<Depends on which kind of plot you want. If a scatterplot, first plot
your "not sepcial" stuff and afterwards add your special data with a
call to points() in, e.g. anotehr color. If you want to separate plots,
look at then lattice package.
Uwe Ligges
On 14.03.2012 15:16, sybil kennelly wrote:> Hi Guys, this is actually a thread of emails, but for some reason, even
> though i am a member, it's withholding my email so i said i would try
it
> this route instead!...
>
> I appreciate the reading Thank you. If i have:
>
> matrix:
>> var1 var2 var3
>> cell1 x x x
>> cell2 x x x
>> cell3 x x x
>>
>> cell4
>>
>> .
>> .
>> .
>> .
>> cell100
>
> and:
>
> vector1<- c("cell1, "cell5",cell19",
"cell50", "cell70")
>
> your_data$mycells<- factor(your_data$cells %in% vector1,
c("Special",
> "NotSpecial"))
>
> So my output will be something like:
>
> [25] Special Special Special Special Special Special
> [31] Special NotSpecial NotSpecial NotSpecial NotSpecial NotSpecial
> [37] NotSpecial NotSpecial NotSpecial NotSpecial
>
> is there a way to plot the data so that my "Special" cells are
plotted on
> top of my not special cells. The reason is my data may have 10000 not
> special points,and i may have 5 special cells, I find I'm not able to
see
> where they are on my plot because they are being covered by my not special
> cells :(
>
> I have been looking around for "order of factors plotted" ,
'order of
> levels", "order of factor levels", is this on the right
track or can it even
> be done?
>
> Syb
>
> --
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>
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