PGFPlots with TikZ produces unstable plots
up vote
2
down vote
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I'm currently trying to get some of my Octave plots to work natively in a LaTeX document. My method of choice is to use the plot parameters of my Octave scripts in a standalone TikZ document that uses PGFPlots and is imported to a larger LaTeX document with some discussion on the results. Unfortunately, there have been some setbacks in my first foray to PGFPlots.
It seems that the plot bears little resemblance to the plot in the Octave script and that the plot is unstable in the sense that its axis offset and its slope change when I adjust the seemingly unrelated axis properties.
Here is the code:
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
compat=newest
]
addplot {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
The plot passes through the origin even if the formula defines offset. Furthermore, adjustment to the x-domain restrictions change the slope of the plot. I worry that there is a feature of PGFPlots that I'm not yet familiar with and which is distorting my plots.
To compare, the following Octave plot has a clear offset from the origin for the corresponding red line.
tikz-pgf pgfplots
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
I'm currently trying to get some of my Octave plots to work natively in a LaTeX document. My method of choice is to use the plot parameters of my Octave scripts in a standalone TikZ document that uses PGFPlots and is imported to a larger LaTeX document with some discussion on the results. Unfortunately, there have been some setbacks in my first foray to PGFPlots.
It seems that the plot bears little resemblance to the plot in the Octave script and that the plot is unstable in the sense that its axis offset and its slope change when I adjust the seemingly unrelated axis properties.
Here is the code:
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
compat=newest
]
addplot {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
The plot passes through the origin even if the formula defines offset. Furthermore, adjustment to the x-domain restrictions change the slope of the plot. I worry that there is a feature of PGFPlots that I'm not yet familiar with and which is distorting my plots.
To compare, the following Octave plot has a clear offset from the origin for the corresponding red line.
tikz-pgf pgfplots
1
Could you add youroctave
plot for reference, so that we can also try to see the problem?
– Raaja
Nov 22 at 12:33
I'm adding the reference. The red line corresponds to the blue line above.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 12:50
3
You add all the restrictions plot in a huge domain. Tryaddplot[domain=-0.05:0.05] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
does not set the domain of the plot, as can be seen clearly from the fact that it runs from-4.5
to4.5
.
– marmot
Nov 22 at 12:54
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
I'm currently trying to get some of my Octave plots to work natively in a LaTeX document. My method of choice is to use the plot parameters of my Octave scripts in a standalone TikZ document that uses PGFPlots and is imported to a larger LaTeX document with some discussion on the results. Unfortunately, there have been some setbacks in my first foray to PGFPlots.
It seems that the plot bears little resemblance to the plot in the Octave script and that the plot is unstable in the sense that its axis offset and its slope change when I adjust the seemingly unrelated axis properties.
Here is the code:
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
compat=newest
]
addplot {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
The plot passes through the origin even if the formula defines offset. Furthermore, adjustment to the x-domain restrictions change the slope of the plot. I worry that there is a feature of PGFPlots that I'm not yet familiar with and which is distorting my plots.
To compare, the following Octave plot has a clear offset from the origin for the corresponding red line.
tikz-pgf pgfplots
I'm currently trying to get some of my Octave plots to work natively in a LaTeX document. My method of choice is to use the plot parameters of my Octave scripts in a standalone TikZ document that uses PGFPlots and is imported to a larger LaTeX document with some discussion on the results. Unfortunately, there have been some setbacks in my first foray to PGFPlots.
It seems that the plot bears little resemblance to the plot in the Octave script and that the plot is unstable in the sense that its axis offset and its slope change when I adjust the seemingly unrelated axis properties.
Here is the code:
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
compat=newest
]
addplot {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
The plot passes through the origin even if the formula defines offset. Furthermore, adjustment to the x-domain restrictions change the slope of the plot. I worry that there is a feature of PGFPlots that I'm not yet familiar with and which is distorting my plots.
To compare, the following Octave plot has a clear offset from the origin for the corresponding red line.
tikz-pgf pgfplots
tikz-pgf pgfplots
edited Nov 22 at 12:49
asked Nov 22 at 12:25
Tommi Rimpiläinen
134
134
1
Could you add youroctave
plot for reference, so that we can also try to see the problem?
