Dear all,
Having received no answer in r-help I'm trying r-devel (hoping this is
not a stupid question).
I don't understand the rationale behind the absolute sizes of the point
symbols, and I couldn't find it documented (I got lost in the C code
graphics.c and gave up). The example below uses
Grid to check the size of the symbols against a square of 10mm x 10mm.
> checkOneSymbol <- function(pch=0){
> gTree(children=gList(
> rectGrob(0.5, 0.5, width=unit(10, "mm"), height=unit(10,
> "mm"),
> gp=gpar(lty=2, fill=NA, col=alpha("black", 0.5))),
> pointsGrob(0.5, 0.5, size=unit(10, "mm"),pch=pch,
> gp=gpar(col=alpha("red", 0.5)))
> ))
>
> }
> all.symbols <- lapply(0:23, checkOneSymbol)
>
> pdf("symbols.pdf", height=1.2/2.54, width=24.2/2.54)
>
> vp <- viewport(width=0.5, height=0.5, name="main")
> pushViewport(vp)
>
> pushViewport(viewport(layout=grid.layout(1, 24,
> widths=unit(10, "mm"),
> heights=unit(10, "mm"),
> just="center")))
>
> for(ii in 0:23){
> pushViewport(viewport(layout.pos.col=ii+1, layout.pos.row=1))
> grid.draw(all.symbols[[ii+1]])
> upViewport(1)
> }
> dev.off()
What dictates the size of each symbol? (in other words, why is pch=21
a circle of radius given in inches, while pch=2 is a triangle of base
length specified in mm and offset vertically?, etc.)
I'm trying to develop a new symbol for the ggplot2 package where the
size is to be accurately mapped onto the data either in linear size or
area. I was expecting a similar idea behind the choice of base
symbols. Is this documented?
Best regards,
baptiste
_____________________________
Baptiste Augui?
School of Physics
University of Exeter
Stocker Road,
Exeter, Devon,
EX4 4QL, UK
Phone: +44 1392 264187
http://newton.ex.ac.uk/research/emag