How to plot this group bar plot?
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I want to generate a barplot with the following characteristics.
There are 5 users in the system. Each user has a demand.
There are 2 suppliers.
Each supplier tries to meet user demand as closely as possible.
One supplier may perform better than the other supplier.
I want a grouped barplot.
There will be two bars for each user (demand and supply)
The supply bar should combine the supplies from two supplies in such a way that the
For example,
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
I just want to combine Supply1
and Supply2
in one bar. So, there will only five supply bars. The demand bars and the supply bars are then grouped as shown in the attached figure.
It is like putting one supply bar above another but both should be visible. The shorter one will always on top so that both are visible.
But the problem I have with this plot is that for the last group, I cannot see the red bar, which is somehow hidden below the purple bar.
This one I obtained with MATLAB. I hope Mathematica can help me with what I need.
plotting graphics charts
$endgroup$
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
I want to generate a barplot with the following characteristics.
There are 5 users in the system. Each user has a demand.
There are 2 suppliers.
Each supplier tries to meet user demand as closely as possible.
One supplier may perform better than the other supplier.
I want a grouped barplot.
There will be two bars for each user (demand and supply)
The supply bar should combine the supplies from two supplies in such a way that the
For example,
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
I just want to combine Supply1
and Supply2
in one bar. So, there will only five supply bars. The demand bars and the supply bars are then grouped as shown in the attached figure.
It is like putting one supply bar above another but both should be visible. The shorter one will always on top so that both are visible.
But the problem I have with this plot is that for the last group, I cannot see the red bar, which is somehow hidden below the purple bar.
This one I obtained with MATLAB. I hope Mathematica can help me with what I need.
plotting graphics charts
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
What have you tried so far usingBarChart
?
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
15 hours ago
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@kglr, this is not what I want. I have revised my question...
$endgroup$
– dipak narayanan
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
try adding the optionChartBaseStyle -> Opacity[.5]
?
$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
2
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the OP is asking for the impossible, despite reasonable suggestions. Furthermore, any solution will be extremely localized to their problem only.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because overloading bar charts makes for unintelligible displays. If there are two objectives for displaying data, then (despite objections from publishers) maybe two separate displays are needed.
$endgroup$
– JimB
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
I want to generate a barplot with the following characteristics.
There are 5 users in the system. Each user has a demand.
There are 2 suppliers.
Each supplier tries to meet user demand as closely as possible.
One supplier may perform better than the other supplier.
I want a grouped barplot.
There will be two bars for each user (demand and supply)
The supply bar should combine the supplies from two supplies in such a way that the
For example,
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
I just want to combine Supply1
and Supply2
in one bar. So, there will only five supply bars. The demand bars and the supply bars are then grouped as shown in the attached figure.
It is like putting one supply bar above another but both should be visible. The shorter one will always on top so that both are visible.
But the problem I have with this plot is that for the last group, I cannot see the red bar, which is somehow hidden below the purple bar.
This one I obtained with MATLAB. I hope Mathematica can help me with what I need.
plotting graphics charts
$endgroup$
I want to generate a barplot with the following characteristics.
There are 5 users in the system. Each user has a demand.
There are 2 suppliers.
Each supplier tries to meet user demand as closely as possible.
One supplier may perform better than the other supplier.
I want a grouped barplot.
There will be two bars for each user (demand and supply)
The supply bar should combine the supplies from two supplies in such a way that the
For example,
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
I just want to combine Supply1
and Supply2
in one bar. So, there will only five supply bars. The demand bars and the supply bars are then grouped as shown in the attached figure.
It is like putting one supply bar above another but both should be visible. The shorter one will always on top so that both are visible.
But the problem I have with this plot is that for the last group, I cannot see the red bar, which is somehow hidden below the purple bar.
This one I obtained with MATLAB. I hope Mathematica can help me with what I need.
plotting graphics charts
plotting graphics charts
edited 13 hours ago
MarcoB
37.2k556113
37.2k556113
asked 15 hours ago
dipak narayanandipak narayanan
1266
1266
$begingroup$
What have you tried so far usingBarChart
?
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
15 hours ago
$begingroup$
@kglr, this is not what I want. I have revised my question...
$endgroup$
– dipak narayanan
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
try adding the optionChartBaseStyle -> Opacity[.5]
?
