Re: [R] Double buffering plots on Windows

2024-03-25 Thread Paul Murrell
kelis" mailto:bic...@math.usask.ca>>, "r-help@r-project.org<mailto:r-help@r-project.org>" mailto:r-help@r-project.org>> Subject: Re: [R] Double buffering plots on Windows Message-ID: mailto:b74c68da-a0b2-47dd-b54f-6b318488c...@stat.auckland.ac.nz>> Content

Re: [R] Double buffering plots on Windows

2024-03-25 Thread Michael L Friendly
ar 2024 10:43:29 +1300 From: Paul Murrell mailto:p...@stat.auckland.ac.nz>> To: "Bickis, Mikelis" mailto:bic...@math.usask.ca>>, "r-help@r-project.org<mailto:r-help@r-project.org>" mailto:r-help@r-project.org>> Subject: Re

Re: [R] Double buffering plots on Windows

2024-03-24 Thread Paul Murrell
Hi Take a look at dev.hold() and dev.flush() Paul On 23/03/24 06:43, Bickis, Mikelis wrote: Hello: I want to present a sequence of plots as an animation. As a toy example consider the code function(n){for (i in 1:n){ plot(1:100,sin(i*(1:100)),type="l") title(paste("n=",i))

Re: [R] Double buffering plots on Windows

2024-03-23 Thread Bert Gunter
A search on "make animated plots in R" brought up many hits and the gganimate package (and maybe others, as I didn't scroll through). Bert On Fri, Mar 22, 2024, 18:45 Bickis, Mikelis wrote: > Hello: > > I want to present a sequence of plots as an animation. As a toy example > consider the

[R] Double buffering plots on Windows

2024-03-22 Thread Bickis, Mikelis
Hello: I want to present a sequence of plots as an animation. As a toy example consider the code function(n){for (i in 1:n){ plot(1:100,sin(i*(1:100)),type="l") title(paste("n=",i)) segments(0,0,100,0,col=2) }} This sort-of works on a MacOS platform, but the rendering of the plots is a bit