# Show does not combine the plots

i've the following problem:

because it's not possible to plot complex numbers (or is it?) i created my own "function":

    complexPlot[cn_] :=
Plot[0, {x, -100, 100},
PlotRange -> {-500, 500},
AspectRatio -> 1,
AxesLabel -> {Re, I },
Epilog -> {Background -> None, PointSize[0.03],
Point[{{Re[cn[[1]]], Im[cn[[1]]]}, {Re[cn[[2]]],
Im[cn[[2]]]}, {Re[cn[[3]]], Im[cn[[3]]]}}]}
]


with complexPlot, I can plot my complex Numbers, but i want to have one graphic for all my number pairs.

    myPlots = Table[
complexPlot[linPolesAll[[n]]],
{n, 1, 16}]

Show[myPlots]


Does not work, it overlays all Plots with the last one (tried it with Show[myPlots[[1]],myPlots[[10]]])

any ideas?

Thanks!

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Show is supposed to overlay all the plots. (If this is not what you want, look at Grid, GraphicsGrid, TableForm, etc.) Is there some problem with how the overlay is occurring? –  whuber Jan 10 '13 at 15:00

Why not just use

complexPlot[pts_]:=ListPlot[{Re@#,Im@#}&/@pts]


as your customly defined plot function? The advantage is that this version shows the appropriate region, not the hardcoded one you have in your version.

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In @Nasser's answer, one could directly use the built-in function RandomComplex:

poles = RandomComplex[{-100 - 100 I, 100 + 100 I}, {12, 3}];


And then, since you want to plot complex numbers and, except for graphics, Mathematica "prefers" complex number to reals, it seems silly to have to program complex things in terms of real and imaginary parts. This is where David Park's Presentations add-on ( http://home.comcast.net/~djmpark/DrawGraphicsPage.html) can do the work for you:

Draw2D[{PointSize[Large], Red, ComplexPoint /@ poles},
Axes -> True, AxesLabel -> {Re, Im}, BaseStyle -> 12, ImageSize -> 400]


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