Possibly, could plot the functions with respect to x
. Kinda concerned since the function is called X(t)
though. Seems like it should be changing with respect to t
or some kind of time variable. The colour and line properties can be configured by adding the short-hand for the colour followed by the line type in this case I used a dashed red line denoted as r--
in the fplot()
line. In this example, I also used hold on
to add a yellow underline. If you need the figure background colour to be yellow add set(gcf,'color','y');
to configure the current figure, gcf
. Not quite sure which portions or plots need the yellow colour. To plot symbolic functions using the fplot()
function can be a useful method. This function can optionally take a second argument that is an array describing the horizontal/x-axis bounds/range to plot the function for. Also note that rand
will only evaluate to doubles in the range from 0 to 1.

clear;
clc;
clf;
syms x;
Xt = int(100*rand*sin(x));
Lower_Bound = -100;
Upper_Bound = 100;
subplot(2,1,1); fplot(Xt,[Lower_Bound Upper_Bound],'y');
hold on
subplot(2,1,1); fplot(Xt,[Lower_Bound Upper_Bound],'r--');
title("Plot of X(t)");
xlabel("x"); ylabel("Amplitude");
hold off
Solution = int(100*rand*sin(x),Lower_Bound,Upper_Bound);
Solution
Y2 = diff(Xt,x);
subplot(2,1,2); fplot(Y2,[Lower_Bound Upper_Bound])
title("Differentiation of X(t) -> Y(t)");
xlabel("x"); ylabel("Amplitude");
Ran using MATLAB R2019b