search for: cexs

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2367 matches for "cexs".

Did you mean: cex
2012 Sep 02
2
Impact of cex changing as a function of mfrow
R 2.15.1 OS X (MLion) Colleagues, I am aware that changes in mfrow / mfcol in par() affect cex (from help: In a layout with exactly two rows and columns the base value of ?"cex"? is reduced by a factor of 0.83: if there are three or more of either rows or columns, the reduction factor is 0.66). I generate a multipage PDF in which mfrow varies such that cex is impacted. This affect
2010 Jul 23
2
decimal seperator
Hi R-List, I have a question regarding R-language formats, I think. I am producing a series of graphs (using plot, barplot, barchart, and bwplot, using either text or mtext to place values on the graphs) and tables for a Francophone country. In fact, I have already done so. However, while they are pleased with the results they've requested I convert all of my decimal points into the French
2019 Jun 19
3
point size in svg
Hello, All: ????? I'm unable to control the font size in plots to svg.? Consider the following: svg('cex-svg.svg') cex. <- 5 plot(1:2, cex.axis=cex.) text(1:2, 1:2, c('as', 'DF'), ????????? cex=cex.) dev.off() ????? When I open this in Gimp 2.10.4, the font size is tiny.? I also tried: svg('cex-svg.svg', width=15, height=15, pointsize=24) cex.
2001 Apr 25
1
Re: identify.default ignores any setting of cex (PR#660)
A follow-up to PR#660 (15 Sep 2000) from Brian Ripley: > R 1.1.1 on Windows, but I think this is widespread. > > Using either > > par(cex=0.5) > plot(1:10) > identify(1:10) > > or > > plot(1:10) > identify(1:10, cex=0.5) > > ignores the cex setting. The root cause is that par(cex=0.5) > alters cexbase for the device but sets cex=1.0, and the
2011 May 11
1
mtext text size (cex) doesn't match plot
Hi, I am using mtext instead of the ylab argument in some plots because i want to move it away from the numbers in the axis. However, the text in the X axis, for example: par(mar=c(5, 5.5, 4, 2)); plot(data, main="plot name", xlab= 'X axis', ylab="", font=2, cex.lab=1.5, font.lab=2, cex.main=1.8); mtext('Y axis', side=2, cex=1.5, line=4,
2007 Nov 07
1
strwidth and strheight for rotated text
Dear All, I would like to plot text with a box around it. I used strwidth and strheight to compute the size of the box which is plotted with rect: z <- rnorm(10) # horizontal text works plot(rnorm(10)) x1 <- 5 y1 <- 0 label <- "Label" cha <- paste(" ", label, " ", sep = "") xh <- strwidth(cha, cex = par("cex")) yh <-
2011 Apr 29
3
Change the text size of the title in a legend of a R plot.
Hello, Is it possible to change the text size of the title in a legend of a R plot? I tried to directly change the title.cex argument but it seems not to work. Trying : Horizo <- c(1,2,6,10,20) legtext <- paste(Horizo,sep="") legend("topleft", legend=legtext,col=col,text.col=col,lwd=lwd, lty=lty,cex=1.1,ncol=3,title = "Horizons",title.col
2016 Aug 25
2
"plot.ts" doesn't respect the value of "pch" (+ blocked from Bugzilla signups)
I've had a chance to read the source more thoroughly. The chain of events is as follows: 1. Local function `plotts()` is defined with argument `cex` that defaults to `par("cex")` 2. `...` is passed to `plotts()`. If "cex" is an element in `...`, inside `plotts()` the variable `cex` is assigned thereby (overriding the default arg). Importantly, this means that the
2016 Aug 25
3
"plot.ts" doesn't respect the value of "pch" (+ blocked from Bugzilla signups)
I did a search on Bugzilla for "plot.ts" and didn't find anything on this issue. I tried to sign up for Bugzilla to report it, but my e-mail address didn't pass your "syntax checking" for a legal e-mail address. The bug is easily reproducible on my machine as follows: ## start # generate some data y <- arima.sim(list(), 150) # this will definitely dispatch to a
2001 Feb 22
1
cex= and plot(), title(), mtext()
using R 1.2.1 under LinuxPPC, using the default X11 graphics device, i can't get the cex= argument for plot() and title() to have any effect. works for text(), though. the text size for plot() and title() _is_ correct if par(cex=size) is called first. oddly, mtext() seems to pay attention to cex=, but to ignore the value set by par(). for example, > plot(1:5, 1:5,
2012 May 08
1
FILLED CONTOUR
Hi, My name is Ingrid, in this moment I try to make a plot with filled.contour. Initially, I can to obtain the graphic but the xaxis was not fine, because the intervals were not coherent (Attach file 1: Plot_age_ML_contamana_final.pdf) I changed the parameters of the each axis, but when I try to run the code appear two errors: 1. in if (del == 0 && to == 0) return(to) :
2017 Mar 25
2
Error in documentation for ?legend
Right, that's my point. The help page mentions a `title.cex`, like I said; saying that `cex` sets the default `title.cex` sure implies to me (and presumably to the other people whose discussion I linked) that a `title.cex` parameter exists. Since no such parameter exists, this bit in the documentation is misleading (suggesting that there is a `title.cex` parameter which can be set, when there
2007 Mar 09
4
About "cex=": how to improve resolution?
