matlab中的画图方法(Matlab drawing method)
matlab中的画图方法(Matlab drawing method)
The second way is to use the copy command copy in metafile format (selected by the copy option entry)
To the clipboard, and then paste directly into the word file, double-click the picture, select 'fill', the item is no, you can
Edit any curve in the picture, or you can edit it in VISIO. Xlabel under Matlab, grid, coordinate scale, curve thickness,
Line type can edit any. The size of the picture can be changed at any time under the condition of closing pictures, and can be used at any time
The mouse with the shift key cuts the part you don't want.
You can save the graphics first and use the command print -dmeta Figure1
Figure1 for the name you want to save, and then insert it into the word
Do you want to copy graphics from Matlab to Word? This article may be of some help
Looking at the papers of college students in China, I can occasionally see such tragedies:
Please, bitmap screenshots, and the resolution is so low (of course)? Such an article cannot, of course, be printed in good quality. High quality print articles, except for photos (usually high resolution), should be vector, which can be referred to the requirements of the IEEE paper.
Insert a sentence, the undergraduate stage does not use TeX also just, doctor stage should compel. As for graduate students Mostly, let's go on with Word.
Let's get to the point of moving the Matlab graphics elegantly into Word.
The most simple and effective way is Copy Figure, the graphics effect is ok.
A more general approach to Windows is to store graphics in EMF format, which is consistent with the effect of direct Copy in terms of printing.
Saying "EMF" - Enhanced, Metafile, Format, Windows enhanced metafile - can be said to have a long history. Win9x has it before, and its rare icon proves it :
On the EMF format, nothing else can browse this brief introduction: MSDN /en-us/library/ff548726 (VS.85).Aspx[2010-5-8 consulting, Windows_Metafile[2010-5-8 consulting or wiki English].
It can also