axes.ZGrid = 'on'; end end end
Create a custom push button for the axes toolbar that snaps the view of the axes to a 2-D view.
First, create a program file called mycustompushbutton.m
. Within
the program file:
Plot a surface.
Create a toolbar for the axes with options to zoom in, zoom out, rotate, and
restore the view using the axtoolbar
function.
Add an empty push button to the toolbar using the
axtoolbarbtn
function. Return the
ToolbarPushButton
object.
Specify the icon, tool tip, and callback function for the push button by
setting the Icon
, Tooltip
, and
ButtonPressedFcn
properties, respectively. This example uses
the icon, which you must first save as an image file
called
my2dicon.png
on your path.
When you run the program file, click the icon to snap the view of the axes to a 2-D view.
function mycustompushbutton surf(peaks(25)) ax = gca; tb = axtoolbar(ax,{'zoomin','zoomout','rotate','restoreview'}); btn = axtoolbarbtn(tb,'push'); btn.Icon = 'my2dicon.png'; btn.Tooltip = 'Snap to 2-D view'; btn.ButtonPushedFcn = @customcallback; function customcallback(src,event) view(event.Axes,2) end end
tb
— ToolbarAxesToolbar
objectToolbar, specified as an AxesToolbar
object. Create the toolbar
using the axtoolbar
function, such as tb =
axestoolbar
.
style
— Button style'push'
| 'state'
Button style, specified as one of these options.
Style | Description |
---|---|
'push' | Push button. When clicked once, the button appears to press and release. |
'state' | State button with two states. When clicked once, the button remains in the pressed or released state until it is clicked again. |
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
.
axtoolbarbtn(tb,'push','Icon','myimage.png','Tooltip','My Icon
Tooltip')
Note
The properties listed here are only a subset. Push buttons and state buttons support a different set of properties. For a full list of properties and descriptions for each type, see the associated property page.
'Icon'
— Button icon'none'
(default) | file name | m-by-n-by-3 array | m-by-n matrix | predefined iconButton icon, specified as one of these values. The axes toolbar displays icons as grayscale images. MATLAB® scales down the image to fit, if necessary.
File name — Specify the file name as a character vector or a string scalar. The file name can be preceded by a path. The image file must be in JPEG, GIF, or PNG format.
Array — Specify an m-by-n-by-3 array of RGB triplets that represent pixels in an image.
Matrix — Specify an m-by-n matrix of numeric values that represent pixels in an image.
If the values are of an integer type, then specify values
between 0
and 63
. A value
of 0
is opaque and a value of
63
is transparent. NaN
is also transparent.
If the values are of type double
, then
specify values between 1
and
64
. A value of 1
is
opaque and a value of 64
is transparent.
NaN
is also transparent.
Predefined icon — Specify one of the names in this table.
Icon Name | Result |
---|---|
'brush' | |
'datacursor' | |
'export' | |
'rotate' | |
'pan' | |
'zoomin' | |
'zoomout' | |
'restoreview' | |
'none' | No icon |
Example: btn.Icon = 'icon.png'
Example: btn.Icon = 'C:\Documents\icon.png'
Example: btn.Icon = 'rotate'
'Tooltip'
— Button tool tip''
(default) | character vector | cell array of character vectors | string arrayButton tool tip, specified as a character vector, cell array of character vectors, or a string array. Use this property to display a message when you hover the pointer over the button. To display multiple lines of text, specify a cell array of character vectors or a string array. Each element in the array displays a separate line of text.
Example: btn.Tooltip = 'My Tooltip'