View source: R/visualization.R
plot_producer | R Documentation |
Draws a step function that represents a numeric vector
with elements in [a,\infty]
.
plot_producer(
x,
type = c("left.continuous", "right.continuous", "curve"),
extend = FALSE,
add = FALSE,
pch = 1,
col = 1,
lty = 1,
lwd = 1,
cex = 1,
col.steps = col,
lty.steps = 2,
lwd.steps = 1,
xlab = "",
ylab = "",
main = "",
xmarg = 10,
xlim = c(0, length(x) * 1.2),
ylim = c(a, max(x)),
a = 0,
...
)
x |
non-negative numeric vector |
type |
character; |
extend |
logical; should the plot be extended infinitely to the right?
Defaults to |
add |
logical; indicates whether to start a new plot, |
pch, col, lty, lwd, cex, xmarg |
graphical parameters |
col.steps, lty.steps, lwd.steps |
graphical parameters, used only
for |
ylim, xlim, xlab, ylab, main, ... |
additional graphical parameters,
see |
a |
single numeric value |
In agop, a vector x=(x_1,\dots,x_n)
can be represented by a
step function defined for 0\le y<n
and given by:
\pi(y)=x_{(n-\lfloor y+1\rfloor+1)}
(for type == 'right.continuous'
)
or for 0< y\le n
\pi(y)=x_{(n-\lfloor y\rfloor+1)}
(for type == 'left.continuous'
, the default)
or by a curve interpolating the points (0, x_{(n)})
,
(1, x_{(n)})
, (1, x_{(n-1)})
, (2, x_{(n-1)})
,
..., (n, x_{(1)})
.
Here, x_{(i)}
denotes the
i
-th smallest value in x
.
In bibliometrics, a step function of one of the two above-presented types is called a citation function.
For historical reasons, this function is also available via its alias,
plot.citfun
[but its usage is deprecated].
nothing interesting
john_s <- c(11,5,4,4,3,2,2,2,2,2,1,1,1,0,0,0,0)
plot_producer(john_s, main="Smith, John", col="red")
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