For a legend, try (untested) legend(0.15,0.9,c("factora","factorb","factorc"),col=c(4,2,3),lty=1) If it overlaps data points move the first two arguments (0.15 and 0.9) around, or change the ?ylim? argument in the plot() to ~1.2. to avoid clutter, put the line-types information in the figure caption (IMO)> On Jun 10, 2015, at 10:03 AM, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu> wrote: > > >> On Jun 10, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> wrote: >> >> Dear All, >> >> >> I attach my data. >> >> Dear Jim, >> >> when I run your code (even the one you send me, not in my data), I get: >> >> Don't know how to automatically pick scale for object of type function. Defaulting to continuous >> Error in data.frame(x = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, : >> arguments imply differing number of rows: 24, 0 >> >> >> >> Dear Don, >> >> It?s meant that I will have 12 lines: >> 3 factors - lines colors >> with 3 different values of ?sample? for each - line types >> >> >> [Three colors, one for each factor, >> and three line types (lty=1,2,3), one for eachvalue of ?sample - preferable dash, thin and thick). >> >> >> in the X - I should have region (because I have 10 regions) >> for each region I have the outcome of 3 different treatments (factor) >> for each region and each treatment I have 3 different sample size. > > But in your original post you had 4 sample sizes: 10,20,30,40. >> >> I need to ?see? the the influence of the region in the treatment outcome for each sample size. >> >> So, at the end I should have 9 lines >> 3 red (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor a (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >> 3 blue (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor b (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >> 3 green (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor c (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >> >> >> >> Hope this time is clear. >> >> >> I also though about doing 3 different graphs, each one for 1 different sample size, and in that case I should have 3 graphs each one with 3 lines >> 1 red to factor a, 1 blue to factor b and 1 green to factor c. >> >> Do you all think is better? > > A matter of style perhaps but I would use dotplots because you have only two data points for each ?line?. The lines will be misleading. You also could use > panel plots, but given your skill set (unless someone wants to spend a fair bit of time with you), it?s probably best to stay as simple as possible. > > But given your original post (cleaned up) # untested: apologies for any typos > >> region sample factora factorb factorc >> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 > > > plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4,type=?l?,ylim=c(0,1),xlab=?region?,ylab=?factor") > lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==10],col=2) > lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==10],col=3) > > lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==20],col=4,lty=2) > lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) > lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==20],col=3,lty=2) > > # Now do two more groups of 3, changing the parameter ?lty? to 3 and then 4 > > > # Look at the syntax and note what changes and what stays constant. Do you see how this works? > # there will be what looks like a vertical line where sample = 30 and factorb = 174.592. Do you see why? > > # then you will need a legend > >> Nonetheless I can?t do it :( >> >> best, >> RO >> >> >> >> Atenciosamente, >> Rosa Oliveira >> >> -- >> ____________________________________________________________________________ >> >> <smile.jpg> >> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >> >> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >> Tlm: +351 939355143 >> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >> ____________________________________________________________________________ >> "Many admire, few know" >> Hippocrates >> >>> On 10 Jun 2015, at 14:13, John Kane <jrkrideau at inbox.com <mailto:jrkrideau at inbox.com>> wrote: >>> >>> Hi Jim, >>> >>> I was looking at that last night and had the same problem of visualizing what Rosa needed. >>> >>> Hi Rosa >>> This is nothing like what you wanted and I really don't understand your data but would something like this work as a substitute or am I completely lost? >>> >>> >>> dat1 <- structure(list(region = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, >>> 0.2), sample = c(10L, 10L, 20L, 20L, 30L, 30L, 40L, 40L), factora = c(0.895, >>> 0.811, 0.735, 0.777, 0.6, 0.466, 0.446, 0.392), factorb = c(0.903, >>> 0.865, 0.966, 0.732, 0.778, 0.592, 0.432, 0.294), factorc = c(0.37, >>> 0.688, 0.611, 0.653, 0.694, 0.461, 0.693, 0.686)), .Names = c("region", >>> "sample", "factora", "factorb", "factorc"), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, >>> -8L)) >>> >>> >>> mdat1 <- melt(dat1, id.var = c("region", "sample"), >>> variable.name = "factor", >>> value.name = "value") >>> str(mdat1) >>> >>> ggplot(mdat1, aes(region, value, colour = factor)) + >>> geom_line() + facet_grid(sample ~ .) >>> >>> John Kane >>> Kingston ON Canada >>> >>> >>>> -----Original Message----- >>>> From: drjimlemon at gmail.com <mailto:drjimlemon at gmail.com> >>>> Sent: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 20:51:52 +1000 >>>> To: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>> Subject: Re: [R] graphs, need urgent help (deadline :( ) >>>> >>>> Hi Rosa, >>>> Like Don, I can't work out what you want and I don't even have the >>>> picture. For example, your specification of color and line type leaves >>>> only one point for each color and line type, and the line from one >>>> point to the same point is not going to show up. Here is a possibility >>>> that may lead (eventually) to a solution. >>>> >>>> library(plotrix) >>>> par(tcl=-0.1) >>>> gap.plot(x=rep(seq(10,45,by=5),3), >>>> y=unlist(my.data[,c("factora","factorb","factorc")]), >>>> main="A plot of factorial mystery", >>>> gap=c(1.1,174),ylim=c(0,175),ylab="factor score",xlab="Group", >>>> xticlab=c(" \n0.1\n10"," \n0.2\n10"," \n0.1\n20"," \n0.2\n20", >>>> " \n0.1\n30"," \n0.2\n30"," \n0.1\n40"," \n0.2\n40"), >>>> ytics=c(0,0.5,1,174.59),pch=rep(1:3,each=8),col=rep(c(4,2,3),each=8)) >>>> mtext(c("Region","Sample"),side=1,at=6,line=c(0,1)) >>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factora,col=4) >>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorb[c(1:5,NA,7,8)],col=2) >>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorc,col=3) >>>> >>>> Jim >>>> >>>> >>>> On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 10:53 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>> wrote: >>>>> Dear Don and all, >>>>> >>>>> I?ve read the tutorial and tried several codes before posting :) >>>>> I?m really naive. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> what I was trying to : is something like the graph in the picture I >>>>> drawee. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Is it more clear now? >>>>> >>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>> >>>>> -- >>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>> >>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>> Hippocrates >>>>> >>>>>> On 09 Jun 2015, at 19:23, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu> >>>>>> <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> The answer lies in learning to use the help (and knowing where to >>>>>> start). Did you look at the tutorial that comes with the R >>>>>> installation? >>>>>> >>>>>> ?plot >>>>>> ?lines >>>>>> >>>>>> ?par >>>>>> >>>>>> In the last, look for the descriptions of ?col? and ?lty?. >>>>>> >>>>>> Using plot() and lines(), and subsetting the four unique values of >>>>>> ?sample?, you can create your lines. >>>>>> >>>>>> Here is a crude start, assuming your columns are part of a data frame >>>>>> called ?my.data?. Untested... >>>>>> >>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4) >>>>>> # blue line, not dashed >>>>>> . >>>>>> . >>>>>> . >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>>>>> # red dashed line >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>> On Jun 9, 2015, at 10:36 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>>> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>>> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> another naive question (i?m pretty sure :( ) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I?m trying to plot a multiple line graph: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> region sample factora factorb >>>>>>> factorc >>>>>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>>>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>>>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>>>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>>>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>>>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>>>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>>>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> The first column should be the independent variable, the second should >>>>>>> compute a bold line for sample(10) and dash line for sample 20. >>>>>> >>>>>> What about the other two values of ?sample?? >>>>>> >>>>>>> The others variables are outcomes for each of the first scenarios, and >>>>>>> so it should: the 3rd, 4th and 5th columns should be blue, red and >>>>>>> green respectively. