Hi, On Thu, Jun 13, 2013 at 11:13 AM, Mohamed Badawy <mbad...@pm-engr.com> wrote: > Hi... I'm still a beginner in R. While doing some curve-fitting with a raw > data set of length 22,000, here is what I had: > > > >> hist(y,col="red") > > gives me the frequency histogram, 13 total rectangles, highest is near 5000. >
You don't provide a reproducible example, so here's some fake data: somedata <- runif(1000) > Now > >> hist(y,prob=TRUE,col="red",ylim=c(0,1.5)) > > gives me the density (probability?) histogram, same number f rectangles, but > the highest rectangle is obviously higher than 1, how can this be?!!! Because you misread the help. using freq=FALSE (equivalent to prob=TRUE, which is a legacy option), you are getting: freq: logical; if ‘TRUE’, the histogram graphic is a representation of frequencies, the ‘counts’ component of the result; if ‘FALSE’, probability densities, component ‘density’, are plotted (so that the histogram has a total area of one). Defaults to ‘TRUE’ _if and only if_ ‘breaks’ are equidistant (and ‘probability’ is not specified). It sounds like what you actually want is: somehist <- hist(somedata, plot=FALSE) somehist$counts <- somehist$counts/sum(somehist$counts) plot(somehist) > P.S. I had to post this thread via email as it got rejected as I posted it > from Nabble, reason was "Message rejected by filter rule match" Nabble is not the R-help mailing list. Posting via email is the correct thing to do. Sarah -- Sarah Goslee http://www.functionaldiversity.org ______________________________________________ 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.