Many thanks to everyone who contributed to this discussion. It looks
like plotly and dygraphs both work well for zooming plots with
thousands of points (and many other things).
Thanks again, I appreciate your help.
best,
Robert Dodier
On Fri, Apr 24, 2020 at 11:11 AM Robert Dodier wrote:
>
> H
Hi Robert,
Maybe you can use something simple like this:
zoomInScatterPlot<-function(x=NULL,y,...) {
if(is.null(x)) x<-1:length(y)
plot(x,y,...)
xylim<-par("usr")
boxed.labels(xylim[1]-diff(xylim[1:2])/20,
xylim[3]-diff(xylim[3:4])/10,"Done")
xy1<-locator(1)
done<-FALSE
while(!done) {
i
> I am making some plots with plot() which have a fair number of points
> (thousands) and I would like to be able to interactively select a
> region of the plot and zoom in on it.
This doesn't answer your question, but I was wondering why having
thousands of data points is problematic?
Sometimes
On Sat 25 Apr, 2020, 12:10 PM Robert Dodier,
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am making some plots with plot() which have a fair number of points
> (thousands) and I would like to be able to interactively select a
> region of the plot and zoom in on it. I tried the zoom package which
> has the function zm() bu
Plotly and dygraphs support this.
On April 24, 2020 11:11:44 AM PDT, Robert Dodier
wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I am making some plots with plot() which have a fair number of points
>(thousands) and I would like to be able to interactively select a
>region of the plot and zoom in on it. I tried the zoom packa
Hi,
I am making some plots with plot() which have a fair number of points
(thousands) and I would like to be able to interactively select a
region of the plot and zoom in on it. I tried the zoom package which
has the function zm() but I found that it was unworkably slow to
refresh the display. I g
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