Binscatter appearance and behavior
Binscatter
properties control the appearance and behavior of binned
scatter plots. By changing property values, you can modify aspects of the display. Use
dot notation to refer to a particular object and property:
h = binscatter(randn(1,100),randn(1,100)); N = h.NumBins h.NumBins = [3 3]
NumBins
— Number of binsNumber of bins, specified as a scalar or two-element vector [Nx
Ny]
.
If NumBins
is specified as a two-element vector
[Nx Ny]
, then binscatter
uses Nx
bins in the x
dimension and Ny
bins in the y
dimension.
If NumBins
is specified as a scalar, then
Nx
and Ny
are both set to
the scalar value.
binscatter
uses Nx
and
Ny
bins along the x and
y dimensions in the initial plot, when the axes are
not zoomed in. (The axes are not zoomed in when the
XLimMode
and YLimMode
properties
are both 'auto'
.) When zooming,
binscatter
adjusts the number of bins to maintain a
bin size such that the visible portion of the plot is approximately divided
into Nx
-by-Ny
bins.
The maximum number of bins in each dimension is 250. The default number of bins is computed based on the data size and standard deviation and does not exceed 100.
Example:
[10 20]
Data Types: single
| double
| int8
| int16
| int32
| int64
| uint8
| uint16
| uint32
| uint64
NumBinsMode
— Selection mode for number of bins'auto'
(default) | 'manual'
Selection mode for number of bins, specified as either
'auto'
or 'manual'
. With the
default value of 'auto'
, the number of bins is computed
from the data according to Scott's rule,
[3.5*std(X(:))*numel(X)^(-1/4),
3.5*std(Y(:))*numel(Y)^(-1/4)]
.
If you specify the number of bins, then the value of
'NumBinsMode'
is set to
'manual'
.
ShowEmptyBins
— Toggle to show empty bins'off'
(default) | on/off logical valueToggle to show empty bins, specified as either 'off'
or
'on'
, or as numeric or logical 1
(true
) or 0
(false
). A value of
'on'
is equivalent to true
, and
'off'
is equivalent to false
. Thus, you can use the
value of this property as a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of
type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
Specify 'on'
or true
to color tiles in the plot that
fall within the bin limits, but have no data points.
XBinEdges
— Bin edges in x-dimensionThis property is read-only.
Bin edges in x-dimension, returned as a vector.
Data Types: single
| double
| datetime
| duration
YBinEdges
— Bin edges in y dimensionThis property is read-only.
Bin edges in y dimension, returned as a vector.
Data Types: single
| double
| datetime
| duration
XLimits
— Data limits in x-dimensionData limits in x-dimension, specified as a two-element vector
[Xmin Xmax]
.
binscatter
only displays data points that fall within the
specified data limits inclusively, .
Example:
[0 10]
Data Types: single
| double
| int8
| int16
| int32
| int64
| uint8
| uint16
| uint32
| uint64
| datetime
| duration
XLimitsMode
— Selection mode for data limits in x-dimension'auto'
(default) | 'manual'
Selection mode for data limits in x-dimension,
specified as 'auto'
or 'manual'
. The
default value is 'auto'
, so that the bin limits
automatically adjust to the data along the x-axis.
If you explicitly specify XLimits
, then
XLimitsMode
is automatically set to
'manual'
. In that case, specify
XLimitsMode
as 'auto'
to rescale
the bin limits to the data.
YLimits
— Data limits in y-dimensionData limits in y-dimension, specified as a two-element vector
[Ymin Ymax]
.
binscatter
only displays data points that fall within the
specified data limits inclusively, .
Example:
[0 10]
Data Types: single
| double
| int8
| int16
| int32
| int64
| uint8
| uint16
| uint32
| uint64
| datetime
| duration
YLimitsMode
— Selection mode for data limits in y-dimension'auto'
(default) | 'manual'
Selection mode for data limits in y-dimension,
specified as 'auto'
or 'manual'
. The
default value is 'auto'
, so that the bin limits
automatically adjust to the data along the y-axis.
If you explicitly specify YLimits
, then
YLimitsMode
is automatically set to
'manual'
. In that case, specify
YLimitsMode
as 'auto'
to rescale
the bin limits to the data.
XData
— x coordinates of datax coordinates of data, specified as a vector.
Data Types: single
| double
| int8
| int16
| int32
| int64
| uint8
| uint16
| uint32
| uint64
| datetime
| duration
YData
— y coordinates of datay coordinates of data, specified as a vector.
Data Types: single
| double
| int8
| int16
| int32
| int64
| uint8
| uint16
| uint32
| uint64
| datetime
| duration
Values
— Bin valuesThis property is read-only.
