| chistogram-methods | R Documentation | 
Returns an object of class Histogram. The method can be called recursively.
This way more than one dataset can be binned into one histogram. The method is time consuming.
## S4 method for signature 'Histogram'
chistogram(x = NULL, Dataset = data.frame(),
           K = numeric(), ymin = numeric(), ymax = numeric(), ...)
## ... and for other signatures
| x | an object of class  | 
| Dataset | a data frame of size  | 
| K | an integer or a vector of length  | 
| ymin | a vector of length  | 
| ymax | a vector of length  | 
| ... | currently not used. | 
signature(x = "Histogram")an object of class Histogram.
Marko Nagode
# Create three datasets.
set.seed(1)
n <- 15
Dataset1 <- as.data.frame(cbind(rnorm(n, 157, 8), rnorm(n, 71, 10)))
Dataset2 <- as.data.frame(cbind(rnorm(n, 244, 14), rnorm(n, 61, 29)))
Dataset3 <- as.data.frame(cbind(rnorm(n, 198, 8), rnorm(n, 252, 13)))
apply(Dataset1, 2, range)
apply(Dataset2, 2, range)
apply(Dataset3, 2, range)
# Bin the first dataset.
hist <- chistogram(Dataset = Dataset1, K = c(4, 5), ymin = c(100.0, 0.0), ymax = c(300.0, 300.0))
# Bin the second dataset.
hist <- chistogram(x = hist, Dataset = Dataset2)
# Bin the third dataset.
hist <- chistogram(x = hist, Dataset = Dataset3)
hist
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