$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
2
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the OP is asking for the impossible, despite reasonable suggestions. Furthermore, any solution will be extremely localized to their problem only.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because overloading bar charts makes for unintelligible displays. If there are two objectives for displaying data, then (despite objections from publishers) maybe two separate displays are needed.
$endgroup$
– JimB
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
$begingroup$
What have you tried so far usingBarChart
?
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
15 hours ago
$begingroup$
@kglr, this is not what I want. I have revised my question...
$endgroup$
– dipak narayanan
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
try adding the optionChartBaseStyle -> Opacity[.5]
?
$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
2
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the OP is asking for the impossible, despite reasonable suggestions. Furthermore, any solution will be extremely localized to their problem only.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
1
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because overloading bar charts makes for unintelligible displays. If there are two objectives for displaying data, then (despite objections from publishers) maybe two separate displays are needed.
$endgroup$
– JimB
9 hours ago
$begingroup$
What have you tried so far using
BarChart
?$endgroup$
– MarcoB
15 hours ago
$begingroup$
What have you tried so far using
BarChart
?$endgroup$
– MarcoB
15 hours ago
$begingroup$
@kglr, this is not what I want. I have revised my question...
$endgroup$
– dipak narayanan
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
@kglr, this is not what I want. I have revised my question...
$endgroup$
– dipak narayanan
14 hours ago
$begingroup$
try adding the option
ChartBaseStyle -> Opacity[.5]
?$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
try adding the option
ChartBaseStyle -> Opacity[.5]
?$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
2
2
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the OP is asking for the impossible, despite reasonable suggestions. Furthermore, any solution will be extremely localized to their problem only.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the OP is asking for the impossible, despite reasonable suggestions. Furthermore, any solution will be extremely localized to their problem only.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
1
1
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because overloading bar charts makes for unintelligible displays. If there are two objectives for displaying data, then (despite objections from publishers) maybe two separate displays are needed.
$endgroup$
– JimB
9 hours ago
$begingroup$
I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because overloading bar charts makes for unintelligible displays. If there are two objectives for displaying data, then (despite objections from publishers) maybe two separate displays are needed.
$endgroup$
– JimB
9 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Update 2: A better approach to pre-processing is to use two separate BarChart
s` (as in m_goldberg's answer):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,1]]}],
ChartLabels -> {Placed["Group " <> ToString[#] & /@ Range[5], Axis],
Placed[{"D", "S"}, Axis]},
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}]];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,2]]}]];
Show[b1, b2]
Update: An alternative, more convenient and better, approach is to pre-process data to reorder based on heights:
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
datab = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, sb}];
bcb = BarChart[datab, ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}]
With this approach we don't need to add PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
, thus we retain all the tool-tips and and dynamic highlighting.
Original answer:
BarChart
does not support mixed layouts (it does not allow combining Grouped
and Overlapped
layouts). So, we cheat by inserting fake data sets with 0 height betweeen groups to separate the five groups and, to make all rectangles visible, we post-process to re-order the yellow and blue rectangles based on their heights (I added PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
above to make this post-processing easier):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
d = Thread[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, Style[0, Opacity[0]]}];
data = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, s}];
bc = BarChart[data,
ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}, PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"];
bc /. pattern : {{_, Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h1_}, ___]}, {_,
Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h2_}, ___]}} :> If[h2 <= h1, pattern, Reverse[pattern]]
Fixing ticks and labels is an altogether different challenge.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Yep, this is the kind of heroic effort that I was hinting at in my comments... Thank you for trying though. (+1)
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
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thank you @MarcoB.
$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
add a comment |
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This will reproduce your matlab generated chart.
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply2}],
ChartStyle -> {{Automatic}, {Automatic, Red}}];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply1}]];
Show[b1, b2, Frame -> True]
It has the same defect as the matlab chart — the longer blue bar at the right end of chart hides the shorter red bar behind it.
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$begingroup$
I suppose that, if OP's purpose is simply to get the plot, one could add{Supply1, Supply2} = Transpose[Sort /@ Transpose[{Supply1, Supply2}]]
before the calls toBarChart
to "swap" the offending last values fromSupply1
andSupply2
.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
5 hours ago
$begingroup$
@MarcoB. Yes, something like that would work, but it would ruin the stark simplicity of this answer :-), which is mainly to point out that hoe easy it is to reproduce the defective matlab chart. I think kglr's answer is better than mine because it makes the chart that is really wanted in a simple way.
