f this is not sufficiently close to your problem
> 1. cut your example down to a *minimal* size and
> 2. provide it as *self contained* and
> 3. *reproducible* code.
>
> On 7/10/06, Jamieson Cobleigh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > With some help from those with experti
With some help from those with expertise on this list, I managed to
produce a plot using trellis that looked like I wanted it to look.
Now, I need to take the same plot and make the lines on it color, but
I want to specify the color for the lines myself.
I've managed to make the key use the colors
Thanks! That worked.
Jamie
On 3/8/06, Marc Schwartz (via MN) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, 2006-03-08 at 14:02 -0500, Jamieson Cobleigh wrote:
> > I have a barplot I have created using barplot2 and I have been able to
> > add points and lines (using the poi
I have a barplot I have created using barplot2 and I have been able to
add points and lines (using the points and lines methods,
respectively). I now need to add some polygons (triangles in
particular), that I want to be shaded to match bars in the plot. I
can get the coordinates of the corners o
I have some plots that I generating using R (using trellis, plot, and
barplot2) that I want to include in a PowerPoint presentation I am
giving. My computer is running OS X. I find that presentations are
easier to read when there is light text on a dark background and would
like to generate plots
Thanks. That was all I needed.
Jamie
On 3/1/06, Marc Schwartz (via MN) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Unless you have modified the 'width' argument, the default width is 1.
>
> Thus the sides of the bars are the centers +/- 0.5.
>
> If you modified the width argument, then the widths are set to t
I'm using barplot2 to plot some data. Is there any way to determine
the width of the bars in the generated plot? I know that barplot2
returns a list of the coordinates of the center of each bar, but since
there is some white space between each bar, I don't know how to get
the width of each bar.
I just tried using Ctrl-C to do a copy a plot from a graphic window
using the Cocoa version of OS X that you can download from the link
below and I was able to paste the plot into a document.
Jamie
On 9/15/05, Jamieson Cobleigh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Also, why are you running
You can try FreeSnap, a screen capture program for OS X:
http://www.efritz.net/software.html
Also, why are you running R from an XTerm? There is an OS X native
version of R that might be better integrated with OS X for doing
screen captures:
http://cran.stat.ucla.edu/bin/macosx/
Jamie
On
That did the trick.
Thanks!
Jamie
On 9/1/05, Sundar Dorai-Raj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> Jamieson Cobleigh wrote:
> > Similar to my last question, I want to tighten up the spacing and
> > margins in a plot I am doing with lattice.
> >
> > Here a
Similar to my last question, I want to tighten up the spacing and
margins in a plot I am doing with lattice.
Here are the commands I'm using:
data <- data.frame(x=c(1:3, 1:3), y=c(1:3, 1:3*2),
cat=c("foo","foo","foo","bar", "bar","bar"))
xyplot(panel=panel.superpose, y~x, data=data, groups=cat,
ot;, xlab="", xaxt="n")
>
> mtext(side=1, line=0.5, "X Label")
>
> hope it helps,
>
> Chuck
>
> Jamieson Cobleigh wrote:
> > If I use the following command to plot points:
> >
> > plot(c(1,2,2,3,3,3), type="p", pch=
If I use the following command to plot points:
plot(c(1,2,2,3,3,3), type="p", pch=20, ylab="Y Label", xlab="X Label", xaxt="n")
there is a large amount of space between the label "X Label" and the
actual x-axis. If I change the xaxt="n" to xaxt="s", the label "X
Label" don't move at all. Is the
I using lattice to make some plots and I want to make the y-axis on
some of these plots use a log scale. In the following plot:
x <- 1:10
y <- 2^x
xyplot(log10(y) ~ x)
I get tick marks on the y-axis at 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, and 3.0. I
would rather have just 3 tick marks at 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0
> Andy
>
> > From: Jamieson Cobleigh
> >
> > With much help from Chuck Cleland, I was able to get xyplot to
> > generate the plot I wanted. I'm trying to write a script (that can be
> > read using source("file")) to create the plots I want and save
With much help from Chuck Cleland, I was able to get xyplot to
generate the plot I wanted. I'm trying to write a script (that can be
read using source("file")) to create the plots I want and save them to
files.
If I type the following lines into the R (in interactive mode), the
correct plot gets
I have a data frame with three columns, type (a factor with two
values: "Monolithic" and "Compositional"), size (numeric), and states
(numeric). I want to create a plot where size goes on the x-axis and
states goes on the y-axis. In this plot, I want two lines, one where
the type is "Monolithic"
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