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Please note that the recommended version of Scilab is 2025.0.0. This page might be outdated.
See the recommended documentation of this function
histplot
plot a histogram
Calling Sequence
histplot(n, data, <opt_args>) histplot(x, data, <opt_args>)
Arguments
- n
positive integer (number of classes)
- x
increasing vector defining the classes (
x
may have at least 2 components)- data
vector (data to be analysed)
- <opt_args>
This represents a sequence of statements
key1=value1,key2=value2
,... wherekey1
,key2,...
can be any optional plot2d parameter (style,strf,leg, rect,nax, logflag,frameflag, axesflag
)or normalization. For this last one the corresponding value must be a boolean scalar (default value %t).
Description
This function plot a histogram of the data
vector using the
classes x
. When the number n
of classes is provided
instead of x
, the classes are chosen equally spaced and
x(1) = min(data) < x(2) = x(1) + dx < ... < x(n+1) = max(data)
with dx = (x(n+1)-x(1))/n.
The classes are defined by C1 = [x(1), x(2)] and Ci = ( x(i), x(i+1)] for i >= 2.
Noting Nmax the total number of data
(Nmax = length(data)) and Ni the number
of data
components falling in Ci, the value of the histogram for x in Ci
is equal to Ni/(Nmax (x(i+1)-x(i))) when normalization
is true
(default case) and else, simply equal to Ni. When normalization occurs the
histogram verifies:
when x(1)<=min(data) and max(data) <= x(n+1)
Any plot2d (optional) parameter may be provided; for instance to
plot a histogram with the color number 2 (blue if std colormap is used) and
to restrict the plot inside the rectangle [-3,3]x[0,0.5],
you may use histplot(n,data, style=2, rect=[-3,0,3,0.5])
.
Enter the command histplot()
to see a demo.
Examples
- Example #1: variations around a histogram of a gaussian random sample
- Example #2: histogram of a binomial (B(6,0.5)) random sample
- Example #3: histogram of an exponential random sample
See Also
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