View source: R/print.trellis.R
C_05_print.trellis | R Documentation |
The print
and plot
methods produce a graph from a
"trellis"
object. The print
method is necessary for
automatic plotting. plot
method is essentially
an alias, provided for convenience. The summary
method
gives a textual summary of the object. dim
and dimnames
describe the cross-tabulation induced by conditioning.
panel.error
is the default handler used when an error occurs
while executing the panel function.
## S3 method for class 'trellis'
plot(x, position, split,
more = FALSE, newpage = TRUE,
packet.panel = packet.panel.default,
draw.in = NULL,
panel.height = lattice.getOption("layout.heights")$panel,
panel.width = lattice.getOption("layout.widths")$panel,
save.object = lattice.getOption("save.object"),
panel.error = lattice.getOption("panel.error"),
prefix,
...)
## S3 method for class 'trellis'
print(x, ...)
## S3 method for class 'trellis'
summary(object, ...)
## S3 method for class 'trellis'
dim(x)
## S3 method for class 'trellis'
dimnames(x)
panel.error(e)
x , object |
an object of class |
position |
a vector of 4 numbers, typically c(xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax) that give the lower-left and upper-right corners of a rectangle in which the Trellis plot of x is to be positioned. The coordinate system for this rectangle is [0-1] in both the x and y directions. |
split |
a vector of 4 integers, c(x,y,nx,ny) , that says to position the current plot at the x,y position in a regular array of nx by ny plots. (Note: this has origin at top left) |
more |
A logical specifying whether more plots will follow on this page. |
newpage |
A logical specifying whether the plot should be on a new page. This option is specific to lattice, and is useful for including lattice plots in an arbitrary grid viewport (see the details section). |
packet.panel |
a function that determines which packet (data
subset) is plotted in which panel. Panels are always drawn in an
order such that columns vary the fastest, then rows and then pages.
This function determines, given the column, row and page and other
relevant information, the packet (if any) which should be used in
that panel. By default, the association is determnined by matching
panel order with packet order, which is determined by varying the
first conditioning variable the fastest, then the second, and so
on. This association rule is encoded in the default, namely the
function |
draw.in |
An optional (grid) viewport (used as the |
panel.width , panel.height |
lists with 2 components, that should be valid Note that this option should not be used in conjunction with
non-default values of the |
save.object |
logical, specifying whether the object being printed is to be
saved. The last object thus saved can be subsequently retrieved.
This is an experimental feature that should allow access to a
panel's data after the plot is done, making it possible to enhance
the plot after the fact. This also allows the user to invoke the
|
panel.error |
a function, or a character string naming a function, that is to be
executed when an error occurs during the execution of the panel
function. The error is caught (using Normal error recovery and debugging tools are unhelpful when
|
prefix |
A character string acting as a prefix identifying the plot of a
|
e |
an error condition caught by |
... |
extra arguments, ignored by the |
This is the default print method for objects of class
"trellis"
, produced by calls to functions like xyplot
,
bwplot
etc. It is usually called automatically when a trellis
object is produced. It can also be called explicitly to control plot
positioning by means of the arguments split
and
position
.
When newpage = FALSE
, the current grid viewport is treated as
the plotting area, making it possible to embed a Lattice plot inside
an arbitrary grid viewport. The draw.in
argument provides an
alternative mechanism that may be simpler to use.
The print method uses the information in x
(the object to be
printed) to produce a display using the Grid graphics engine. At the
heart of the plot is a grid layout, of which the entries of most
interest to the user are the ones containing the display panels.
Unlike in older versions of Lattice (and Grid), the grid display tree
is retained after the plot is produced, making it possible to access
individual viewport locations and make additions to the plot. For
more details and a lattice level interface to these viewports, see
trellis.focus
.
Unlike S-PLUS, trying to position a multipage display (using
position
and/or split
) will mess things up.
Deepayan Sarkar Deepayan.Sarkar@R-project.org
Lattice
, unit
,
update.trellis
, trellis.focus
,
packet.panel.default
p11 <- histogram( ~ height | voice.part, data = singer, xlab="Height")
p12 <- densityplot( ~ height | voice.part, data = singer, xlab = "Height")
p2 <- histogram( ~ height, data = singer, xlab = "Height")
## simple positioning by split
print(p11, split=c(1,1,1,2), more=TRUE)
print(p2, split=c(1,2,1,2))
## Combining split and position:
print(p11, position = c(0,0,.75,.75), split=c(1,1,1,2), more=TRUE)
print(p12, position = c(0,0,.75,.75), split=c(1,2,1,2), more=TRUE)
print(p2, position = c(.5,.75,1,1), more=FALSE)
## Using seekViewport
## repeat same plot, with different polynomial fits in each panel
xyplot(Armed.Forces ~ Year, longley, index.cond = list(rep(1, 6)),
layout = c(3, 2),
panel = function(x, y, ...)
{
panel.xyplot(x, y, ...)
fm <- lm(y ~ poly(x, panel.number()))
llines(x, predict(fm))
})
## Not run:
grid::seekViewport(trellis.vpname("panel", 1, 1))
cat("Click somewhere inside the first panel:\n")
ltext(grid::grid.locator(), lab = "linear")
## End(Not run)
grid::seekViewport(trellis.vpname("panel", 1, 1))
grid::grid.text("linear")
grid::seekViewport(trellis.vpname("panel", 2, 1))
grid::grid.text("quadratic")
grid::seekViewport(trellis.vpname("panel", 3, 1))
grid::grid.text("cubic")
grid::seekViewport(trellis.vpname("panel", 1, 2))
grid::grid.text("degree 4")
grid::seekViewport(trellis.vpname("panel", 2, 2))
grid::grid.text("degree 5")
grid::seekViewport(trellis.vpname("panel", 3, 2))
grid::grid.text("degree 6")
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.