coplot {graphics} | R Documentation |
This function produces two variants of the conditioning plots discussed in the reference below.
coplot(formula, data, given.values, panel = points, rows, columns,
show.given = TRUE, col = par("fg"), pch = par("pch"),
bar.bg = c(num = gray(0.8), fac = gray(0.95)),
xlab = c(x.name, paste("Given :", a.name)),
ylab = c(y.name, paste("Given :", b.name)),
subscripts = FALSE,
axlabels = function(f) abbreviate(levels(f)),
number = 6, overlap = 0.5, xlim, ylim, ...)
co.intervals(x, number = 6, overlap = 0.5)
formula |
a formula describing the form of conditioning plot. A
formula of the form All three or four variables may be either numeric or factors.
When |
data |
a data frame containing values for any variables in the
formula. By default the environment where |
given.values |
a value or list of two values which determine how
the conditioning on When there is no |
panel |
a |
rows |
the panels of the plot are laid out in a |
columns |
the number of columns in the panel layout array. |
show.given |
logical (possibly of length 2 for 2 conditioning
variables): should conditioning plots be shown for the
corresponding conditioning variables (default |
col |
a vector of colors to be used to plot the points. If too short, the values are recycled. |
pch |
a vector of plotting symbols or characters. If too short, the values are recycled. |
bar.bg |
a named vector with components |
xlab |
character; labels to use for the x axis and the first conditioning variable. If only one label is given, it is used for the x axis and the default label is used for the conditioning variable. |
ylab |
character; labels to use for the y axis and any second conditioning variable. |
subscripts |
logical: if true the panel function is given an
additional (third) argument |
axlabels |
function for creating axis (tick) labels when x or y are factors. |
number |
integer; the number of conditioning intervals,
for a and b, possibly of length 2. It is only used if the
corresponding conditioning variable is not a |
overlap |
numeric < 1; the fraction of overlap of the conditioning variables, possibly of length 2 for x and y direction. When overlap < 0, there will be gaps between the data slices. |
xlim |
the range for the x axis. |
ylim |
the range for the y axis. |
... |
additional arguments to the panel function. |
x |
a numeric vector. |
In the case of a single conditioning variable a
, when both
rows
and columns
are unspecified, a ‘close to
square’ layout is chosen with columns >= rows
.
In the case of multiple rows
, the order of the panel
plots is from the bottom and from the left (corresponding to
increasing a
, typically).
A panel function should not attempt to start a new plot, but just plot
within a given coordinate system: thus plot
and boxplot
are not panel functions.
The rendering of arguments xlab
and
ylab
is not controlled by par
arguments
cex.lab
and font.lab
even though they are plotted by
mtext
rather than title
.
co.intervals(., number, .)
returns a (number
\times
2) matrix
, say ci
, where ci[k,]
is
the range
of x
values for the k
-th interval.
Chambers, J. M. (1992) Data for models. Chapter 3 of Statistical Models in S eds J. M. Chambers and T. J. Hastie, Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
Cleveland, W. S. (1993) Visualizing Data. New Jersey: Summit Press.
pairs
,
panel.smooth
,
points
.
## Tonga Trench Earthquakes
coplot(lat ~ long | depth, data = quakes)
given.depth <- co.intervals(quakes$depth, number=4, overlap=.1)
coplot(lat ~ long | depth, data = quakes, given.v=given.depth, rows=1)
## Conditioning on 2 variables:
ll.dm <- lat ~ long | depth * mag
coplot(ll.dm, data = quakes)
coplot(ll.dm, data = quakes, number=c(4,7), show.given=c(TRUE,FALSE))
coplot(ll.dm, data = quakes, number=c(3,7),
overlap=c(-.5,.1)) # negative overlap DROPS values
## given two factors
Index <- seq(length=nrow(warpbreaks)) # to get nicer default labels
coplot(breaks ~ Index | wool * tension, data = warpbreaks,
show.given = 0:1)
coplot(breaks ~ Index | wool * tension, data = warpbreaks,
col = "red", bg = "pink", pch = 21,
bar.bg = c(fac = "light blue"))
## Example with empty panels:
with(data.frame(state.x77), {
coplot(Life.Exp ~ Income | Illiteracy * state.region, number = 3,
panel = function(x, y, ...) panel.smooth(x, y, span = .8, ...))
## y ~ factor -- not really sensible, but 'show off':
coplot(Life.Exp ~ state.region | Income * state.division,
panel = panel.smooth)
})