Matlab 2014b [2024]

It wasn't perfect. The ribbon was annoying, and the documentation was slow. But for one brief moment in 2014, MATLAB finally looked and felt like a professional 21st-century tool. And we are still reaping those benefits today.

tiledlayout introduced a grid-based layout manager. It treated TileSpacing and Padding as first-class properties. You could nest layouts. You could create a plot with a shared colorbar that automatically resized when you changed the figure window. matlab 2014b

The difference was immediate and visceral. Suddenly, lines had anti-aliasing. Markers didn't look like chunky blocks. Colormaps became perceptually uniform (the infamous jet was finally dethroned by parula as the default). Most importantly, the render pipeline became object-oriented. Under the hood, HG2 moved from a procedural "draw now" model to a retained scene graph. Every line, text box, or axes became a matlab.graphics.GraphicsObject with properties that propagated intelligently. This wasn't just aesthetic; it enabled the Legend object to actually update dynamically. For the first time, you could delete a line from a plot, and the legend would automatically refresh without having to regenerate the entire figure. It wasn't perfect

In the long, iterative history of technical computing, some releases quietly fix bugs, others add a single function you might never use, and a rare few fundamentally change how you feel while coding. And we are still reaping those benefits today

Before 2014b, we had subplot . And subplot was fine ... until it wasn't. Want to add a colorbar that spans three subplots? Good luck. Want to remove a subplot without leaving a weird, empty hole? Impossible. Want consistent spacing that doesn't look like a ransom note? You had to manually calculate 'Position' vectors.