Hello -

In you example, what are the classes of x and y?

 x<-1:4
 y<-5:8
 plot(x,y)

class(x)
class(y)

In your 'real' data, what are the classes of A and B

class(A)
class(B)

One may be a factor?

How are you reading your data into R, read.table? Make sure your data are numeric, then plot them, and it should do what you'd like.

Since you're new to R, one of my tips would be to learn the class() and str() functions. Many functions, such as plot, operate differently depending on the class of data given to them, therefore it's very important to know the classes of your data objects.


BKMooney wrote:
I am new to R and am running into trouble with the function plot. When I enter in the simple code: x<-1:4
y<-5:8
plot(x,y)

I get a scatter plot with 4 points as expected.
However, with my own data, A and B are both vectors of length ~85, each
entry a decimal in [0,1].
Using the same plot(A,B) with this data, the plot function no longer gives
me a simple plot with 85 points.  Instead there are many points, and what
looks to be several box&whisker plots also included on the plot. This is a link to the actual output. http://www.nabble.com/file/p20364310/plotAB.bmp plotAB.bmp
Why is the plot function doing this?  How can I get it to simply give me a
scatterplot?  (From there I want to do a lsline, etc..)

Any help is greatly appreciated...

Thanks!

______________________________________________
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.

Reply via email to