[scilab-Users] drawing out of two data files

Petar Knezevich petar.knezevich at gmail.com
Mon Sep 20 14:50:21 CEST 2010


If you have different sample rates then build a new time variable for each  

example:

t1=[0 60 120 180...]
t2=[0 5 10 15 20...]

Regards,
Petar Knezevich

On 2010-09-20, at 17:41, Peng Du <eddy.pdu at gmail.com> wrote:

> Thanks for your replies. They are definitely useful but I think it would be better to make my problem clearer:
> 
> Different to the example Antoine provided, my data looks more like
> data1=[1,5,76,2,7,32,54,6,343,675,454,32,121,5,6,8,]
> data2=[3,12,43,54,65,76]
> 
> They are the data collected from an experiment and unlikely to have any mathematical relationship. The first and last value happen at the same moment ("1" in data1 and "3" in data2 happens simultaneously). The difference in the sizes of data1 and data2 is due to the different sampling rate when collecting data.
> 
> What I'd like to do is something like "plot(t,data1); plot(t,data2)" where t denotes the timespan. So that in the graph the "1" in data1 and "3" in data2 are aligned to the identical x-axis position (time) whilst "8" in data1 and "75" in data2 are also aligned. And everything else in between should be averagely distributed.
> 
> So how can I get it done?
> 
> Thanks very much.
> 
> On 20 September 2010 13:08, Francis Drossaert <Francis.Drossaert at pgs.com> wrote:
> Just use plot(x,y) or plot2d(,xy) rather than just plot(y) or plot2d(y). Scilab will plot irregular sampled data correctly.
> 
>  
> 
> For example this will plot a straight line even it irregular sampled:
> 
> x = [0,1,2,3,4,4.5,5,5.5,6];
> 
> y = [1,2,3,4,5,5.5,6,6.5];
> 
> plot(x,y);
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> From: Peng Du [mailto:eddy.pdu at gmail.com] 
> Sent: 20 September 2010 12:49
> To: users at lists.scilab.org
> Subject: [scilab-Users] drawing out of two data files
> 
>  
> 
> Hi everyone.
> 
> I have two data files containing information of the event with the same timespan but in different sampling rate, i.e. they have different sizes but the first and last line denote the identical moment.
> 
> Is there any way I can draw them in one graph and have them proper aligned? Thanks a lot.
> 
> Best regards,
> 
> Peng
> 
> 
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