On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 05:11:05PM -0200, Rodrigo Aluizio wrote: > Philipp you actually solved my problem when you mentioned matplot function. > I hadn't read anything about it before, when you mentioned I searched and > I'm getting what I need, now it's just a question of minor adjustments. > > Below is a simple solution that I will now improve. > > matplot(Perfil$3.W,Perfil$2.H,type='n',xlab='Length',ylab='Height') > lines(Perfil$1.W,Perfil$1.H,lty='solid') > lines(Perfil$2.W,Perfil$2.H,lty='dotted') > lines(Perfil$3.W,Perfil$3.H,lty='dashed') > lines(Perfil$4.W,Perfil$4.H,lty='dotdash')
Assuming Perfil is a data frame, you can do all of this in a single matplot call. E.g.: # prepare some example data x <- 1:25 df <- data.frame(w1=x, w2=x+0.5, h1=x^2, h2=3*x+1.3) # use matplot to graph all data at once matplot(df[,c('w1','w2')], df[,c('h1','h2')], type='l', lty=c('solid', 'dotted')) cu Philipp -- Dr. Philipp Pagel Lehrstuhl für Genomorientierte Bioinformatik Technische Universität München Wissenschaftszentrum Weihenstephan 85350 Freising, Germany http://mips.gsf.de/staff/pagel ______________________________________________ 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.