Displaying 20 results from an estimated 10000 matches similar to: "par(mfror=c(1,2))"
2013 Sep 13
3
Problema con el tamaño de las letras en R en gráficos multiples
Hola buenas,
Actualmente me hayo haciendo unas gráficas que han de tener un tamaño de
letra determinado. Para ello empleo los parametros ps de las funciones
x11() y en par().
Mientras hago gráficas de uno y gráficas de dos plots todo va bien. Pego
las gráficas en power point y veo que las gráficas son del tamaño
recomendado (pego una caja de texto y compruebo que todo es correcto de
manera
2009 Mar 14
1
Problem with figure size when embedding fonts
Dear Colleagues:
I need to make a graphic that uses the Nimbus rather than Helvetica font
family so that the font can be embedded in the encapsulated postscript
file. This is to satisfy a requirement from a journal for electronic
submission of figures. I do the following:
postscript('lowess.eps', onefile=FALSE, pointsize=18, horizontal=FALSE,
family='NimbusSan')
2003 Jul 11
3
postscript/eps label clipping
The following code produces an eps file with the tops of each of the ylabs
clipped off.
par(mfrow=c(2,2))
plot(runif(10),
ylab="Function(Lengthy Expression)",xlab="Prediction")
plot(runif(10),
ylab=expression(Delta * Beta^2),xlab="Prediction")
plot(runif(10),
ylab="Function(Lengthy Expression)",xlab="Prediction")
2002 Jun 17
2
layout() and postscript()
HI,
I would like to know if it's possible to create a postscript file with
multiple graphs . I'm creating some graphs by the means of a loop and I want
to save each graph in the same file (splitting making the device by the
number of graphs).
Do I have to use the par(matrix()) option, the layout() function or the
split.screen() one ?
Thanks
Nolwenn
2009 Feb 05
2
Unexpected mfrow, layout behavior (pdf still has multiple pages)
My goal is to create a graph with one column and three rows into a
single graphic. The mfrow, mfcol, and layout functions all have the
same effect: three graphs are produced in a single pdf file, having
one graph per page. This is not what I want (I didn't want multiple
pages). Just before I sent this post, I was able to generate the
desired output with split.screen. Is this the expected
2011 May 10
1
Saving multiple 3x3 TIFF graphics inside a loop
Dear Friends,
I have been trying to save multiple 3x3 (mfrow=c(3,3) graphics inside a loop
using tiff figure format (not using PDF or savePlot functions) with no
success. Could you please help?
Here is a simplified example code:
dat=data.frame (ID=rep(1:10,each=10),IDV=rep(seq(1:10),times=10))
dat$DV <- with(dat, 50+15*IDV)
dat=dat[order(dat$ID,dat$IDV),]
for(i in 1:10){
dt1 =
2005 Jul 22
3
problems with submitting an eps-file created in R
Dear all
I've got some problems submitting a manuscript, because I can't manage
creating the favourable eps-file of a graph created in R. The journal's
graphic requirements are as followed:
format: eps
width: max. 6 inches
resolution: min. 1000 dpi
supported fonts: Arial, Courier, Helvetica, Symbol, Times, Charcoal,
Chicago, Geneva, Georgia, Monaco, Zapf, New York
Itried to ways
2010 Jul 16
8
save plot
I made a plot, but after I made a second plot, the previous plot was
gone. How can I save all the plots in a file (I do not manually copy
and paste them one by one)?
Thanks.
Linda
2007 Jan 04
3
pretended size postscript and size of the graphic device window
Dear list members!
I've two questions concerning graphic export:
a) I want to export my graphics as PostScript files. in this way I use the postscript() function. The tricky part is that they must have a pretended size (7 x 7 cm) and an absoulte font size (10pt).
b) how can i (permanent) change the size of the graphic device window?
Best regards
mirca heli
--
2009 Jan 19
1
patch for textspecial and defaultfont in xfig
Hello,
The current xfig device lacks the functionality to set the
textspecial flag and use the defaultfont in xfig. This is necessary
when you want to export to xfig and use interpreted text (e.g., $
\frac{1}{e}$ gets interpreted by latex). The attached patch adds this
functionality.
Why would you like to do this?