Bin values, returned as a double matrix. The (i,j)
th
entry in Values
specifies the bin count for the bin whose
x edges are [XBinEdges(i),
XBinEdges(i+1)]
and whose y edges are
[YBinEdges(j), YBinEdges(j+1)]
.
The bin inclusion scheme for the different numbered bins in
Values
, as well as their relative orientation to the
x-axis and y-axis, is
For example, the (1,1)
bin includes values that fall on
the first edge in each dimension. The last bin in the bottom right includes
values that fall on any of its edges.
FaceAlpha
— Transparency of tiles1
(default) | scalar value between 0
and 1
inclusiveTransparency of tiles, specified as a scalar value between
0
and 1
inclusive.
binscatter
uses the same transparency for all the
tiles. A value of 1
means fully opaque and
0
means completely transparent (invisible).
Example: binscatter(X,Y,'FaceAlpha',0.5)
creates a
binned scatter plot with semitransparent bins.
DisplayName
— Text used by legendData
or
''
(default) | character vectorText used by the legend, specified as a character vector. The text appears next to an icon of the binscatter.
Example: 'Text Description'
For multiline text, create the character vector using
sprintf
with the new line character
\n
.
Example: sprintf('line one\nline two')
Alternatively, you can specify the legend text using the legend
function.
If you specify the text as an input argument to the legend
function, then the legend uses the specified text and sets the
DisplayName
property to the same
value.
If you do not specify the text as an input argument to the
legend
function, then the legend uses the text in the
DisplayName
property. The default value
of DisplayName
is one of these values.
For numeric inputs, DisplayName
is
a character vector representing the variable name of the
input data used to construct the histogram. If the input
data does not have a variable name, then
DisplayName
is empty,
''
.
For categorical array inputs,
DisplayName
is empty,
''
.
If the DisplayName
property does not
contain any text, then the legend generates a character vector. The
character vector has the form 'dataN'
, where
N
is the number assigned to the binscatter object based on its location in the list of legend
entries.
If you edit interactively the character vector in an existing legend, then
MATLAB® updates the DisplayName
property to the
edited character vector.
Annotation
— Control for including or excluding object from legendAnnotation
objectThis property is read-only.
Control for including or excluding the object from a legend,
returned as an Annotation
object. Set the underlying IconDisplayStyle
property
to one of these values:
'on'
— Include the object
in the legend (default).
'off'
— Do not include the
object in the legend.
For example, to exclude a graphics object, go
, from the legend set the
IconDisplayStyle
property to
'off'
.
go.Annotation.LegendInformation.IconDisplayStyle = 'off';
Alternatively, you can control the items in a legend using the legend
function. Specify the first input argument as a vector of the
graphics objects to include. If you do not specify an existing graphics object in the
first input argument, then it does not appear in the legend. However, graphics objects
added to the axes after the legend is created do appear in the legend. Consider creating
the legend after creating all the plots to avoid extra items.
Visible
— State of visibility'on'
(default) | on/off logical valueState of visibility, specified as 'on'
or 'off'
, or as
numeric or logical 1
(true
) or
0
(false
). A value of 'on'
is equivalent to true
, and 'off'
is equivalent to
false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical
value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
'on'
— Display the object.
'off'
— Hide the object without deleting it. You
still can access the properties of an invisible object.
DataTipTemplate
— Data tip contentDataTipTemplate
objectData tip content, specified as a DataTipTemplate
object. You can
control the content that appears in a data tip by modifying the properties of the
underlying DataTipTemplate
object. For a list of properties, see
DataTipTemplate Properties.
For an example of modifying data tips, see Create Custom Data Tips.
Note
The DataTipTemplate
object is not returned by
findobj
or findall
, and it is not
copied by copyobj
.
ContextMenu
— Context menuGraphicsPlaceholder
array (default) | ContextMenu
objectContext menu, specified as a ContextMenu
object. Use this property
to display a context menu when you right-click the object. Create the context menu using
the uicontextmenu
function.
Note
If the PickableParts
property is set to
'none'
or if the HitTest
property is set
to 'off'
, then the context menu does not appear.
Selected
— Selection state'off'
(default) | on/off logical valueSelection state, specified as 'on'
or 'off'
, or as
numeric or logical 1
(true
) or
0
(false
). A value of 'on'
is equivalent to true, and 'off'
is equivalent to
false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical
value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
'on'
— Selected. If you click the object when in
plot edit mode, then MATLAB sets its Selected
property to
'on'
. If the SelectionHighlight
property also is set to 'on'
, then MATLAB displays selection handles around the object.
'off'
— Not selected.
SelectionHighlight
— Display of selection handles'on'
(default) | on/off logical valueDisplay of selection handles when selected, specified as 'on'
or
'off'
, or as numeric or logical 1
(true
) or 0
(false
). A
value of 'on'
is equivalent to true, and 'off'
is
equivalent to false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as
a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
'on'
— Display selection handles when the
Selected
property is set to
'on'
.
