How to preserve the 3d plot box, when changing patch visibility.

I have a 3d plot with a collection of patches. If I set a subset of patches Visible attributes to 'off', the plot box is recomputed. How can I capture and preserve all aspects of the plot box so that the visible patches don't jump around as other patches become visible or invisible.

 채택된 답변

Here's something a little fancier, and maybe more robust. It captures (and reasserts) all relevant properties of the plot perspective, including camera angles and such:
figure;
ax = gca;
% drop some data between 1 and 5 in all 3 dimensions
for x = 1:4:5
for y = 1:4:5
line([x,x],[y,y],[1,5]);
end
end
axis equal;
view(ax,[1,1,1]);
fpose=figPose(ax);
figPose(ax, fpose)
ax.XLimMode %Verify manual mode
ans = 'manual'
ax.YLimMode
ans = 'manual'
ax.ZLimMode
ans = 'manual'
function varargout = figPose(varargin)
%figPose Record or assert a 3-D camera/figure pose
%
%Record pose
%
% S = figPose();
% S = figPose(ax);
%
%Apply pose
%
% figPose(S)
% figPose(ax,S)
%
%The pose includes:
% • Camera geometry
% • Projection mode
% • Axis limits / aspect ratios
% • Figure size
%--------------------------------------------
% Resolve axis handle
%--------------------------------------------
if nargin == 0
hAx = gca;
varargin = {};
else
if isgraphics(varargin{1},'axes')
hAx = varargin{1};
varargin = varargin(2:end);
else
hAx = gca;
end
end
assert(isvalid(hAx),'Axis invalid')
hFig = ancestor(hAx,'figure');
assertPose = ~isempty(varargin) && isstruct(varargin{1});
%--------------------------------------------
% Properties to clone
%--------------------------------------------
camProps = { ...
'CameraPosition',...
'CameraTarget',...
'CameraUpVector',...
'CameraViewAngle',...
'Projection'};
axisProps = { ...
'XLim','YLim','ZLim',...
'DataAspectRatio',...
'PlotBoxAspectRatio'};
%--------------------------------------------
% Apply pose
%--------------------------------------------
if assertPose
S = varargin{1};
% Lock camera modes
set(hAx,...
'CameraPositionMode','manual',...
'CameraTargetMode','manual',...
'CameraUpVectorMode','manual',...
'CameraViewAngleMode','manual');
% Restore camera
set(hAx,camProps,S.cam);
% Restore axis geometry if present
if isfield(S,'axis')
set(hAx,axisProps,S.axis);
end
% Restore figure size
if isfield(S,'figpos')
set(hFig,'Position',S.figpos);
end
%--------------------------------------------
% Capture pose
%--------------------------------------------
else
S.cam = get(hAx,camProps);
S.axis = get(hAx,axisProps);
S.figpos = hFig.Position;
varargout = {S};
end
end

추가 답변 (3개)

Matt J
Matt J 2026년 3월 11일
편집: Matt J 2026년 3월 11일
Using axis() twice, we can both capture and reassert the axis limits,
axis(axis)
This also then converts all X,Y,ZLimModes to 'manual' so automatic changes will not happen.

