filled.contour {base} | R Documentation |
This function produces a contour plot with the areas between the contours filled in solid color (Cleveland calls this a level plot). A key showing how the colors map to z values is shown to the right of the plot.
filled.contour(x = seq(0, 1, len = nrow(z)),
y = seq(0, 1, len = ncol(z)),
z,
xlim = range(x, finite=TRUE),
ylim = range(y, finite=TRUE),
zlim = range(z, finite=TRUE),
levels = pretty(zlim, nlevels), nlevels = 20,
color.palette = cm.colors,
col = color.palette(length(levels) - 1),
plot.title, plot.axes, key.title, key.axes,
asp = NA, xaxs = "i", yaxs = "i", las = 1, axes = TRUE,
...)
x , y |
locations of grid lines at which the values in |
z |
a matrix containing the values to be plotted ( |
xlim |
x limits for the plot. |
ylim |
y limits for the plot. |
zlim |
z limits for the plot. |
levels |
a set of levels which are used to partition the range
of |
nlevels |
if |
color.palette |
a color palette function to be used to assign colors in the plot. |
col |
an explicit set of colors to be used in the plot. This argument overrides any palette function specification. |
plot.title |
statements which add titles the main plot. |
plot.axes |
statements which draw axes on the main plot. This overrides the default axes. |
key.title |
statements which add titles for the plot key. |
key.axes |
statements which draw axes on the plot key. This overrides the default axis. |
asp |
the |
xaxs |
the x axis style. The default is to use internal labeling. |
yaxs |
the y axis style. The default is to use internal labeling. |
las |
the style of labeling to be used. The default is to use horizontal labeling. |
axes , ... |
additional graphical parameters. |
This function currently uses the layout
function and so
is restricted to a full page display. In future it is likely to
be replaced by a genuine levelplot
function which will
work in multipanel displays.
The ouput produced by filled.contour
is actually a combination
of two plots; one is the filled contour and one is the legend.
Two separate coordinate systems are set up for these
two plots, but they are only used internally - once the function has
returned these coordinate systems are lost. If you
want to annotate the main contour plot, for example to add points,
you can specify
graphics commands in the plot.axes argument. An example is given
below.
Ross Ihaka.
Cleveland, W. S. (1993) Visualizing Data. Summit, New Jersey: Hobart.
contour
, image
, palette
.
data(volcano)
filled.contour(volcano, color = terrain.colors, asp = 1)# simple
x <- 10*1:nrow(volcano)
y <- 10*1:ncol(volcano)
filled.contour(x, y, volcano, color = terrain.colors,
plot.title = title(main = "The Topography of Maunga Whau",
xlab = "Meters North", ylab = "Meters West"),
plot.axes = { axis(1, seq(100, 800, by = 100))
axis(2, seq(100, 600, by = 100)) },
key.title = title(main="Height\n(meters)"),
key.axes = axis(4, seq(90, 190, by = 10)))# maybe also asp=1
mtext(paste("filled.contour(.) from", R.version.string),
side = 1, line = 4, adj = 1, cex = .66)
# Annotating a filled contour plot
a <- expand.grid(1:20, 1:20)
b <- matrix(a[,1] + a[,2], 20)
filled.contour(x = 1:20, y = 1:20, z = b,
plot.axes={ axis(1); axis(2); points(10,10) })