Hi, I need to plot a graph with a fixed circle and with a series of point of different size. Here is a "simplified" example: angle<-pi/180*c(0:360) x<-seq(0,2,by=0.2) y<-seq(0,2,by=0.2) z<-seq(0,1,by=0.1) par(pty="s") plot(-2:2,-2:2,type="n") lines(cos(angle),sin(angle)) points(x,y,cex=z) The size of the points compared to the circle (of radius 1) is
2008 Dec 05
1
Trouble with gridBase and inset plots
Dear All, I ma having a trouble in generating a figure containing 3 insets with the gridBase package. I always get an error message of the kind: Error in gridPLT() : Figure region too small and/or viewport too large No matter which parameters I choose. The plots works nicely with two insets only, but when I try adding the third one, my troubles begin. I am probably doing something wrong in the
2012 Apr 20
1
How to make nice tiny sized figures on graphic devices producing scalable vector output?
Hello! Usually whenever I want a tiny plot, I just create it as is (or even large) and then downscale it in the end application like LaTeX of MS Word. However, all these graphic devices like postscript, pdf, win.metafile retain physical sizes, so it would be natural if I can just insert graphics as is provided those have proper physical sizes embedded. The question is what is the best
2017 Aug 03
1
switch of cex adjustment with mfrow?
> use > > par(mfrow=c(2,2), cex = 1) This does work as written. But when I first checked single-call setting, an mfrow change to cex in the same call superseded cex=1; hence my suggestion to use separate calls to par(). Further checking confirms that the result of a call to par is dependent on argument specification order in the call: par(mfrow=c(2,2), cex = 1) par("cex") #
2001 Oct 22
1
cex/col/etc. in title(): documentation? (PR#1136)
There appears to be a mismatch between the documentation and behavior of title(), or at least a clarification is in order. The documentation says you can pass extra arguments from par() as "...". However, cex at least is ignored. Later on in the documentation it becomes clear that you can specify these extra parameters as part of a list. I wouldn't say this is necessarily a bug
2011 Mar 17
2
Help with Time Series Plot‏
Dear List, This is an embarrassing question, but I can seem to make this work…How do I change the font size on the xlab and on the numbers shown in the x-axis on the time series plot below. The arguments cex.lab and cex.axis do not seem to be 'passing' to the plot function. plot(ts(rnorm(100), start=2004, freq=12), ylab="RQI", xlab="My X lab",
2011 Feb 16
0
y-axis slightly cut-off after printing plots to tiff
Hi Folks, I'm hoping someone could help me a bit. I have plotted the following: ########################################### tiff("plot7.tiff",units="cm",width=15,height=36,res=700) layout(matrix(c(1,2,3,4,5,6),3,1),widths=lcm(c(15)),heights=lcm(c(12,12,12)),respect=TRUE) plot.t1<-plot(data.dist,flot1.bray.hell,xlab="",ylab="Bray-Curtis dissimilarity
2017 Mar 24
2
Error in documentation for ?legend
To whom it may concern: The help page for ?legend refers to a `title.cex` parameter, which suggests that the function has such a parameter. As far as I can tell, though, it doesn't; here's an example: > plot(1,1) > legend("topright",pch=1, legend="something", title="my legend", title.cex=2) Error in legend("topright", pch = 1, legend =