When I subset an array constructed from meshgrid
, I cannot work out how to keep its meshgrid structure. Thus, you cannot use it in a call to mesh
or surface
. I will demonstrate this in my example of constructing the unit sphere.
Possible alternate titles for this question:
- How do you make the top half of the meshgrid sphere from scratch in Matlab?
- How do you use mesh to plot a subset of a meshgrid?
This is motivated using the following toy example of constructing a sphere of unit radius in Matlab from scratch, so that it is like the one generated by:
[x, y, z] = sphere(100)
mesh(x, y, z)
Using the equation for a sphere:
Define a meshgrid and z
to be:
x = linspace(-1, 1, 201);
y = linspace(-1, 1, 201);
[x, y] = meshgrid(x, y);
z = sqrt(1 - x.^2 - y.^2);
So far so good, except z
takes imaginary values where the sphere does not exist over the xy-plane, that is, anywhere outside of the unit circle.
A call to mesh
now returns an error:
>> mesh(x, y, z)
Error using mesh (line 58)
X, Y, Z, and C cannot be complex.
Thus, a logical step is to remove all complex values:
% get logical vector index where real z is
LI = z == real(z)
x = x(LI)
y = y(LI)
z = z(LI)
But now x
, y
, and z
are no longer 3d arrays, and calling mesh
gives another error:
>> mesh(x, y, z)
Error using mesh (line 58)
Z must be a matrix, not a scalar or vector.
So, in general I have no idea how to preserve the meshgrid
structure when subsetting the data. Hence, I can't generate the top half of this sphere from scratch.