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Resume :) >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I should have a graph, in the x-axe should have the region and in the >>>>>>> y axe, the factor. >>>>>>> Lines: >>>>>>> 1 - blue and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>> 2 - blue and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>> 3 - red and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>> 4 - red and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>> 5 - green and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>> 6 - green and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>> >>>>>> Not consistent with what you said above. These are no longer lines, but >>>>>> points. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> nonetheless the independent variable is nominal, I should plot a line >>>>>>> graph. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Can anyone help me please? >>>>>>> I have my file as a cvs file, so I first read that file (that I know >>>>>>> how to do :)). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> But I have it in that format. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Best, >>>>>>> RO >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>> >>>>>>> -- >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> <mailto:R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org>> mailing list -- To >>>>>>> UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>>> <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help>> >>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>> <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>> >>>>>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>> >>>> ______________________________________________ >>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>> >>> ____________________________________________________________ >>> FREE 3D MARINE AQUARIUM SCREENSAVER - Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! >>> Check it out at http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium <http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium> >>> >>> >> > > <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >
Sorry, I taught I attached the cvs file :) Don, I tried, but I got an error:> my.data$Region[1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10> my.data$sample[1] 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 [29] 1000 1000> my.data$factor.a[1] 0.895 0.811 0.685 0.777 0.600 0.466 0.446 0.392 0.256 0.198 0.136 0.121 0.875 0.777 0.685 0.626 0.550 0.466 0.384 0.330 0.060 0.138 0.065 [24] 0.034 0.931 0.124 0.060 0.028 0.017 0.014> plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?l?,xlab=?Region?,ylab=?factor")Error: unexpected input in "plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?? I?m really naive, right? Best, RO Atenciosamente, Rosa Oliveira -- ____________________________________________________________________________ Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com Tlm: +351 939355143 Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira ____________________________________________________________________________ "Many admire, few know" Hippocrates> On 10 Jun 2015, at 18:10, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu> wrote: > > For a legend, try (untested) > > legend(0.15,0.9,c("factora","factorb","factorc"),col=c(4,2,3),lty=1) > > If it overlaps data points move the first two arguments (0.15 and 0.9) around, or change the ?ylim? argument in the plot() to ~1.2. > > to avoid clutter, put the line-types information in the figure caption (IMO) > > >> On Jun 10, 2015, at 10:03 AM, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>> wrote: >> >> >>> On Jun 10, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> wrote: >>> >>> Dear All, >>> >>> >>> I attach my data. >>> >>> Dear Jim, >>> >>> when I run your code (even the one you send me, not in my data), I get: >>> >>> Don't know how to automatically pick scale for object of type function. Defaulting to continuous >>> Error in data.frame(x = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, : >>> arguments imply differing number of rows: 24, 0 >>> >>> >>> >>> Dear Don, >>> >>> It?s meant that I will have 12 lines: >>> 3 factors - lines colors >>> with 3 different values of ?sample? for each - line types >>> >>> >>> [Three colors, one for each factor, >>> and three line types (lty=1,2,3), one for eachvalue of ?sample - preferable dash, thin and thick). >>> >>> >>> in the X - I should have region (because I have 10 regions) >>> for each region I have the outcome of 3 different treatments (factor) >>> for each region and each treatment I have 3 different sample size. >> >> But in your original post you had 4 sample sizes: 10,20,30,40. >>> >>> I need to ?see? the the influence of the region in the treatment outcome for each sample size. >>> >>> So, at the end I should have 9 lines >>> 3 red (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor a (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>> 3 blue (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor b (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>> 3 green (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor c (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>> >>> >>> >>> Hope this time is clear. >>> >>> >>> I also though about doing 3 different graphs, each one for 1 different sample size, and in that case I should have 3 graphs each one with 3 lines >>> 1 red to factor a, 1 blue to factor b and 1 green to factor c. >>> >>> Do you all think is better? >> >> A matter of style perhaps but I would use dotplots because you have only two data points for each ?line?. The lines will be misleading. You also could use >> panel plots, but given your skill set (unless someone wants to spend a fair bit of time with you), it?s probably best to stay as simple as possible. >> >> But given your original post (cleaned up) # untested: apologies for any typos >> >>> region sample factora factorb factorc >>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >> >> >> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4,type=?l?,ylim=c(0,1),xlab=?region?,ylab=?factor") >> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==10],col=2) >> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==10],col=3) >> >> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==20],col=4,lty=2) >> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==20],col=3,lty=2) >> >> # Now do two more groups of 3, changing the parameter ?lty? to 3 and then 4 >> >> >> # Look at the syntax and note what changes and what stays constant. Do you see how this works? >> # there will be what looks like a vertical line where sample = 30 and factorb = 174.592. Do you see why? >> >> # then you will need a legend >> >>> Nonetheless I can?t do it :( >>> >>> best, >>> RO >>> >>> >>> >>> Atenciosamente, >>> Rosa Oliveira >>> >>> -- >>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>> >>> <smile.jpg> >>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>> >>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>> "Many admire, few know" >>> Hippocrates >>> >>>> On 10 Jun 2015, at 14:13, John Kane <jrkrideau at inbox.com <mailto:jrkrideau at inbox.com>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Hi Jim, >>>> >>>> I was looking at that last night and had the same problem of visualizing what Rosa needed. >>>> >>>> Hi Rosa >>>> This is nothing like what you wanted and I really don't understand your data but would something like this work as a substitute or am I completely lost? >>>> >>>> >>>> dat1 <- structure(list(region = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, >>>> 0.2), sample = c(10L, 10L, 20L, 20L, 30L, 30L, 40L, 40L), factora = c(0.895, >>>> 0.811, 0.735, 0.777, 0.6, 0.466, 0.446, 0.392), factorb = c(0.903, >>>> 0.865, 0.966, 0.732, 0.778, 0.592, 0.432, 0.294), factorc = c(0.37, >>>> 0.688, 0.611, 0.653, 0.694, 0.461, 0.693, 0.686)), .Names = c("region", >>>> "sample", "factora", "factorb", "factorc"), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, >>>> -8L)) >>>> >>>> >>>> mdat1 <- melt(dat1, id.var = c("region", "sample"), >>>> variable.name = "factor", >>>> value.name = "value") >>>> str(mdat1) >>>> >>>> ggplot(mdat1, aes(region, value, colour = factor)) + >>>> geom_line() + facet_grid(sample ~ .) >>>> >>>> John Kane >>>> Kingston ON Canada >>>> >>>> >>>>> -----Original Message----- >>>>> From: drjimlemon at gmail.com <mailto:drjimlemon at gmail.com> >>>>> Sent: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 20:51:52 +1000 >>>>> To: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>> Subject: Re: [R] graphs, need urgent help (deadline :( ) >>>>> >>>>> Hi Rosa, >>>>> Like Don, I can't work out what you want and I don't even have the >>>>> picture. For example, your specification of color and line type leaves >>>>> only one point for each color and line type, and the line from one >>>>> point to the same point is not going to show up. Here is a possibility >>>>> that may lead (eventually) to a solution. >>>>> >>>>> library(plotrix) >>>>> par(tcl=-0.1) >>>>> gap.plot(x=rep(seq(10,45,by=5),3), >>>>> y=unlist(my.data[,c("factora","factorb","factorc")]), >>>>> main="A plot of factorial mystery", >>>>> gap=c(1.1,174),ylim=c(0,175),ylab="factor score",xlab="Group", >>>>> xticlab=c(" \n0.1\n10"," \n0.2\n10"," \n0.1\n20"," \n0.2\n20", >>>>> " \n0.1\n30"," \n0.2\n30"," \n0.1\n40"," \n0.2\n40"), >>>>> ytics=c(0,0.5,1,174.59),pch=rep(1:3,each=8),col=rep(c(4,2,3),each=8)) >>>>> mtext(c("Region","Sample"),side=1,at=6,line=c(0,1)) >>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factora,col=4) >>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorb[c(1:5,NA,7,8)],col=2) >>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorc,col=3) >>>>> >>>>> Jim >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 10:53 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>> wrote: >>>>>> Dear Don and all, >>>>>> >>>>>> I?ve read the tutorial and tried several codes before posting :) >>>>>> I?m really naive. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> what I was trying to : is something like the graph in the picture I >>>>>> drawee. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Is it more clear now? >>>>>> >>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>> >>>>>> -- >>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>> >>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>> >>>>>>> On 09 Jun 2015, at 19:23, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu> >>>>>>> <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>>> wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> The answer lies in learning to use the help (and knowing where to >>>>>>> start). Did you look at the tutorial that comes with the R >>>>>>> installation? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ?plot >>>>>>> ?lines >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ?par >>>>>>> >>>>>>> In the last, look for the descriptions of ?col? and ?lty?. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Using plot() and lines(), and subsetting the four unique values of >>>>>>> ?sample?, you can create your lines. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Here is a crude start, assuming your columns are part of a data frame >>>>>>> called ?my.data?. Untested... >>>>>>> >>>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4) >>>>>>> # blue line, not dashed >>>>>>> . >>>>>>> . >>>>>>> . >>>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>>>>>> # red dashed line >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On Jun 9, 2015, at 10:36 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>>>> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>>> wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> another naive question (i?m pretty sure :( ) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I?m trying to plot a multiple line graph: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> region sample factora factorb >>>>>>>> factorc >>>>>>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>>>>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>>>>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>>>>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>>>>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>>>>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>>>>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>>>>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The first column should be the independent variable, the second should >>>>>>>> compute a bold line for sample(10) and dash line for sample 20. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> What about the other two values of ?sample?? >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The others variables are outcomes for each of the first scenarios, and >>>>>>>> so it should: the 3rd, 4th and 5th columns should be blue, red and >>>>>>>> green respectively. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Resume :) >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> I should have a graph, in the x-axe should have the region and in the >>>>>>>> y axe, the factor. >>>>>>>> Lines: >>>>>>>> 1 - blue and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>> 2 - blue and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>> 3 - red and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>> 4 - red and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>> 5 - green and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>>> 6 - green and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Not consistent with what you said above. These are no longer lines, but >>>>>>> points. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> nonetheless the independent variable is nominal, I should plot a line >>>>>>>> graph. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Can anyone help me please? >>>>>>>> I have my file as a cvs file, so I first read that file (that I know >>>>>>>> how to do :)). >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> But I have it in that format. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Best, >>>>>>>> RO >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> -- >>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> <mailto:R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org>> mailing list -- To >>>>>>>> UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>>>> <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help>> >>>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>>> <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html>> >>>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>> >>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>> >>>> ____________________________________________________________ >>>> FREE 3D MARINE AQUARIUM SCREENSAVER - Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! >>>> Check it out at http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium <http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium> >>>> >>>> >>> >> >> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >> > > <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >
You need to substitute the real name of the data frame for ?my.data?. That was just my example. :-)> On Jun 10, 2015, at 11:03 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com> wrote: > > Sorry, > > I taught I attached the cvs file :) > > <therapy.csv> > > > Don, > > I tried, but I got an error: > > > my.data$Region > [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > > my.data$sample > [1] 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 > [29] 1000 1000 > > my.data$factor.a > [1] 0.895 0.811 0.685 0.777 0.600 0.466 0.446 0.392 0.256 0.198 0.136 0.121 0.875 0.777 0.685 0.626 0.550 0.466 0.384 0.330 0.060 0.138 0.065 > [24] 0.034 0.931 0.124 0.060 0.028 0.017 0.014 > > > > plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?l?,xlab=?Region?,ylab=?factor") > Error: unexpected input in "plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?? > > > I?m really naive, right? > > > Best, > RO > > > Atenciosamente, > Rosa Oliveira > > -- > ____________________________________________________________________________ > > <smile.jpg> > > Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, > > E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> > Tlm: +351 939355143 > Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> > ____________________________________________________________________________ > "Many admire, few know" > Hippocrates > >> On 10 Jun 2015, at 18:10, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>> wrote: >> >> For a legend, try (untested) >> >> legend(0.15,0.9,c("factora","factorb","factorc"),col=c(4,2,3),lty=1) >> >> If it overlaps data points move the first two arguments (0.15 and 0.9) around, or change the ?ylim? argument in the plot() to ~1.2. >> >> to avoid clutter, put the line-types information in the figure caption (IMO) >> >> >>> On Jun 10, 2015, at 10:03 AM, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>> wrote: >>> >>> >>>> On Jun 10, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Dear All, >>>> >>>> >>>> I attach my data. >>>> >>>> Dear Jim, >>>> >>>> when I run your code (even the one you send me, not in my data), I get: >>>> >>>> Don't know how to automatically pick scale for object of type function. Defaulting to continuous >>>> Error in data.frame(x = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, : >>>> arguments imply differing number of rows: 24, 0 >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Dear Don, >>>> >>>> It?s meant that I will have 12 lines: >>>> 3 factors - lines colors >>>> with 3 different values of ?sample? for each - line types >>>> >>>> >>>> [Three colors, one for each factor, >>>> and three line types (lty=1,2,3), one for eachvalue of ?sample - preferable dash, thin and thick). >>>> >>>> >>>> in the X - I should have region (because I have 10 regions) >>>> for each region I have the outcome of 3 different treatments (factor) >>>> for each region and each treatment I have 3 different sample size. >>> >>> But in your original post you had 4 sample sizes: 10,20,30,40. >>>> >>>> I need to ?see? the the influence of the region in the treatment outcome for each sample size. >>>> >>>> So, at the end I should have 9 lines >>>> 3 red (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor a (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> 3 blue (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor b (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> 3 green (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor c (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Hope this time is clear. >>>> >>>> >>>> I also though about doing 3 different graphs, each one for 1 different sample size, and in that case I should have 3 graphs each one with 3 lines >>>> 1 red to factor a, 1 blue to factor b and 1 green to factor c. >>>> >>>> Do you all think is better? >>> >>> A matter of style perhaps but I would use dotplots because you have only two data points for each ?line?. The lines will be misleading. You also could use >>> panel plots, but given your skill set (unless someone wants to spend a fair bit of time with you), it?s probably best to stay as simple as possible. >>> >>> But given your original post (cleaned up) # untested: apologies for any typos >>> >>>> region sample factora factorb factorc >>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>> >>> >>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4,type=?l?,ylim=c(0,1),xlab=?region?,ylab=?factor") >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==10],col=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==10],col=3) >>> >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==20],col=4,lty=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==20],col=3,lty=2) >>> >>> # Now do two more groups of 3, changing the parameter ?lty? to 3 and then 4 >>> >>> >>> # Look at the syntax and note what changes and what stays constant. Do you see how this works? >>> # there will be what looks like a vertical line where sample = 30 and factorb = 174.592. Do you see why? >>> >>> # then you will need a legend >>> >>>> Nonetheless I can?t do it :( >>>> >>>> best, >>>> RO >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Atenciosamente, >>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>> >>>> -- >>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>> >>>> <smile.jpg> >>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>> >>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>> Hippocrates >>>> >>>>> On 10 Jun 2015, at 14:13, John Kane <jrkrideau at inbox.com <mailto:jrkrideau at inbox.com>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Hi Jim, >>>>> >>>>> I was looking at that last night and had the same problem of visualizing what Rosa needed. >>>>> >>>>> Hi Rosa >>>>> This is nothing like what you wanted and I really don't understand your data but would something like this work as a substitute or am I completely lost? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> dat1 <- structure(list(region = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, >>>>> 0.2), sample = c(10L, 10L, 20L, 20L, 30L, 30L, 40L, 40L), factora = c(0.895, >>>>> 0.811, 0.735, 0.777, 0.6, 0.466, 0.446, 0.392), factorb = c(0.903, >>>>> 0.865, 0.966, 0.732, 0.778, 0.592, 0.432, 0.294), factorc = c(0.37, >>>>> 0.688, 0.611, 0.653, 0.694, 0.461, 0.693, 0.686)), .Names = c("region", >>>>> "sample", "factora", "factorb", "factorc"), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, >>>>> -8L)) >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> mdat1 <- melt(dat1, id.var = c("region", "sample"), >>>>> variable.name = "factor", >>>>> value.name = "value") >>>>> str(mdat1) >>>>> >>>>> ggplot(mdat1, aes(region, value, colour = factor)) + >>>>> geom_line() + facet_grid(sample ~ .) >>>>> >>>>> John Kane >>>>> Kingston ON Canada >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>> -----Original Message----- >>>>>> From: drjimlemon at gmail.com <mailto:drjimlemon at gmail.com> >>>>>> Sent: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 20:51:52 +1000 >>>>>> To: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>> Subject: Re: [R] graphs, need urgent help (deadline :( ) >>>>>> >>>>>> Hi Rosa, >>>>>> Like Don, I can't work out what you want and I don't even have the >>>>>> picture. For example, your specification of color and line type leaves >>>>>> only one point for each color and line type, and the line from one >>>>>> point to the same point is not going to show up. Here is a possibility >>>>>> that may lead (eventually) to a solution. >>>>>> >>>>>> library(plotrix) >>>>>> par(tcl=-0.1) >>>>>> gap.plot(x=rep(seq(10,45,by=5),3), >>>>>> y=unlist(my.data[,c("factora","factorb","factorc")]), >>>>>> main="A plot of factorial mystery", >>>>>> gap=c(1.1,174),ylim=c(0,175),ylab="factor score",xlab="Group", >>>>>> xticlab=c(" \n0.1\n10"," \n0.2\n10"," \n0.1\n20"," \n0.2\n20", >>>>>> " \n0.1\n30"," \n0.2\n30"," \n0.1\n40"," \n0.2\n40"), >>>>>> ytics=c(0,0.5,1,174.59),pch=rep(1:3,each=8),col=rep(c(4,2,3),each=8)) >>>>>> mtext(c("Region","Sample"),side=1,at=6,line=c(0,1)) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factora,col=4) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorb[c(1:5,NA,7,8)],col=2) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorc,col=3) >>>>>> >>>>>> Jim >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 10:53 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> Dear Don and all, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I?ve read the tutorial and tried several codes before posting :) >>>>>>> I?m really naive. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> what I was trying to : is something like the graph in the picture I >>>>>>> drawee. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Is it more clear now? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>> >>>>>>> -- >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On 09 Jun 2015, at 19:23, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu> >>>>>>>> <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>>> wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The answer lies in learning to use the help (and knowing where to >>>>>>>> start). Did you look at the tutorial that comes with the R >>>>>>>> installation? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ?plot >>>>>>>> ?lines >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ?par >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> In the last, look for the descriptions of ?col? and ?lty?. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Using plot() and lines(), and subsetting the four unique values of >>>>>>>> ?sample?, you can create your lines. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Here is a crude start, assuming your columns are part of a data frame >>>>>>>> called ?my.data?. Untested... >>>>>>>> >>>>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4) >>>>>>>> # blue line, not dashed >>>>>>>> . >>>>>>>> . >>>>>>>> . >>>>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>>>>>>> # red dashed line >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> On Jun 9, 2015, at 10:36 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>>>>> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> another naive question (i?m pretty sure :( ) >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I?m trying to plot a multiple line graph: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> region sample factora factorb >>>>>>>>> factorc >>>>>>>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The first column should be the independent variable, the second should >>>>>>>>> compute a bold line for sample(10) and dash line for sample 20. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> What about the other two values of ?sample?? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The others variables are outcomes for each of the first scenarios, and >>>>>>>>> so it should: the 3rd, 4th and 5th columns should be blue, red and >>>>>>>>> green respectively. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Resume :) >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I should have a graph, in the x-axe should have the region and in the >>>>>>>>> y axe, the factor. >>>>>>>>> Lines: >>>>>>>>> 1 - blue and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>>> 2 - blue and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>>> 3 - red and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>>> 4 - red and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>>> 5 - green and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>>>> 6 - green and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Not consistent with what you said above. These are no longer lines, but >>>>>>>> points. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> nonetheless the independent variable is nominal, I should plot a line >>>>>>>>> graph. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Can anyone help me please? >>>>>>>>> I have my file as a cvs file, so I first read that file (that I know >>>>>>>>> how to do :)). >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> But I have it in that format. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Best, >>>>>>>>> RO >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> -- >>>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> <mailto:R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org>> mailing list -- To >>>>>>>>> UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>>>>> <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help>> >>>>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>>>> <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html>> >>>>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>> >>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>> >>>>> ____________________________________________________________ >>>>> FREE 3D MARINE AQUARIUM SCREENSAVER - Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! >>>>> Check it out at http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium <http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium> >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>> >> >> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >> >
You were caught by a mysterious issue that I don?t understand either. plot(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==50],therapy.df$factor.a[therapy.df$sample==50],col=4,type=?l?,xlab=?Region?,ylab=?factor") Error: unexpected input in "plot(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==50],therapy.df$factor.a[therapy.df$sample==50],col=4,type=?? but if I change the order of arguments to plot(), it?s fine plot(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==50],therapy.df$factor.a[therapy.df$sample==50],type="l",col=4,xlab="Region",ylab="factor?) I don?t know what to tell you. If someone wiser than I is still reading, maybe s(he) can explain. Possibly a bug has crept into the call to ?par?, but ?bugs" suspected by non-experts like me usually turn out to be naive user errors. For your purposes, use the one that works. :-)> On Jun 10, 2015, at 11:03 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com> wrote: > > Sorry, > > I taught I attached the cvs file :) > > <therapy.csv> > > > Don, > > I tried, but I got an error: > > > my.data$Region > [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > > my.data$sample > [1] 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 > [29] 1000 1000 > > my.data$factor.a > [1] 0.895 0.811 0.685 0.777 0.600 0.466 0.446 0.392 0.256 0.198 0.136 0.121 0.875 0.777 0.685 0.626 0.550 0.466 0.384 0.330 0.060 0.138 0.065 > [24] 0.034 0.931 0.124 0.060 0.028 0.017 0.014 > > > > plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?l?,xlab=?Region?,ylab=?factor") > Error: unexpected input in "plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?? > > > I?m really naive, right? > > > Best, > RO > > > Atenciosamente, > Rosa Oliveira > > -- > ____________________________________________________________________________ > > <smile.jpg> > > Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, > > E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> > Tlm: +351 939355143 > Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> > ____________________________________________________________________________ > "Many admire, few know" > Hippocrates > >> On 10 Jun 2015, at 18:10, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>> wrote: >> >> For a legend, try (untested) >> >> legend(0.15,0.9,c("factora","factorb","factorc"),col=c(4,2,3),lty=1) >> >> If it overlaps data points move the first two arguments (0.15 and 0.9) around, or change the ?ylim? argument in the plot() to ~1.2. >> >> to avoid clutter, put the line-types information in the figure caption (IMO) >> >> >>> On Jun 10, 2015, at 10:03 AM, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>> wrote: >>> >>> >>>> On Jun 10, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> wrote: >>>> >>>> Dear All, >>>> >>>> >>>> I attach my data. >>>> >>>> Dear Jim, >>>> >>>> when I run your code (even the one you send me, not in my data), I get: >>>> >>>> Don't know how to automatically pick scale for object of type function. Defaulting to continuous >>>> Error in data.frame(x = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, : >>>> arguments imply differing number of rows: 24, 0 >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Dear Don, >>>> >>>> It?s meant that I will have 12 lines: >>>> 3 factors - lines colors >>>> with 3 different values of ?sample? for each - line types >>>> >>>> >>>> [Three colors, one for each factor, >>>> and three line types (lty=1,2,3), one for eachvalue of ?sample - preferable dash, thin and thick). >>>> >>>> >>>> in the X - I should have region (because I have 10 regions) >>>> for each region I have the outcome of 3 different treatments (factor) >>>> for each region and each treatment I have 3 different sample size. >>> >>> But in your original post you had 4 sample sizes: 10,20,30,40. >>>> >>>> I need to ?see? the the influence of the region in the treatment outcome for each sample size. >>>> >>>> So, at the end I should have 9 lines >>>> 3 red (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor a (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> 3 blue (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor b (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> 3 green (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor c (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Hope this time is clear. >>>> >>>> >>>> I also though about doing 3 different graphs, each one for 1 different sample size, and in that case I should have 3 graphs each one with 3 lines >>>> 1 red to factor a, 1 blue to factor b and 1 green to factor c. >>>> >>>> Do you all think is better? >>> >>> A matter of style perhaps but I would use dotplots because you have only two data points for each ?line?. The lines will be misleading. You also could use >>> panel plots, but given your skill set (unless someone wants to spend a fair bit of time with you), it?s probably best to stay