Simulink Xy Graph Multiple Plots Multiplots are a simple way to make graphs that take multiple parts or multiple dimensions. As with all your other examples, we’ll take a simple curve equation and work with it to bring it together. Use it to create something that looks like this: You will need both a graph file and Xy Graph to work with. In this case, we would create our simple curve from our HTML code and then go through our HTML code to create the HTML: This is completely unnecessary, but what you might not realize is that if you need to add parameters of graph nodes for some reason, you need to add the parameters at the end of your HTML! At this point we’ll work on the problem and maybe build an HTML parser with the parameters for our curve. Use the right curve Although the solution is simple and may look appealing, your code may not be the solution you want. If the problem is small in scope, then it may not be able to cope very well – so you might need to add a small function that takes in the parameters of the graph and then returns the correct answers. When doing this, I recommend that you look up how to use a function as a regular expression. Note that in order for your code to work, it must include the following code: … function getElementsByName () { return array_keys :: { ‘xs_i’ => xs ( i ); }; }… Here we call function getElementById from the function of type getElementById which we already specified. Although that may seem confusing, you might get some very interesting looking things out of combining it with make an HTML, which will tell it about the right solution to your problem. To solve all of these issues, we implement our function with the wrong equation. Here’s what our function produces: … function getElementsByName ( xsrs ) { return array_keys :: { ‘