Drawing a circle .. help please.

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Keith Elliott
Keith Elliott on 13 Jun 2018
Commented: Keith Elliott on 14 Jun 2018
Hi .. I'm trialling matlab to see if it's worth the money for me. Array limits, speed and graphical output being my concerns.
right now I can't even draw a circle and would appreciate any advice.
the first code I tried was
clear
x=-1:0.01:1;
y=sqrt(1-(x.^2));
y1=-y;
plot(x,y)
plot(x,y1)
This only gives me half a circle(upper or lower).
Also if I use 0.0000001 as the steps instead of 0.01 the calculations are quick but the plot takes forever to happen.
I then tried ..
clear
x=-1;
while(x<1)
y=sqrt(1-(x^2));
plot(x,y)
x=x+0.01;
end
to try and avoid array size issues and plot points as you calculate them (without storing data) but this didn't give me any chart at all (heaven knows why not)
any suggestions / clarifications very welcome
thanks

Accepted Answer

Aquatris
Aquatris on 13 Jun 2018
Edited: Aquatris on 13 Jun 2018
Use a different equation that describes the circle to make it easier.
theta = 0:0.01:2*pi;
r = 2;
x = r*cos(theta);
y = r*sin(theta);
plot(x,y),axis equal
The problem with your approach is, plot function overwrites the data. Use
plot(x,y,x,y1)
or if you want both parts to be the same color use
plot(x,y,'b',x,y1,'b')
where 'b' stands for blue.
Alternatively, after the first call to plot function, add 'hold on' to tell Matlab the next plot function should not erase the previous content within the plot.
  1 Comment
Keith Elliott
Keith Elliott on 14 Jun 2018
the bit that helped was they 'hold on' command.
the sin / cos approach won't work for me (until I get to the complex plane form) as I'll also be looking to solve x^n+y^n=1 (where n is even) as n tends to infinity to try and include squares (similarly as n-> infinity for ellipses to rectangles)
the hold on command deals with the plotting aspect for simple 2d stuff which got me past one problem! Many more problems to hurdle, no doubt, but little by little is good :)

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More Answers (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 13 Jun 2018
Code samples for drawing circles, ellipses, and arcs are in the FAQ: https://matlab.wikia.com/wiki/FAQ#How_do_I_create_a_circle.3F
  1 Comment
Keith Elliott
Keith Elliott on 13 Jun 2018
thanks. I found the section you were referring to.
It's my bad.. I didn't ask my question quite specifically enough.
My overall objective is to derive and plot potentially irregular orbits of stars, planets and moons in theoretical triple star systems over long time scales. this means I will need to calculate (the maths is simple) x,y coordinates (assuming coplanar orbits) for each body's position at a lot of time intervals
To understand matlab likely limitations I wanted to derive points on a circle (x^2+y^2=1) in the two different ways (or three if you include steps of 0.0000001).
So my question should have been...
please can anyone offer advice/suggestions on how to plot a circle on these ways
(ps I've not investigated plotyy yet but that may help)
thanks again (in advance)

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Keith Elliott
Keith Elliott on 13 Jun 2018
thanks Aquatris.. that definitely helps.
  2 Comments
Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 13 Jun 2018
His code is basically the 5th code chunk in the FAQ I gave you the link for.
Keith Elliott
Keith Elliott on 14 Jun 2018
Thanks. You're right of course. The bit that helped was the 'hold on' command.. I hadn't come across it before. It solved the simple graphical display issue I had.

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