as simple as possible. >>> >>> But given your original post (cleaned up) # untested: apologies for any typos >>> >>>> region sample factora factorb factorc >>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>> >>> >>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4,type=?l?,ylim=c(0,1),xlab=?region?,ylab=?factor") >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==10],col=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==10],col=3) >>> >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==20],col=4,lty=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==20],col=3,lty=2) >>> >>> # Now do two more groups of 3, changing the parameter ?lty? to 3 and then 4 >>> >>> >>> # Look at the syntax and note what changes and what stays constant. Do you see how this works? >>> # there will be what looks like a vertical line where sample = 30 and factorb = 174.592. Do you see why? >>> >>> # then you will need a legend >>> >>>> Nonetheless I can?t do it :( >>>> >>>> best, >>>> RO >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Atenciosamente, >>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>> >>>> -- >>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>> >>>> <smile.jpg> >>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>> >>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>> Hippocrates >>>> >>>>> On 10 Jun 2015, at 14:13, John Kane <jrkrideau at inbox.com <mailto:jrkrideau at inbox.com>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Hi Jim, >>>>> >>>>> I was looking at that last night and had the same problem of visualizing what Rosa needed. >>>>> >>>>> Hi Rosa >>>>> This is nothing like what you wanted and I really don't understand your data but would something like this work as a substitute or am I completely lost? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> dat1 <- structure(list(region = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, >>>>> 0.2), sample = c(10L, 10L, 20L, 20L, 30L, 30L, 40L, 40L), factora = c(0.895, >>>>> 0.811, 0.735, 0.777, 0.6, 0.466, 0.446, 0.392), factorb = c(0.903, >>>>> 0.865, 0.966, 0.732, 0.778, 0.592, 0.432, 0.294), factorc = c(0.37, >>>>> 0.688, 0.611, 0.653, 0.694, 0.461, 0.693, 0.686)), .Names = c("region", >>>>> "sample", "factora", "factorb", "factorc"), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, >>>>> -8L)) >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> mdat1 <- melt(dat1, id.var = c("region", "sample"), >>>>> variable.name = "factor", >>>>> value.name = "value") >>>>> str(mdat1) >>>>> >>>>> ggplot(mdat1, aes(region, value, colour = factor)) + >>>>> geom_line() + facet_grid(sample ~ .) >>>>> >>>>> John Kane >>>>> Kingston ON Canada >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>> -----Original Message----- >>>>>> From: drjimlemon at gmail.com <mailto:drjimlemon at gmail.com> >>>>>> Sent: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 20:51:52 +1000 >>>>>> To: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>> Subject: Re: [R] graphs, need urgent help (deadline :( ) >>>>>> >>>>>> Hi Rosa, >>>>>> Like Don, I can't work out what you want and I don't even have the >>>>>> picture. For example, your specification of color and line type leaves >>>>>> only one point for each color and line type, and the line from one >>>>>> point to the same point is not going to show up. Here is a possibility >>>>>> that may lead (eventually) to a solution. >>>>>> >>>>>> library(plotrix) >>>>>> par(tcl=-0.1) >>>>>> gap.plot(x=rep(seq(10,45,by=5),3), >>>>>> y=unlist(my.data[,c("factora","factorb","factorc")]), >>>>>> main="A plot of factorial mystery", >>>>>> gap=c(1.1,174),ylim=c(0,175),ylab="factor score",xlab="Group", >>>>>> xticlab=c(" \n0.1\n10"," \n0.2\n10"," \n0.1\n20"," \n0.2\n20", >>>>>> " \n0.1\n30"," \n0.2\n30"," \n0.1\n40"," \n0.2\n40"), >>>>>> ytics=c(0,0.5,1,174.59),pch=rep(1:3,each=8),col=rep(c(4,2,3),each=8)) >>>>>> mtext(c("Region","Sample"),side=1,at=6,line=c(0,1)) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factora,col=4) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorb[c(1:5,NA,7,8)],col=2) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorc,col=3) >>>>>> >>>>>> Jim >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 10:53 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> Dear Don and all, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I?ve read the tutorial and tried several codes before posting :) >>>>>>> I?m really naive. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> what I was trying to : is something like the graph in the picture I >>>>>>> drawee. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Is it more clear now? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>> >>>>>>> -- >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On 09 Jun 2015, at 19:23, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu> >>>>>>>> <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>>> wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The answer lies in learning to use the help (and knowing where to >>>>>>>> start). Did you look at the tutorial that comes with the R >>>>>>>> installation? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ?plot >>>>>>>> ?lines >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ?par >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> In the last, look for the descriptions of ?col? and ?lty?. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Using plot() and lines(), and subsetting the four unique values of >>>>>>>> ?sample?, you can create your lines. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Here is a crude start, assuming your columns are part of a data frame >>>>>>>> called ?my.data?. Untested... >>>>>>>> >>>>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4) >>>>>>>> # blue line, not dashed >>>>>>>> . >>>>>>>> . >>>>>>>> . >>>>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>>>>>>> # red dashed line >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> On Jun 9, 2015, at 10:36 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>>>>> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> another naive question (i?m pretty sure :( ) >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I?m trying to plot a multiple line graph: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> region sample factora factorb >>>>>>>>> factorc >>>>>>>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The first column should be the independent variable, the second should >>>>>>>>> compute a bold line for sample(10) and dash line for sample 20. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> What about the other two values of ?sample?? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The others variables are outcomes for each of the first scenarios, and >>>>>>>>> so it should: the 3rd, 4th and 5th columns should be blue, red and >>>>>>>>> green respectively. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Resume :) >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I should have a graph, in the x-axe should have the region and in the >>>>>>>>> y axe, the factor. >>>>>>>>> Lines: >>>>>>>>> 1 - blue and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>>> 2 - blue and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>>> 3 - red and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>>> 4 - red and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>>> 5 - green and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>>>> 6 - green and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Not consistent with what you said above. These are no longer lines, but >>>>>>>> points. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> nonetheless the independent variable is nominal, I should plot a line >>>>>>>>> graph. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Can anyone help me please? >>>>>>>>> I have my file as a cvs file, so I first read that file (that I know >>>>>>>>> how to do :)). >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> But I have it in that format. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Best, >>>>>>>>> RO >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> -- >>>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> >>>>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira>> >>>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> <mailto:R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org>> mailing list -- To >>>>>>>>> UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>>>>> <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help>> >>>>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>>>> <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html>> >>>>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>> >>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>> >>>>> ____________________________________________________________ >>>>> FREE 3D MARINE AQUARIUM SCREENSAVER - Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! >>>>> Check it out at http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium <http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium> >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>> >> >> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >> >