댓글 수: 4

Borrowing your example,
figure;
ax = gca;
% drop some data between 1 and 5 in all 3 dimensions
for x = 1:4:5
for y = 1:4:5
line([x,x],[y,y],[1,5]);
end
end
axis equal;
view(ax,[1,1,1]);
originalLimits = axis %Check the current axis limits
originalLimits = 1×6
0.4628 5.5372 1.0000 5.0000 0.5000 5.5000
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
axis(axis) %assert the limits and change to manual limit mode
isequal(originalLimits,axis) %recheck axis limits -- they're unchanged
ans = logical
1
ax.XLimMode %Verify manual mode
ans = 'manual'
ax.YLimMode
ans = 'manual'
ax.ZLimMode
ans = 'manual'
Yes, that's working for me.
(But on code hygeine grounds, I hate it. What does axis(axis) do? In other languages, it might look like a copy constructor. Or maybe the Y combinator, invoking a function on itself. In matlab, it's some magic incantation whose semantics are completely independent of the rest of the language. Bleh.)
"What does axis(axis) do?"
It's the same as
lim = axis();
axis(lim)
but without assigning to the variable lim.
Both of those usages are documented.
In matlab, it's some magic incantation whose semantics are completely independent of the rest of the language.
There must be dozens of other graphics commands that behave the same way:
xlim(xlim) %reasserts x-limits
ylim(ylim) %reasserts y-limits
zlim(zlim) %reasserts z-limits
campos(campos)
camva(camva)
camup(camup)
view(view)
figure(figure(n))

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

Voss
Voss 2026년 3월 11일
편집: Voss 2026년 3월 11일

0 개 추천

You don't need to capture anything.
To preserve the axes limits as they are, set the axes XLimMode, YLimMode, and ZLimMode to 'manual'. Obviously you would do that at a point in the code where the axes limits are what you want them to be, e.g., after all patches are initialized.
Other axes properties besides the limits affect the plot box, so you may want to set some other properties' modes to 'manual' as well in order to disable all undesired automatic changes to the plot box, e.g., PlotBoxAspectRatioMode, CameraViewAngleMode, etc. Look through the axes properties to see what you have control over:

댓글 수: 5

It seems I do need to capture previous values because setting the ?LimMode's causes the limits to change.
See below how the ZLim values change when the YLimMode is set.
>> [ax.XLim, ax.YLim, ax.ZLim]
ans =
-0.1561 6.1561 1.0000 5.0000 0.5000 5.5000
>> ax.XLimMode = 'manual';
>> ax.YLimMode = 'manual';
>> [ax.XLim, ax.YLim, ax.ZLim]
ans =
-0.1561 6.1561 1.0000 5.0000 1.0000 5.0000
Interesting
It's definitely an Xbug (i.e. unexpected behavior). Whether it's a bug depends on whether all the auto-scaling behavior has a comprehensive description somewhere in the documentation. This code demonstrates the (X)bug.
figure;
ax = gca;
% drop some data between 1 and 5 in all 3 dimensions
for x = 1:4:5
for y = 1:4:5
line([x,x],[y,y],[1,5]);
end
end
axis equal;
view(ax,[1,1,1]);
[ax.XLim, ax.YLim, ax.ZLim]
ans = 1×6
0.4628 5.5372 1.0000 5.0000 0.5000 5.5000
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
ax.XLimMode = 'manual';
ax.YLimMode = 'manual';
[ax.XLim, ax.YLim, ax.ZLim]
ans = 1×6
0.4628 5.5372 1.0000 5.0000 1.0000 5.0000
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
<mw-icon class=""></mw-icon>
ax.ZLimMode = 'manual';
Voss
Voss 2026년 3월 13일
편집: Voss 2026년 3월 13일
If you set the modes all at once, i.e.,
set(ax,'XLimMode','manual','YLimMode','manual','ZLimMode','manual')
Then the limits don't change.

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

Nick
Nick 2026년 3월 18일
편집: Matt J 2026년 3월 18일
you may change patch color to fully transparent instead, e.g.
patch_handle.FaceAlpha = 0;
% or make use of the function
alpha(patch_handle, 'clear');
% prepend with "hold on;" if necessary

댓글 수: 1

That's an interesting suggestion. One difference (between setting alpha and setting object visibility) might be in the behavior of tooltips. I haven't done much with tooltips yet, but plan to.

댓글을 달려면 로그인하십시오.

카테고리

도움말 센터File Exchange에서 Discrete Data Plots에 대해 자세히 알아보기

제품

릴리스

R2025b

질문:

2026년 3월 11일

댓글:

2026년 3월 18일

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by