$endgroup$
– m_goldberg
3 hours ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Update 2: A better approach to pre-processing is to use two separate BarChart
s` (as in m_goldberg's answer):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,1]]}],
ChartLabels -> {Placed["Group " <> ToString[#] & /@ Range[5], Axis],
Placed[{"D", "S"}, Axis]},
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}]];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,2]]}]];
Show[b1, b2]
Update: An alternative, more convenient and better, approach is to pre-process data to reorder based on heights:
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
datab = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, sb}];
bcb = BarChart[datab, ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}]
With this approach we don't need to add PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
, thus we retain all the tool-tips and and dynamic highlighting.
Original answer:
BarChart
does not support mixed layouts (it does not allow combining Grouped
and Overlapped
layouts). So, we cheat by inserting fake data sets with 0 height betweeen groups to separate the five groups and, to make all rectangles visible, we post-process to re-order the yellow and blue rectangles based on their heights (I added PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
above to make this post-processing easier):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
d = Thread[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, Style[0, Opacity[0]]}];
data = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, s}];
bc = BarChart[data,
ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}, PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"];
bc /. pattern : {{_, Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h1_}, ___]}, {_,
Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h2_}, ___]}} :> If[h2 <= h1, pattern, Reverse[pattern]]
Fixing ticks and labels is an altogether different challenge.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Yep, this is the kind of heroic effort that I was hinting at in my comments... Thank you for trying though. (+1)
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
thank you @MarcoB.
$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Update 2: A better approach to pre-processing is to use two separate BarChart
s` (as in m_goldberg's answer):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,1]]}],
ChartLabels -> {Placed["Group " <> ToString[#] & /@ Range[5], Axis],
Placed[{"D", "S"}, Axis]},
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}]];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,2]]}]];
Show[b1, b2]
Update: An alternative, more convenient and better, approach is to pre-process data to reorder based on heights:
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
datab = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, sb}];
bcb = BarChart[datab, ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}]
With this approach we don't need to add PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
, thus we retain all the tool-tips and and dynamic highlighting.
Original answer:
BarChart
does not support mixed layouts (it does not allow combining Grouped
and Overlapped
layouts). So, we cheat by inserting fake data sets with 0 height betweeen groups to separate the five groups and, to make all rectangles visible, we post-process to re-order the yellow and blue rectangles based on their heights (I added PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
above to make this post-processing easier):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
d = Thread[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, Style[0, Opacity[0]]}];
data = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, s}];
bc = BarChart[data,
ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}, PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"];
bc /. pattern : {{_, Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h1_}, ___]}, {_,
Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h2_}, ___]}} :> If[h2 <= h1, pattern, Reverse[pattern]]
Fixing ticks and labels is an altogether different challenge.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Yep, this is the kind of heroic effort that I was hinting at in my comments... Thank you for trying though. (+1)
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
thank you @MarcoB.
$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Update 2: A better approach to pre-processing is to use two separate BarChart
s` (as in m_goldberg's answer):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,1]]}],
ChartLabels -> {Placed["Group " <> ToString[#] & /@ Range[5], Axis],
Placed[{"D", "S"}, Axis]},
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}]];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,2]]}]];
Show[b1, b2]
Update: An alternative, more convenient and better, approach is to pre-process data to reorder based on heights:
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
datab = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, sb}];
bcb = BarChart[datab, ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}]
With this approach we don't need to add PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
, thus we retain all the tool-tips and and dynamic highlighting.
Original answer:
BarChart
does not support mixed layouts (it does not allow combining Grouped
and Overlapped
layouts). So, we cheat by inserting fake data sets with 0 height betweeen groups to separate the five groups and, to make all rectangles visible, we post-process to re-order the yellow and blue rectangles based on their heights (I added PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
above to make this post-processing easier):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
d = Thread[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, Style[0, Opacity[0]]}];
data = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, s}];
bc = BarChart[data,
ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}, PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"];
bc /. pattern : {{_, Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h1_}, ___]}, {_,
Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h2_}, ___]}} :> If[h2 <= h1, pattern, Reverse[pattern]]
Fixing ticks and labels is an altogether different challenge.
