Antje wrote:
Hi Uwe,
I tried to explain my problem with the given example.
I don't see any documentation which tells me that the length of
"col.regions" should be one less than "at". (At least I assume now that
it should be this way...)
If it's equal or longer some colors (in the middle of the color-vector)
are simply not used.
Just try the example below with rainbow(5) and rainbow(6) and compare
the results... both plot will use 5 colors!
Sorry, but this behaviour is not really self-explaining to me... maybe
I'm to blind to find the documentation which says that only one color
less will ensure the usage of all colors.
Well, of you have 5 at locations (i.e. breaks), then you have 4
intervals in between and that's the amount of colors that is sensible.
(It is so important for me because I need to display a heatmap with
colors let's say
* all lower data outliers "green",
* all higher data outliers "blue" and
* everything else within the color range "yellow" to "red".
I've seen that some values do not get blue or green though they are
outliers...
I've attached one graph, I've generated - maybe it helps to understand)
Any wrong assumption?
Maybe:
Say you want everything below -1 be considered as a lower outlier and
all above 1 is a higher outlier, then you can say:
levelplot(matrix(c(1,2,0,-2), nrow=2),
at = c(-Inf, seq(-1, 1, length=10), Inf),
col.regions = c(rgb(0,1,0),
hcl(seq(20, 80, length=10), c=400),
rgb(0,0,1)))
Then below -1 is green (rgb(0,1,0)), above 1 is blue (rgb(0,0,1)) and in
between we have 10 regions from -1 to 1 each with a color between some
kind of yellow and red in hcl() space.
Uwe Ligges
Ciao,
Antje
Uwe Ligges schrieb:
Antje wrote:
Hi there,
as I'm not sure to understand the coloring levelplot uses, I'm
looking for another easy way to create a heatmap like this:
library(lattice)
mat <- matrix(seq(1,5, length.out = 12), nrow = 3)
mat[1,2] <- 3.5
my.at <- seq(0.5,5.5, length.out = 6)
my.col.regions <- rainbow(5)
graph <- levelplot(t(mat[nrow(mat):1, ] ), at = my.at, col.regions =
my.col.regions)
print(graph)
Can anybody help me with some hints or little examples?
Dear Antje,
since you are asking the same question again now, maybe you can
explain what you are going to get? In fact, I do not undertsand where
your problem is. R places the colors according to the values in your
matrix very well including the legend and I thought up to today that
the plot is self explaining.
Best wishes,
Uwe Ligges
Antje
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