– Raaja
Nov 22 at 12:33
I'm adding the reference. The red line corresponds to the blue line above.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 12:50
3
You add all the restrictions plot in a huge domain. Tryaddplot[domain=-0.05:0.05] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
does not set the domain of the plot, as can be seen clearly from the fact that it runs from-4.5
to4.5
.
– marmot
Nov 22 at 12:54
add a comment |
1
Could you add youroctave
plot for reference, so that we can also try to see the problem?
– Raaja
Nov 22 at 12:33
I'm adding the reference. The red line corresponds to the blue line above.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 12:50
3
You add all the restrictions plot in a huge domain. Tryaddplot[domain=-0.05:0.05] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
does not set the domain of the plot, as can be seen clearly from the fact that it runs from-4.5
to4.5
.
– marmot
Nov 22 at 12:54
1
1
Could you add your
octave
plot for reference, so that we can also try to see the problem?– Raaja
Nov 22 at 12:33
Could you add your
octave
plot for reference, so that we can also try to see the problem?– Raaja
Nov 22 at 12:33
I'm adding the reference. The red line corresponds to the blue line above.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 12:50
I'm adding the reference. The red line corresponds to the blue line above.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 12:50
3
3
You add all the restrictions plot in a huge domain. Try
addplot[domain=-0.05:0.05] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
does not set the domain of the plot, as can be seen clearly from the fact that it runs from -4.5
to 4.5
.– marmot
Nov 22 at 12:54
You add all the restrictions plot in a huge domain. Try
addplot[domain=-0.05:0.05] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
does not set the domain of the plot, as can be seen clearly from the fact that it runs from -4.5
to 4.5
.– marmot
Nov 22 at 12:54
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
You are using restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
, about which the manual says
However, you do not set an appropriate domain. If you do that,
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
pgfplotsset{compat=1.16}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
domain=-0.05:0.05
]
addplot[no marks] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
you'll get
which has a clearly visible offset.
Adding the domain really was the key.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 14:09
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
You are using restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
, about which the manual says
However, you do not set an appropriate domain. If you do that,
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
pgfplotsset{compat=1.16}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
domain=-0.05:0.05
]
addplot[no marks] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
you'll get
which has a clearly visible offset.
Adding the domain really was the key.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 14:09
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
You are using restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
, about which the manual says
However, you do not set an appropriate domain. If you do that,
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
pgfplotsset{compat=1.16}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
domain=-0.05:0.05
]
addplot[no marks] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
you'll get
which has a clearly visible offset.
Adding the domain really was the key.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 14:09
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
You are using restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
, about which the manual says
However, you do not set an appropriate domain. If you do that,
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
pgfplotsset{compat=1.16}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
domain=-0.05:0.05
]
addplot[no marks] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
you'll get
which has a clearly visible offset.
You are using restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
, about which the manual says
However, you do not set an appropriate domain. If you do that,
documentclass[crop,tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{pgfplots}
pgfplotsset{compat=1.16}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
begin{axis}[
width=8cm,
height=6cm,
samples=6,
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
restrict y to domain*=-0.0004:0.0004,
xmin=-0.05, xmax=0.05,
ymin=-0.0002, ymax=0.0002,
axis lines=left,
grid=both,
domain=-0.05:0.05
]
addplot[no marks] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
end{axis}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
you'll get
which has a clearly visible offset.
answered Nov 22 at 13:02
marmot
81.2k491173
81.2k491173
Adding the domain really was the key.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 14:09
add a comment |
Adding the domain really was the key.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 14:09
Adding the domain really was the key.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 14:09
Adding the domain really was the key.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 14:09
add a comment |
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1
Could you add your
octave
plot for reference, so that we can also try to see the problem?– Raaja
Nov 22 at 12:33
I'm adding the reference. The red line corresponds to the blue line above.
– Tommi Rimpiläinen
Nov 22 at 12:50
3
You add all the restrictions plot in a huge domain. Try
addplot[domain=-0.05:0.05] {0.000018165+0.0014500*x};
restrict x to domain*=-0.15:0.15,
does not set the domain of the plot, as can be seen clearly from the fact that it runs from-4.5
to4.5
.– marmot
Nov 22 at 12:54