fill a polygon with a hole

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Qingping
Qingping on 26 Feb 2014
Answered: Steven Lord on 19 Sep 2019
data=[
0.5, 0.8;
1.0, 0.0;
0.0, 0.0;
0.5, 0.8;
0.5, 0.4;
0.1, 0.1;
0.7, 0.1;
0.5, 0.4;
];
h=fill(data(:,1),data(:,2),'r')
the image is:
there is a line between dot(0.5,0.8) and (0.5,0.4) how to delete this line in prefectly? such as
I used the code set(h,'EdgeColor','r') to disappear this line.
  2 Comments
Azzi Abdelmalek
Azzi Abdelmalek on 26 Feb 2014
What is the problem?
Qingping
Qingping on 28 Feb 2014
I want to delete the line between two triangle in automatic!

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Accepted Answer

lvn
lvn on 28 Feb 2014
Alternatively, you can remove all black lines (like that the figure looks good to me)
h=fill(data(:,1),data(:,2),'r','Linestyle','none')

More Answers (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst on 26 Feb 2014
Simply get rid of the last 5 rows of your data.
data=[
0.5, 0.8;
1.0, 0.0;
0.0, 0.0;
];
h=fill(data(:,1),data(:,2),'r')
That's so simple I guess I'm missing something, or you are.
  4 Comments
Qingping
Qingping on 3 Mar 2014
In this way, I want to confirm which one is outer object and which one is inner object.
Patrik Ek
Patrik Ek on 3 Mar 2014
Edited: Patrik Ek on 3 Mar 2014
@Image Analyst: That was not expected, that matlab would not handle the case of polygons with holes, when plotting. I will remove my answer. I also did some research since it felt a bit incredulous that matlab could not do this. However the solution proposed by you were the most commonly recommended. +1 for that
@Qingping: Answer one is is of course the simplest one. However, to keep direction of the polygons you can check the direction or windiness or what you prefer to call it. The dierction should be opposite if the polygons are properly defined. Depending on standard the direction of the outer polygon may vary, but mathematics it is most often defined counter clockwise. However, MATLAB does in a number of occations define it the other way around (eg in mapping toolbox since this is more or less standard when working with maps)

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Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 19 Sep 2019
Consider creating and plotting a polyshape. You will receive a warning but depending on how you've generated your data you may be able to avoid this.
data=[
0.5, 0.8;
1.0, 0.0;
0.0, 0.0;
0.5, 0.8;
0.5, 0.4;
0.1, 0.1;
0.7, 0.1;
0.5, 0.4;
];
p = polyshape(data);
plot(p)
Or, if you're building the outermost shape then subtracting away the inner holes:
outer=[
0.5, 0.8;
1.0, 0.0;
0.0, 0.0;
0.5, 0.8];
outerP = polyshape(outer);
hole = [
0.5, 0.4;
0.1, 0.1;
0.7, 0.1;
0.5, 0.4;
];
holeP = polyshape(hole);
totalP = subtract(outerP, holeP);
plot(totalP)

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