Dear Sarah, everything worked out! Thank You!!! ---------------------------------- Sarah Goslee <sarah.gos...@gmail.com>: > Well, you don't provide a reproducible example, so there's only so > much we can do. The help for par is a lot, but I told you which option > to use. Did you try reading the examples for ?axis at all? > plot (cox, col=1:2, xscale=1, xlab="OS", ylab="Probability", xaxt="n") > axis(1, at=seq(0, 48, by=12)) > Or whatever axis values you actually want.
> > Sarah Goslee <sarah.gos...@gmail.com>: > > > You can presumably use xaxt="n" in your plot() statement (see ?par for > > > details), and then use axis() to make anything you'd like (see ?axis > > > for details). > > ---------------------------------- > > >> Medic <mailipadp...@gmail.com> wrote: > > >> In this code: > > >> plot (cox, col=1:2, xscale=1, xlab="OS", ylab="Probability") > > >> the X scale is divided (by default) as: > > >> 0 ... 50 ... 100 ... 150 ... 200 > > >> And I would like so: > > >> 0 ... 12 ... 24 ... 36 ... 48. > > >> I looked ?plot(cox), but did not understand what argument is > > >> responsible for this. ______________________________________________ R-help@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.