ordilabel | R Documentation |
Function ordilabel
is similar to
text
, but the text is on an opaque label. This can help
in crowded ordination plots: you still cannot see all text labels, but
at least the uppermost are readable. Argument priority
helps to
make the most important labels visible.
ordilabel(x, display, labels, choices = c(1, 2), priority, select,
cex = 0.8, fill = "white", border = NULL, col = NULL, xpd = TRUE, ...)
x |
An ordination object an any object known to
|
display |
Kind of scores displayed (passed to
|
labels |
Optional text used in plots. If this is not given, the text is found from the ordination object. |
choices |
Axes shown (passed to |
priority |
Vector of the same length as the number of labels. The items with high priority will be plotted uppermost. |
select |
Items to be displayed. This can either be a logical
vector which is |
cex |
Character expansion for the text (passed to
|
fill |
Background colour of the labels (the |
border |
The colour and visibility of the border of the label as
defined in |
col |
Text colour. Default |
xpd |
Draw labels also outside the plot region (see
|
... |
Other arguments (passed to |
The function may be useful with crowded ordination plots, in
particular together with argument priority
. You will not see
all text labels, but at least some are readable. Other alternatives to
crowded plots are identify.ordiplot
,
orditorp
and orditkplot
.
Jari Oksanen
scores
, polygon
,
text
. The function is modelled after
s.label
in ade4 package.
data(dune)
ord <- cca(dune)
plot(ord, type = "n")
ordilabel(ord, dis="sites", cex=1.2, font=3, fill="hotpink", col="blue")
## You may prefer separate plots, but here species as well
ordilabel(ord, dis="sp", font=2, priority=colSums(dune))
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.