$endgroup$
Update 2: A better approach to pre-processing is to use two separate BarChart
s` (as in m_goldberg's answer):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,1]]}],
ChartLabels -> {Placed["Group " <> ToString[#] & /@ Range[5], Axis],
Placed[{"D", "S"}, Axis]},
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}]];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, sb[[All,2]]}]];
Show[b1, b2]
Update: An alternative, more convenient and better, approach is to pre-process data to reorder based on heights:
sb = SortBy[#, -First[#] &] & /@ s;
datab = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, sb}];
bcb = BarChart[datab, ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}]
With this approach we don't need to add PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
, thus we retain all the tool-tips and and dynamic highlighting.
Original answer:
BarChart
does not support mixed layouts (it does not allow combining Grouped
and Overlapped
layouts). So, we cheat by inserting fake data sets with 0 height betweeen groups to separate the five groups and, to make all rectangles visible, we post-process to re-order the yellow and blue rectangles based on their heights (I added PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"
above to make this post-processing easier):
demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
s = Transpose[{Style[#, Blue] & /@ supply1, Style[#, Yellow] & /@ supply2}];
d = Thread[{Style[#, Red] & /@ demand, Style[0, Opacity[0]]}];
data = Join @@ Thread[{0, 0, 0, 0, 0, d, s}];
bc = BarChart[data,
ChartLayout -> "Overlapped",
ChartLegends -> SwatchLegend[{Red, Blue, Yellow}, {"D", "S1", "S2"}],
BarSpacing -> {0, .1}, PerformanceGoal -> "Speed"];
bc /. pattern : {{_, Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h1_}, ___]}, {_,
Rectangle[{_, _}, {_, h2_}, ___]}} :> If[h2 <= h1, pattern, Reverse[pattern]]
Fixing ticks and labels is an altogether different challenge.
edited 2 hours ago
answered 13 hours ago
kglrkglr
187k10203421
187k10203421
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Yep, this is the kind of heroic effort that I was hinting at in my comments... Thank you for trying though. (+1)
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– MarcoB
13 hours ago
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thank you @MarcoB.
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– kglr
13 hours ago
add a comment |
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Yep, this is the kind of heroic effort that I was hinting at in my comments... Thank you for trying though. (+1)
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– MarcoB
13 hours ago
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thank you @MarcoB.
$endgroup$
– kglr
13 hours ago
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Yep, this is the kind of heroic effort that I was hinting at in my comments... Thank you for trying though. (+1)
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
$begingroup$
Yep, this is the kind of heroic effort that I was hinting at in my comments... Thank you for trying though. (+1)
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
13 hours ago
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thank you @MarcoB.
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– kglr
13 hours ago
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thank you @MarcoB.
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– kglr
13 hours ago
add a comment |
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This will reproduce your matlab generated chart.
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply2}],
ChartStyle -> {{Automatic}, {Automatic, Red}}];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply1}]];
Show[b1, b2, Frame -> True]
It has the same defect as the matlab chart — the longer blue bar at the right end of chart hides the shorter red bar behind it.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
I suppose that, if OP's purpose is simply to get the plot, one could add{Supply1, Supply2} = Transpose[Sort /@ Transpose[{Supply1, Supply2}]]
before the calls toBarChart
to "swap" the offending last values fromSupply1
andSupply2
.
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– MarcoB
5 hours ago
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@MarcoB. Yes, something like that would work, but it would ruin the stark simplicity of this answer :-), which is mainly to point out that hoe easy it is to reproduce the defective matlab chart. I think kglr's answer is better than mine because it makes the chart that is really wanted in a simple way.
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– m_goldberg
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
This will reproduce your matlab generated chart.
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply2}],
ChartStyle -> {{Automatic}, {Automatic, Red}}];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply1}]];
Show[b1, b2, Frame -> True]
It has the same defect as the matlab chart — the longer blue bar at the right end of chart hides the shorter red bar behind it.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
I suppose that, if OP's purpose is simply to get the plot, one could add{Supply1, Supply2} = Transpose[Sort /@ Transpose[{Supply1, Supply2}]]
before the calls toBarChart
to "swap" the offending last values fromSupply1
andSupply2
.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
5 hours ago
$begingroup$
@MarcoB. Yes, something like that would work, but it would ruin the stark simplicity of this answer :-), which is mainly to point out that hoe easy it is to reproduce the defective matlab chart. I think kglr's answer is better than mine because it makes the chart that is really wanted in a simple way.
