how to stack hist?

206 views (last 30 days)
davit petraasya
davit petraasya on 30 Jun 2016
Commented: Joris Bockhofer on 5 Jul 2023
Does anyone knows how to stack 2 histogram. I have certain area data for 20 years. I am calculating yearly number of events by hist command. And also I have another area data for 20 years. Doing the same, calculating yearly number of events by hist command for the area also. Note for 2 data time the same, 1980-2000 in years.
Now I wanted 2 hist data stack. Is there any way to do it?
Thanks!
  4 Comments
José-Luis
José-Luis on 30 Jun 2016
I still don't get it. Could you show a figure as an example? And some data?
Stephen Licata
Stephen Licata on 23 Dec 2020
Edited: Stephen Licata on 23 Dec 2020
That is a very good and fun example - many thanks!
BTW, if you want a special color, like 'gray' (which does not have a Matlab shortcut symbol code), do this bar command
bar(binrng,counts2,'FaceColor', [0.75 0.75 0.75])
which is equivalent to this version using the RGB integer values:
bar(binrng,counts2,'FaceColor', [192 192 192]/255)

Sign in to comment.

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 30 Jun 2016
The hist function does not offer a 'stacked' option, but you can create the effect easily enough with the histc function and a bar plot.
Experiment with this to get the result you want with your data:
d1 = randi(9, 50, 1); % Create Data
d2 = randi(9, 50, 1); % Create Data
binrng = 1:9; % Create Bin Ranges
counts1 = histc(d1, binrng); % Histogram For ‘d1’
counts2 = histc(d2, binrng); % Histogram For ‘d2’
counts3 = counts1 + counts2; % Histogram Sum ‘d1’+‘d2’
figure(1)
bar(binrng, counts3, 'b')
hold on
bar(binrng, counts1, 'y')
hold off
legend('Data 1', 'Data 2')
The idea is straightforward: create histogram counts for both sets of data, add them, then use the bar plot to first plot the sum, then overplot with one of the others. That will create your stacked histogram plot.
  11 Comments
Star Strider
Star Strider on 15 Jul 2021
That’s a bit ambiguous.
Perhaps:
v1 = randi(9,1,50);
v2 = randi(9,1,50);
v3 = randi(9,1,50);
v4 = randi(9,1,50);
v5 = randi(9,1,50);
v6 = randi(9,1,50);
vm = [v1; v2; v3; v4; v5; v6];
binrng = 1:9;
for k = 1:size(vm,1)
counts(k,:) = histc(vm(k,:), binrng);
end
figure
bar(binrng,counts,'stacked')
grid
Experiment, if necessary, to get different results.
.
Joris Bockhofer
Joris Bockhofer on 5 Jul 2023
Make sure to use histc!
MatLab recommended using histcounts instead but this will not work because histcounts yields one less value than #bins for whatever reason.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (0)

Categories

Find more on Data Distribution Plots in Help Center and File Exchange

Tags

Community Treasure Hunt

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

Start Hunting!