--- Jim Lemon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > John Kane wrote: > > I think you're going to find that barchart with > that > > many values in a bar is going to be pretty well > > uninterpretable. > > > > Jim Lemon gives the desired barchart but it is > very > > difficult to read. > > > > Stealing his code to create the same matrix I'd > > suggest may be looking at a dotchart. I'm not > sure if > > this is even close to an optimal solution but I do > > think it's a bit better than a barchart approach > > > ====================================================== > > heights<-matrix(sample(10:70,54),ncol=3) > > bar.colors<-rep(rep(2:7,each=3),3) > > cost.types <- c("Direct", "Indirec", "Induced") > > colnames(heights) <- c("A", "B", "C") > > rownames(heights) <- c(rep(cost.types, 6)) > > > > dotchart(heights, col=bar.colors, pch=16, cex=.6) > > > > > ======================================================= > Very nice John, but it does look like someone > dropped the M&Ms. > Jim
Please I'm Canadian, we have Smarties. Much nicer than M&Ms :) It is a bit garish but I didn't see a fast way to turn off the colours on the axis though from the Help it looks possible. [[replacing trailing spam]] ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list 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.