Palettes {base} | R Documentation |
These functions create a vector of n
“contiguous” colors.
Conceptually, all of these functions actually use (parts of) a line
cut out of the 3-dimensional color space, parametrized by
hsv(h,s,v, gamma)
, where gamma
=1
for the
foo.colors
function, and hence,
equispaced hues in RGB space tend to cluster at
the red, green and blue primaries.
Some applications such as contouring require a palette
of colors which do not “wrap around” to give a final
color close to the starting one.
With rainbow
, the parameters start
and end
can be used
to specify particular subranges of hues.
The following values can be used when generating
such a subrange:
red=0, yellow=\frac 1 6
, green=\frac 2 6
, cyan=\frac 3 6
, blue=\frac 4 6
and magenta=\frac 5 6
.
rainbow(n, s = 1, v = 1, start = 0, end = max(1,n - 1)/n, gamma = 1)
heat.colors(n)
terrain.colors(n)
topo.colors(n)
n |
the number of colors ( |
s , v |
the “saturation” and “value” to be used to complete the HSV color descriptions. |
start |
the (corrected) hue in [0,1] at which the rainbow begins. |
end |
the (corrected) hue in [0,1] at which the rainbow ends. |
gamma |
the gamma correction, see |
A character vector, cv
, of color names. This can be used
either to create a user–defined color palette for subsequent
graphics by palette(cv)
, a col=
specification
in graphics functions or in par
.
colors
, palette
, hsv
,
rgb
, gray
.
# A Color Wheel
piechart(rep(1,12), col=rainbow(12))
##------ Some palettes ------------
n <- if(.Device == "postscript") 64 else 16
## For screen, larger n may give color allocation problem
i <- 1:n
d <- n/20; dy <- 2*d; j <- n%/%4
plot(i,i+d, type='n', main=paste("color palettes; n=",n))
rect(i-.5, dy, i+.4, j, col=rainbow(n, start=.7, end=.1))
text(2*j, j+dy/4, "rainbow(n, start=.7, end=.1)")
rect(i-.5, j+dy, i+.4, 2*j, col=heat.colors(n))
text(2*j, 2*j+dy/4, "heat.colors(n)")
rect(i-.5, 2*j+dy, i+.4, 3*j, col=terrain.colors(n))
text(2*j, 3*j+dy/4, "terrain.colors(n)")
rect(i-.5, 3*j+dy, i+.4, 4*j, col=topo.colors(n))
text(2*j, 4*j+dy/4, "topo.colors(n)")