Here is code that IS tested. I am sending Rosa the (ugly) output in a separate file. Crazy problems with argument order; I never figured out exactly what was wrong. # therapy plot plot(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==50],therapy.df$factor.a[therapy.df$sample==50],xlab="Region",ylab="factor",type="l",col=4,ylim=c(0,1.5)) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==50],therapy.df$factor.b[therapy.df$sample==50],col=2) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==50],therapy.df$factor.c[therapy.df$sample==50],col=3) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==250],therapy.df$factor.a[therapy.df$sample==250],col=4,lty=2) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==250],therapy.df$factor.b[therapy.df$sample==250],col=2,lty=2) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==250],therapy.df$factor.c[therapy.df$sample==250],col=3,lty=2) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==1000],therapy.df$factor.a[therapy.df$sample==1000],col=4,lty=3) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==1000],therapy.df$factor.b[therapy.df$sample==1000],col=2,lty=3) lines(therapy.df$Region[therapy.df$sample==1000],therapy.df$factor.c[therapy.df$sample==1000],col=3,lty=3) legend(7,1.4,c("factor.a","factor.b","factor.c"),col=c(4,2,3),lty=1)> On Jun 10, 2015, at 11:03 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com> wrote: > > Sorry, > > I taught I attached the cvs file :) > > <therapy.csv> > > > Don, > > I tried, but I got an error: > > > my.data$Region > [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > > my.data$sample > [1] 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 250 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 > [29] 1000 1000 > > my.data$factor.a > [1] 0.895 0.811 0.685 0.777 0.600 0.466 0.446 0.392 0.256 0.198 0.136 0.121 0.875 0.777 0.685 0.626 0.550 0.466 0.384 0.330 0.060 0.138 0.065 > [24] 0.034 0.931 0.124 0.060 0.028 0.017 0.014 > > > > plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?l?,xlab=?Region?,ylab=?factor") > Error: unexpected input in "plot(my.data$Region[my.data$sample==50],my.data$factor.a[my.data$sample==50],col=4,type=?? > > > I?m really naive, right? > > > Best, > RO > > > Atenciosamente, > Rosa Oliveira > > -- > ____________________________________________________________________________ > > <smile.jpg> > > Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, > > E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com > Tlm: +351 939355143 > Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira > ____________________________________________________________________________ > "Many admire, few know" > Hippocrates > >> On 10 Jun 2015, at 18:10, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu> wrote: >> >> For a legend, try (untested) >> >> legend(0.15,0.9,c("factora","factorb","factorc"),col=c(4,2,3),lty=1) >> >> If it overlaps data points move the first two arguments (0.15 and 0.9) around, or change the ?ylim? argument in the plot() to ~1.2. >> >> to avoid clutter, put the line-types information in the figure caption (IMO) >> >> >>> On Jun 10, 2015, at 10:03 AM, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu> wrote: >>> >>> >>>> On Jun 10, 2015, at 9:08 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>> Dear All, >>>> >>>> >>>> I attach my data. >>>> >>>> Dear Jim, >>>> >>>> when I run your code (even the one you send me, not in my data), I get: >>>> >>>> Don't know how to automatically pick scale for object of type function. Defaulting to continuous >>>> Error in data.frame(x = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, : >>>> arguments imply differing number of rows: 24, 0 >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Dear Don, >>>> >>>> It?s meant that I will have 12 lines: >>>> 3 factors - lines colors >>>> with 3 different values of ?sample? for each - line types >>>> >>>> >>>> [Three colors, one for each factor, >>>> and three line types (lty=1,2,3), one for eachvalue of ?sample - preferable dash, thin and thick). >>>> >>>> >>>> in the X - I should have region (because I have 10 regions) >>>> for each region I have the outcome of 3 different treatments (factor) >>>> for each region and each treatment I have 3 different sample size. >>> >>> But in your original post you had 4 sample sizes: 10,20,30,40. >>>> >>>> I need to ?see? the the influence of the region in the treatment outcome for each sample size. >>>> >>>> So, at the end I should have 9 lines >>>> 3 red (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor a (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> 3 blue (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor b (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> 3 green (1 dash, 1 thin, 1 thick) - concerning factor c (dash for sample size 50, thin for sample size 250 and thick for sample size 1000) >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Hope this time is clear. >>>> >>>> >>>> I also though about doing 3 different graphs, each one for 1 different sample size, and in that case I should have 3 graphs each one with 3 lines >>>> 1 red to factor a, 1 blue to factor b and 1 green to factor c. >>>> >>>> Do you all think is better? >>> >>> A matter of style perhaps but I would use dotplots because you have only two data points for each ?line?. The lines will be misleading. You also could use >>> panel plots, but given your skill set (unless someone wants to spend a fair bit of time with you), it?s probably best to stay as simple as possible. >>> >>> But given your original post (cleaned up) # untested: apologies for any typos >>> >>>> region sample factora factorb factorc >>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>> >>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4,type=?l?,ylim=c(0,1),xlab=?region?,ylab=?factor") >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==10],col=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==10],col=3) >>> >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==20],col=4,lty=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorc[my.data$sample==20],col=3,lty=2) >>> >>> # Now do two more groups of 3, changing the parameter ?lty? to 3 and then 4 >>> >>> # Look at the syntax and note what changes and what stays constant. Do you see how this works? >>> # there will be what looks like a vertical line where sample = 30 and factorb = 174.592. Do you see why? >>> >>> # then you will need a legend >>> >>>> Nonetheless I can?t do it :( >>>> >>>> best, >>>> RO >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Atenciosamente, >>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>> >>>> -- >>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>> >>>> <smile.jpg> >>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>> >>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com >>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira >>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>> Hippocrates >>>> >>>>> On 10 Jun 2015, at 14:13, John Kane <jrkrideau at inbox.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Hi Jim, >>>>> >>>>> I was looking at that last night and had the same problem of visualizing what Rosa needed. >>>>> >>>>> Hi Rosa >>>>> This is nothing like what you wanted and I really don't understand your data but would something like this work as a substitute or am I completely lost? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> dat1 <- structure(list(region = c(0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, 0.2, 0.1, >>>>> 0.2), sample = c(10L, 10L, 20L, 20L, 30L, 30L, 40L, 40L), factora = c(0.895, >>>>> 0.811, 0.735, 0.777, 0.6, 0.466, 0.446, 0.392), factorb = c(0.903, >>>>> 0.865, 0.966, 0.732, 0.778, 0.592, 0.432, 0.294), factorc = c(0.37, >>>>> 0.688, 0.611, 0.653, 0.694, 0.461, 0.693, 0.686)), .Names = c("region", >>>>> "sample", "factora", "factorb", "factorc"), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, >>>>> -8L)) >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> mdat1 <- melt(dat1, id.var = c("region", "sample"), >>>>> variable.name = "factor", >>>>> value.name = "value") >>>>> str(mdat1) >>>>> >>>>> ggplot(mdat1, aes(region, value, colour = factor)) + >>>>> geom_line() + facet_grid(sample ~ .) >>>>> >>>>> John Kane >>>>> Kingston ON Canada >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>> -----Original Message----- >>>>>> From: drjimlemon at gmail.com >>>>>> Sent: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 20:51:52 +1000 >>>>>> To: rosita21 at gmail.com >>>>>> Subject: Re: [R] graphs, need urgent help (deadline :( ) >>>>>> >>>>>> Hi Rosa, >>>>>> Like Don, I can't work out what you want and I don't even have the >>>>>> picture. For example, your specification of color and line type leaves >>>>>> only one point for each color and line type, and the line from one >>>>>> point to the same point is not going to show up. Here is a possibility >>>>>> that may lead (eventually) to a solution. >>>>>> >>>>>> library(plotrix) >>>>>> par(tcl=-0.1) >>>>>> gap.plot(x=rep(seq(10,45,by=5),3), >>>>>> y=unlist(my.data[,c("factora","factorb","factorc")]), >>>>>> main="A plot of factorial mystery", >>>>>> gap=c(1.1,174),ylim=c(0,175),ylab="factor score",xlab="Group", >>>>>> xticlab=c(" \n0.1\n10"," \n0.2\n10"," \n0.1\n20"," \n0.2\n20", >>>>>> " \n0.1\n30"," \n0.2\n30"," \n0.1\n40"," \n0.2\n40"), >>>>>> ytics=c(0,0.5,1,174.59),pch=rep(1:3,each=8),col=rep(c(4,2,3),each=8)) >>>>>> mtext(c("Region","Sample"),side=1,at=6,line=c(0,1)) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factora,col=4) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorb[c(1:5,NA,7,8)],col=2) >>>>>> lines(seq(10,45,by=5),my.data$factorc,col=3) >>>>>> >>>>>> Jim >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> On Wed, Jun 10, 2015 at 10:53 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>> Dear Don and all, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I?ve read the tutorial and tried several codes before posting :) >>>>>>> I?m really naive. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> what I was trying to : is something like the graph in the picture I >>>>>>> drawee. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Is it more clear now? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>> >>>>>>> -- >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira >>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On 09 Jun 2015, at 19:23, Don McKenzie <dmck at u.washington.edu >>>>>>>> <mailto:dmck at u.washington.edu>> wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> The answer lies in learning to use the help (and knowing where to >>>>>>>> start). Did you look at the tutorial that comes with the R >>>>>>>> installation? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ?plot >>>>>>>> ?lines >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> ?par >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> In the last, look for the descriptions of ?col? and ?lty?. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Using plot() and lines(), and subsetting the four unique values of >>>>>>>> ?sample?, you can create your lines. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Here is a crude start, assuming your columns are part of a data frame >>>>>>>> called ?my.data?. Untested... >>>>>>>> >>>>> plot(my.data$region[my.data$sample==10],my.data$factora[my.data$sample==10],col=4) >>>>>>>> # blue line, not dashed >>>>>>>> . >>>>>>>> . >>>>>>>> . >>>>> lines(my.data$region[my.data$sample==20],my.data$factorb[my.data$sample==20],col=2,lty=2) >>>>>>>> # red dashed line >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> On Jun 9, 2015, at 10:36 AM, Rosa Oliveira <rosita21 at gmail.com >>>>>>>>> <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com>> wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Hi, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> another naive question (i?m pretty sure :( ) >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I?m trying to plot a multiple line graph: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> region sample factora factorb >>>>>>>>> factorc >>>>>>>>> 0.1 10 0.895 0.903 0.378 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 10 0.811 0.865 0.688 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 20 0.735 0.966 0.611 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 20 0.777 0.732 0.653 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 30 0.600 0.778 0.694 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 30 0.466 174.592 0.461 >>>>>>>>> 0.1 40 0.446 0.432 0.693 >>>>>>>>> 0.2 40 0.392 0.294 0.686 >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The first column should be the independent variable, the second should >>>>>>>>> compute a bold line for sample(10) and dash line for sample 20. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> What about the other two values of ?sample?? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The others variables are outcomes for each of the first scenarios, and >>>>>>>>> so it should: the 3rd, 4th and 5th columns should be blue, red and >>>>>>>>> green respectively. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Resume :) >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I should have a graph, in the x-axe should have the region and in the >>>>>>>>> y axe, the factor. >>>>>>>>> Lines: >>>>>>>>> 1 - blue and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>>> 2 - blue and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor a >>>>>>>>> 3 - red and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>>> 4 - red and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor b >>>>>>>>> 5 - green and bold for region 0.1, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>>>> 6 - green and dash for region 0.2, sample 10 and factor c >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Not consistent with what you said above. These are no longer lines, but >>>>>>>> points. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> nonetheless the independent variable is nominal, I should plot a line >>>>>>>>> graph. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Can anyone help me please? >>>>>>>>> I have my file as a cvs file, so I first read that file (that I know >>>>>>>>> how to do :)). >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> But I have it in that format. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Best, >>>>>>>>> RO >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Atenciosamente, >>>>>>>>> Rosa Oliveira >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> -- >>>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Rosa Celeste dos Santos Oliveira, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> E-mail: rosita21 at gmail.com <mailto:rosita21 at gmail.com> >>>>>>>>> Tlm: +351 939355143 >>>>>>>>> Linkedin: https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira >>>>>>>>> <https://pt.linkedin.com/in/rosacsoliveira> >>>>>>>>> ____________________________________________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> "Many admire, few know" >>>>>>>>> Hippocrates >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]] >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org <mailto:R-help at r-project.org> mailing list -- To >>>>>>>>> UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >>>>>>>>> <https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help> >>>>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html >>>>>>>>> <http://www.r-project.org/posting-guide.html> >>>>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>>> R-help at r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >>>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html >>>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>>> >>>>>> ______________________________________________ >>>>>> R-help at r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see >>>>>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help >>>>>> PLEASE do read the posting guide >>>>>> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html >>>>>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code. >>>>> >>>>> ____________________________________________________________ >>>>> FREE 3D MARINE AQUARIUM SCREENSAVER - Watch dolphins, sharks & orcas on your desktop! >>>>> Check it out at http://www.inbox.com/marineaquarium >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >>> >> >> <PastedGraphic-1.tiff> >> >