On 08/04/2011 9:16 AM, nferreri at fceia.unr.edu.ar
wrote:> I'm working in Rosario, Argentina, trying to plot some contours.
>
> I found the function "draw.contour" created by James Forester at
> R-bloggers. If you take a look at that function you'll see it's
very
> useful!
>
> But I have a problem with it and James is trying to help me (but also
> asked me to seek for more help) I hope you can help me (don't worry if
you
> can't):
>
> Using "draw.contour" I get the contour but I want to place it in
a
> cartesian-coordinate system where x = "Componente 1" range
between -1 y 1
> and y = "Componente 2" range between 0 and 3, regardless of
xrange or
> yrange.
>
> Of course, xrange and yrange are important to obtain an adequate contour
> plot but I want to see that contour in the cartesian coordinate system I
> told you before.
>
> so I put ylim = c(0,3) and xlim = c(-1,1) but R ignores those sentences
> and gives me a graphic using xrange and yrange as limits
>
> can anyone help me? I hope you can understand my problem (and my poor
> english!!!). if you don't, tell me and i'll send you more
information
>
> thank you very much!!!
My advice would be to use the contour() function, rather than
"draw.contour". I would guess the latter was written to solve a
particular problem, whereas contour() is the general purpose function in
base R, and it does respect your requests for xlim and ylim.
Duncan Murdoch