- Use math in labels (e.g., name your variables $r_{xy}$, do a
2006 May 16
3
multiple plots in a function()
Dear all,
I have the following problem:
I have written a function genereating to plots, eg
myfunction <- (data, some.parameters) {
#some calculations etc
.
par (mfrow=c(1,2))
plot1(......)
plot2(.....)
}
which works fine. But for analysing several variants, I tried a slope, eg:
par (mfrow=c(5,5))
for ( i in 1:10) {
myfunction(data, i)
}
Off
2000 Jun 16
1
postscript device on R-1.1.0
Am I the only one with this problem?
> postscript()
Error in old$command == "default" : comparison (1) is possible only for
vector types
The function postscript() is creates a list called "old". the function
wants to access old$command, but old does not have a component called
command.
> postscript
function (file = ifelse(onefile, "Rplots.ps",
2007 Mar 07
5
How to open more windows to make more graphs at once!
Dear R users,
I have a data frame (test) including five columns of upper (numeric), lower (numeric), observed (numeric), best_sim (numeric) and stname (factor with 80 levels, each level with different length). Now I would like to write a short program to draw one graph as follow for each level of stname but I would like also to draw each time 12 graphs for the 12 levels of stname in the same
2005 Mar 02
3
orientation of eps files
hello,
i have a problem with the orientation of eps files produced with the postscript() command. i have generated some eps files with R using:
postscript(file = filename, horizontal = FALSE, paper = "special", onefile = F
ALSE, height = height, width = width, pointsize = pointsize)
now, when i include these eps files into a standard paper document (ie. a4 paper, portrait orientation)
2011 Feb 22
2
Plotting a functional time series
Hello,
I'm willing to plot a sequence of densities on a 3d graph, something like
-----------------------------------------------------------------
x <- sapply(1:10, function(i)rnorm(1000))
f <- sapply(1:10, function(i)density(x[,i], from=-5,to=5)$y)
grid <- density(x[,1], from=-5,to=5)$x
win.graph()
persp(grid1, 1:10, f,theta=-50, phi=30, d=2)
2006 Dec 20
3
How to use strings from a data.frame as the argument of an expression() for plot
Greetings,
I would like to use a data.frame with strings to feed
the expression() in the title of a plot. The way I did
this is:
molecules
<-data.frame(name=c("o3","no","no2"),expression=c("quote(O[3])","quote(NO)","quote(NO[2])"))
for (mol in c(5,7,9)) {
plot(x, y, type="b",
2006 Jan 18
6
some EPS rotated in journal preview
I am trying to send a manuscript to a journal.
One of the figures build by R is in the right orientation and 4 are rotated clockwise 90 deg in the preview.
I used the right click save to PS option and I used the command line
postscript("c:/temp/fig04.eps",bg="transparent",onefile = TRUE ,pointsize=20,paper = "letter",height=8,width=8,horizontal=FALSE,family =
2007 Dec 27
1
warning on gamma option in par(args) or calling par(= new)?
Dear All,
I have the following function
tstpar <-
function(n = 200, want.pdf = FALSE, pdfFileName = NULL){
oldpar <- par(no.readonly = TRUE)
on.exit(par(oldpar))
steps <- seq(from = 1, to = 8, by = 1)
h <- 10; w <- 6
if(want.pdf){pdf(file = pdfFileName, onefile = TRUE,
paper = "letter", width = w, height = h)}
par(mfrow = c(4,2))
for(i
2011 Jan 11
1
Alphabetic labels on multi-plot graphics
Is there a way to achieve
lbl=c("a", "b", "c", "d")
par(mfrow=c(2,2), ann=FALSE)
for (t in 1:4){
plot(seq(from=1,to=2*pi,length=100),
sin(t*seq(from=1,to=2*pi,length=100)), type="l")
title(main=paste("(", lbl[t], ")", sep=""))
}
without having to use an object like 'lbl'?
More generally: is it possible
2005 Jan 10
3
Mixing portrait/landscape in a postscript file
Dear list,
I'm stuck with a little graphical problem. I'm generating several
lattice plots which are printed in a single postcript device opened by
> trellis.device(postscript, theme=canonical.theme("postscript",
color=F), file="an_phase2_graph.ps", paper="a4", pointsize = 10,
onefile=TRUE, horizontal=TRUE)
Everything works fine,but some of these