'off'
— Never display selection handles, even
when the Selected
property is set to
'on'
.
ButtonDownFcn
— Mouse-click callback''
(default) | function handle | cell array | character vectorMouse-click callback, specified as one of these values:
Function handle
Cell array containing a function handle and additional arguments
Character vector that is a valid MATLAB command or function, which is evaluated in the base workspace (not recommended)
Use this property to execute code when you click the object. If you specify this property using a function handle, then MATLAB passes two arguments to the callback function when executing the callback:
Clicked object — Access properties of the clicked object from within the callback function.
Event data — Empty argument. Replace it with the tilde character
(~
) in the function definition to indicate that this
argument is not used.
For more information on how to use function handles to define callback functions, see Callback Definition.
Note
If the PickableParts
property is set to 'none'
or
if the HitTest
property is set to 'off'
,
then this callback does not execute.
CreateFcn
— Creation function''
(default) | function handle | cell array | character vectorObject creation function, specified as one of these values:
Function handle.
Cell array in which the first element is a function handle. Subsequent elements in the cell array are the arguments to pass to the callback function.
Character vector containing a valid MATLAB expression (not recommended). MATLAB evaluates this expression in the base workspace.
For more information about specifying a callback as a function handle, cell array, or character vector, see Callback Definition.
This property specifies a callback function to execute when MATLAB creates the object. MATLAB initializes all property values before executing the CreateFcn
callback. If you do not specify the CreateFcn
property, then MATLAB executes a default creation function.
Setting the CreateFcn
property on an existing component has no effect.
If you specify this property as a function handle or cell array, you can access the object that is being created using the first argument of the callback function. Otherwise, use the gcbo
function to access the object.
DeleteFcn
— Deletion function''
(default) | function handle | cell array | character vectorObject deletion function, specified as one of these values:
Function handle.
Cell array in which the first element is a function handle. Subsequent elements in the cell array are the arguments to pass to the callback function.
Character vector containing a valid MATLAB expression (not recommended). MATLAB evaluates this expression in the base workspace.
For more information about specifying a callback as a function handle, cell array, or character vector, see Callback Definition.
This property specifies a callback function to execute when MATLAB deletes the object. MATLAB executes the DeleteFcn
callback before destroying the
properties of the object. If you do not specify the DeleteFcn
property, then MATLAB executes a default deletion function.
If you specify this property as a function handle or cell array, you can access the object that is being deleted using the first argument of the callback function. Otherwise, use the gcbo
function to access the object.
Interruptible
— Callback interruption'on'
(default) | on/off logical valueCallback interruption, specified as 'on'
or 'off'
, or as
numeric or logical 1
(true
) or
0
(false
). A value of 'on'
is equivalent to true
, and 'off'
is equivalent to
false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as a logical
value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
This property determines if a running callback can be interrupted. There are two callback states to consider:
The running callback is the currently executing callback.
The interrupting callback is a callback that tries to interrupt the running callback.
Whenever MATLAB invokes a callback, that callback attempts to interrupt the running
callback (if one exists). The Interruptible
property of the object
owning the running callback determines if interruption is allowed.
A value of 'on'
allows other callbacks to interrupt the
object's callbacks. The interruption occurs at the next point where
MATLAB processes the queue, such as when there is a drawnow
, figure
, uifigure
, getframe
, waitfor
, or pause
command.
If the running callback contains one of those commands, then MATLAB stops the execution of the callback at that point and executes the interrupting callback. MATLAB resumes executing the running callback when the interrupting callback completes.
If the running callback does not contain one of those commands, then MATLAB finishes executing the callback without interruption.
A value of 'off'
blocks all interruption attempts. The
BusyAction
property of the object owning the
interrupting callback determines if the interrupting callback is discarded
or put into a queue.
Note
Callback interruption and execution behave differently in these situations:
If the interrupting callback is a DeleteFcn
, CloseRequestFcn
or SizeChangedFcn
callback, then the interruption occurs regardless of the Interruptible
property value.
If the running callback is currently executing the waitfor
function, then the interruption occurs regardless of the Interruptible
property value.
Timer
objects execute according to schedule regardless of the Interruptible
property value.
When an interruption occurs, MATLAB does not save the state of properties or the display. For example, the
object returned by the gca
or gcf
command might change when
another callback executes.
BusyAction
— Callback queuing'queue'
(default) | 'cancel'
Callback queuing, specified as 'queue'
or 'cancel'
. The BusyAction
property determines how MATLAB handles the execution of interrupting callbacks. There are two callback states to consider:
The running callback is the currently executing callback.
The interrupting callback is a callback that tries to interrupt the running callback.