$endgroup$
– m_goldberg
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
This will reproduce your matlab generated chart.
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply2}],
ChartStyle -> {{Automatic}, {Automatic, Red}}];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply1}]];
Show[b1, b2, Frame -> True]
It has the same defect as the matlab chart — the longer blue bar at the right end of chart hides the shorter red bar behind it.
$endgroup$
This will reproduce your matlab generated chart.
Demand = {10, 15, 20, 17, 9};
Supply1 = {8, 13, 18, 14, 11};
Supply2 = {9, 14, 19, 16, 10};
b1 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply2}],
ChartStyle -> {{Automatic}, {Automatic, Red}}];
b2 = BarChart[Transpose[{Demand, Supply1}]];
Show[b1, b2, Frame -> True]
It has the same defect as the matlab chart — the longer blue bar at the right end of chart hides the shorter red bar behind it.
edited 11 hours ago
answered 12 hours ago
m_goldbergm_goldberg
87.4k872198
87.4k872198
$begingroup$
I suppose that, if OP's purpose is simply to get the plot, one could add{Supply1, Supply2} = Transpose[Sort /@ Transpose[{Supply1, Supply2}]]
before the calls toBarChart
to "swap" the offending last values fromSupply1
andSupply2
.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
5 hours ago
$begingroup$
@MarcoB. Yes, something like that would work, but it would ruin the stark simplicity of this answer :-), which is mainly to point out that hoe easy it is to reproduce the defective matlab chart. I think kglr's answer is better than mine because it makes the chart that is really wanted in a simple way.
$endgroup$
– m_goldberg
3 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I suppose that, if OP's purpose is simply to get the plot, one could add{Supply1, Supply2} = Transpose[Sort /@ Transpose[{Supply1, Supply2}]]
before the calls toBarChart
to "swap" the offending last values fromSupply1
andSupply2
.
$endgroup$
– MarcoB
5 hours ago
$begingroup$
@MarcoB. Yes, something like that would work, but it would ruin the stark simplicity of this answer :-), which is mainly to point out that hoe easy it is to reproduce the defective matlab chart. I think kglr's answer is better than mine because it makes the chart that is really wanted in a simple way.
$endgroup$
– m_goldberg
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
I suppose that, if OP's purpose is simply to get the plot, one could add
{Supply1, Supply2} = Transpose[Sort /@ Transpose[{Supply1, Supply2}]]
before the calls to BarChart
to "swap" the offending last values from Supply1
and Supply2
.$endgroup$
– MarcoB
5 hours ago
$begingroup$
I suppose that, if OP's purpose is simply to get the plot, one could add
{Supply1, Supply2} = Transpose[Sort /@ Transpose[{Supply1, Supply2}]]
before the calls to BarChart
to "swap" the offending last values from Supply1
and Supply2
.$endgroup$
– MarcoB
5 hours ago
$begingroup$
@MarcoB. Yes, something like that would work, but it would ruin the stark simplicity of this answer :-), which is mainly to point out that hoe easy it is to reproduce the defective matlab chart. I think kglr's answer is better than mine because it makes the chart that is really wanted in a simple way.
$endgroup$
– m_goldberg
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
@MarcoB. Yes, something like that would work, but it would ruin the stark simplicity of this answer :-), which is mainly to point out that hoe easy it is to reproduce the defective matlab chart. I think kglr's answer is better than mine because it makes the chart that is really wanted in a simple way.
$endgroup$
– m_goldberg
3 hours ago
add a comment |
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$begingroup$
What have you tried so far using
BarChart
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– MarcoB
15 hours ago
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@kglr, this is not what I want. I have revised my question...
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– dipak narayanan
14 hours ago
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try adding the option
ChartBaseStyle -> Opacity[.5]
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– kglr
13 hours ago
2
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I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because the OP is asking for the impossible, despite reasonable suggestions. Furthermore, any solution will be extremely localized to their problem only.
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– MarcoB
13 hours ago
1
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I'm voting to close this question as off-topic because overloading bar charts makes for unintelligible displays. If there are two objectives for displaying data, then (despite objections from publishers) maybe two separate displays are needed.
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– JimB
9 hours ago