I've just uploaded gregmisc 0.8.6 to CRAN, it should show up in the package tree shortly. It contains both an enhanced barplot() [named barplot2 in my code] and an enhanced heatmap() function that I would like to see propagate to the base and mva packages respectively. I've checked the code for both functions against the code in R 1.8.1, and these functions have all of the latest features/patches. The barplot2 code is a drop-in replacement for the current barplot() command which adds these features: - control color of the plot region - allow either/both axes to be plotted on a log scale - allow grid-lines to be shown on the plot - plot confidence intervals when standard error is provided - 'add' parameter to allow plotting onto an existing canvas barplot2() is mostly contributed changes by Marc Schwartz. The heatmap code is an almost* drop-in replacement for the standard heatmap function. It adds: - ability to specify 'breaks' which define how numeric ranges are assigned to colors * a variant mechanism for specifying whether row or column dendograms should be generated and plotted: dengrogram="row", "column" "none" or "both". This differs from R's standard heatmap, which does this by Rowv=NA or Colv=NA, which also prevents *reordering* the rows/columns. - changes the default colors to 'heat.colors' instead of 'topo.colors', which seems more appropriate for continuous data. - allow visual separation of row / column blocks with a solid (usually background) color 'border' - allow text to be placed within colored cells (ie for p-value significance flags) - automatically provide a color-key when the data is not internally scaled (scaling is now off by default) - add 'level trace' lines. These lines, which can run down rows or across columns represent the scale of the measurement by the distance of the line within a cell from the lower or left side of the color block. These lines allow one to visually compare the scale of measurements more accurately than is possible from the colors themselves. [Visually it is almost impossible to decide that this red is twice intense that red. This line makes this type of comparison simple.] I made these changes for presentation of fold-change heatmaps. The specification of 'breaks' allows for the mapping of colors to ranges to be made symmetric around +-1, for the space between +-1 to be 'collapsed' into a single color, and for extreme values to be 'collapsed' into a single color block instead of bleaching out all of the lower values. In this context, a color key becomes invaluable, and if the plotted data is the result of model fitting, one wants to add p-value flags, and to select a meaningful column order instead of depending on the dendrogram or the original matrix order. -G Gregory R. Warnes, Ph.D. Senior Coordinator Groton Non-Clinical Statistics Pfizer Global Research and Development <<Warnes, Gregory R.vcf>> LEGAL NOTICE\ Unless expressly stated otherwise, this messag...{{dropped}}