Whenever MATLAB invokes a callback, that callback attempts to interrupt a running callback. The Interruptible
property of the object owning the running callback determines if interruption is permitted. If interruption is not permitted, then the BusyAction
property of the object owning the interrupting callback determines if it is discarded or put in the queue. These are possible values of the BusyAction
property:
'queue'
— Puts the interrupting callback in a queue to be processed after the running callback finishes execution.
'cancel'
— Does not execute the interrupting callback.
PickableParts
— Ability to capture mouse clicks'visible'
(default) | 'none'
Ability to capture mouse clicks, specified as one of these values:
'visible'
— Capture mouse clicks only when
visible. The Visible
property must be set to
'on'
. The HitTest
property
determines if the Binscatter
object responds to the click or if an ancestor does.
'none'
— Cannot capture mouse clicks. Clicking the Binscatter
object passes the
click to the object behind it in the current view of the figure window. The
HitTest
property of the Binscatter
object has no effect.
HitTest
— Response to captured mouse clicks'on'
(default) | on/off logical valueResponse to captured mouse clicks, specified as 'on'
or
'off'
, or as numeric or logical 1
(true
) or 0
(false
). A
value of 'on'
is equivalent to true, and 'off'
is
equivalent to false
. Thus, you can use the value of this property as
a logical value. The value is stored as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
'on'
— Trigger the
ButtonDownFcn
callback of the Binscatter
object. If you have
defined the ContextMenu
property, then invoke the
context menu.
'off'
— Trigger the callbacks for the nearest
ancestor of the Binscatter
object that has one of these:
HitTest
property set to
'on'
PickableParts
property set to a value that
enables the ancestor to capture mouse clicks
Note
The PickableParts
property determines if
the Binscatter
object can capture
mouse clicks. If it cannot, then the HitTest
property
has no effect.
BeingDeleted
— Deletion statusThis property is read-only.
Deletion status, returned as an on/off logical value of type matlab.lang.OnOffSwitchState
.
MATLAB sets the BeingDeleted
property to
'on'
when the DeleteFcn
callback begins
execution. The BeingDeleted
property remains set to
'on'
until the component object no longer exists.
Check the value of the BeingDeleted
property to verify that the object is not about to be deleted before querying or modifying it.
Parent
— ParentAxes
objectParent, specified as an Axes
object.
Children
— ChildrenGraphicsPlaceholder
array | DataTip
object arrayChildren, returned as an empty GraphicsPlaceholder
array or a
DataTip
object array. Use this property to view a list of data tips
that are plotted on the chart.
You cannot add or remove children using the Children
property. To add a
child to this list, set the Parent
property of the
DataTip
object to the chart object.
HandleVisibility
— Visibility of object handle'on'
(default) | 'off'
| 'callback'
Visibility of the object handle in the Children
property
of the parent, specified as one of these values:
'on'
— Object handle is
always visible.
'off'
— Object handle is invisible at
all times. This option is useful for preventing unintended
changes by another function. Set the
HandleVisibility
to
'off'
to temporarily hide the handle
during the execution of that function.
'callback'
— Object handle is visible
from within callbacks or functions invoked by callbacks, but not
from within functions invoked from the command line. This option
blocks access to the object at the command line, but permits
callback functions to access it.
If the object is not listed in the Children
property of the parent, then
functions that obtain object handles by searching the object hierarchy or querying
handle properties cannot return it. Examples of such functions include the
get
, findobj
, gca
, gcf
, gco
, newplot
, cla
, clf
, and close
functions.
Hidden object handles are still valid. Set the root ShowHiddenHandles
property
to 'on'
to list all object handles regardless of
their HandleVisibility
property setting.
Type
— Type of graphics object'binscatter'
This property is read-only.
Type of graphics object, returned as 'binscatter'
. Use
this property to find all objects of a given type within a plotting
hierarchy, such as searching for the type using findobj
.
Tag
— Object identifier''
(default) | character vector | string scalarObject identifier, specified as a character vector or string scalar. You can specify a unique Tag
value to serve as an identifier for an object. When you need access to the object elsewhere in your code, you can use the findobj
function to search for the object based on the Tag
value.
UserData
— User data[]
(default) | arrayUser data, specified as any MATLAB array. For example, you can specify a scalar, vector, matrix, cell array, character array, table, or structure. Use this property to store arbitrary data on an object.
If you are working in App Designer, create public or private properties in the app to share data instead of using the UserData
property. For more information, see Share Data Within App Designer Apps.
UIContextMenu
property is not recommendedNot recommended starting in R2020a
Starting in R2020a, using the UIContextMenu
property to
assign a context menu to a graphics object or UI component is not recommended. Use
the ContextMenu
property instead. The property values are the
same.
There are no plans to remove support for the UIContextMenu
property at this time. However, the UIContextMenu
property no
longer appears in the list returned by calling the get
function
on a graphics object or UI component.