I can reccommend ggobi. http://www.ggobi.org/
Install the binary standalone, and the Rggobi package for R (both are from the above site). Works fine for me on Windows 2000, R 1.7.1. Cheers, Simon. Simon Blomberg, PhD Depression & Anxiety Consumer Research Unit Centre for Mental Health Research Australian National University http://www.anu.edu.au/cmhr/ [EMAIL PROTECTED] +61 (2) 6125 3379 > -----Original Message----- > From: Richard A. O'Keefe [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Friday, 19 September 2003 3:41 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [R] 3D plotting in R > > > A student is trying to cluster some data. Tree-building > things seem to > be pretty hopeless (we've tried most of the ones in R, I think). > Multi-dimensional scaling produces somewhat tantalising results: > things do clump together somewhat, but the clusters overlap a lot. > I was wondering if these was an artefact of squeezing it down to 2D, > and whether 3D might be better. So > loc <- cmdscale(dist(scale(log(data))), k=3) > plot(loc) > _but_ I still get a 2D plot. > > I know about persp(), and a bunch of other things in R that give me > a 3d view of a 2d field (plots of a function of 2 arguments, in other > words). But I want to plot a bunch of 3D points and label them. > > If the worst comes to the worst, I'll dump them out in a file and use > XLispStat to view them. > > I've asked previously whether there's a spinning plot in R, > and have been > told that there isn't and why. I've been given one anyway, > but it calls > Tcl/Tk, and for some reason that doesn't work in my setup. > > ______________________________________________ > [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list > https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help > ______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list https://www.stat.math.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help