Hi Andre,
Try this:
plot(x= Index, y=Values, ylim= c(-16,16), pch= 19,
col = "blue",yaxt="n")
points (Log, pch = 19, col="green")
axis(2,at=seq(-16,16,by=4))
Jim
On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 8:32 AM, André Luis Neves wrote:
> Dear all:
>
>
> I was wondering how I modify the plot command below so th
Dear all:
I was wondering how I modify the plot command below so that the y-axis
displays the numbers in a 4 by 4 scale.
It looks like the plot generated by the commands below shows the y-axis in
a 5 by 5 scale:
Values <- c(1/16, 1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16)
Values
Log <- log2(Values)
Lo
On 09/13/2013 12:48 AM, Moshiur Rahman wrote:
Hi R-helpers,
Can anyone help me to give hints/packages to make a simple bar plot with
mean and standard error of variables (A, C& F) that I'd like to plot in X
and the values in Y? The factor (sex) should be as legend (Male& Female).
Actually, I'd
Hi R-helpers,
Can anyone help me to give hints/packages to make a simple bar plot with
mean and standard error of variables (A, C & F) that I'd like to plot in X
and the values in Y? The factor (sex) should be as legend (Male & Female).
Actually, I'd prefer to have a plot like the attached Fig.
>
You could set xlim and slim when using plot()
plot(vector,xlab="Period",ylab="Values",xlim=range(0,length(vector)+1),ylim=range(vector,est_vector,forecast))
i think - you forgot to provide data for the vectors :)
On 10.10.2012, at 11:31, piranha piranha wrote:
> Hello,
>
> i have been doing br
On 12-10-10 5:31 AM, piranha piranha wrote:
Hello,
i have been doing browns exponential smooting for myself and have a little
trouble with plotting values:
par(xpd=TRUE)
The line above says "allow plotting outside the frame".
plot(vector,xlab="Period",ylab="Values")
legend(ma
Hello,
i have been doing browns exponential smooting for myself and have a little
trouble with plotting values:
par(xpd=TRUE)
plot(vector,xlab="Period",ylab="Values")
legend(max(vector), legend = c("Original values", "Estimated values"),
col=c("blue","red"),lwd=0.5, cex=1, xjust=0.1,
On 10/20/2010 08:34 PM, Peter Francis wrote:
Dear List,
I am relatively new to R and am trying to create more attractive plots than
excel can manage!
I have looked through the various programmes ggplot, lattice, hmisc etc but my
case seems to be not metnioned, maybe it is but i have not notic
I think that your first problem is that you have a very large range of
values and the CIs are small in comparison, so you won't see any
difference on the plots. Do you want to plot each of the 35 values
showing the complete range and then where the actual value lies either
inside/outside the range
Dear List,
I am relatively new to R and am trying to create more attractive plots than
excel can manage!
I have looked through the various programmes ggplot, lattice, hmisc etc but my
case seems to be not metnioned, maybe it is but i have not noticed - if this is
the case i apologise.
***
Hi:
Your confidence intervals are so short that the size of the point in the
graphics region covers the endpoints! You also have a wide range of
simulated means (0 - 52) and actual values (0 - 54). Here are some measures
of your CIs:
> with(simvsact, max(simCI.upper - simCI.lower))# maximum C
Dear List,
I am relatively new to R and am trying to create more attractive plots than
excel can manage!
I have looked through the various programmes ggplot, lattice, hmisc etc but my
case seems to be not metnioned, maybe it is but i have not noticed - if this is
the case i apologise.
***
Is there an easy way to do two things:
I have a dataframe with headers and 18 columns
I want to plot all the columns on same y axis plot(df) does this.
BUT
1. There is no legend, the legend function seems pedantic - surely there
must be an easy way to just pick up my headers?
2. How do I vary
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of tom soyer
> Sent: Wednesday, January 23, 2008 8:14 PM
> To: r-help@r-project.org
> Subject: [R] plot help
>
> Hi,
>
> Suppose I already have two plots on the same screen, and I
> want to draw lines in each of them. I
Thanks Henrique!
On 1/24/08, Henrique Dallazuanna <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Try this:
>
> #some data
> y1=rnorm(1:3)
> y2=rnorm(1:3)
>
> #draw two plots on the same screen
> par(mfrow=c(2,1),oma = c(6, 0, 5, 0))
> par(mar=c(0, 5.1, 0, 5.1))
> plot(y1,xaxt="n",type="n") #1st plot
> par(mar=c(0
Try this:
#some data
y1=rnorm(1:3)
y2=rnorm(1:3)
#draw two plots on the same screen
par(mfrow=c(2,1),oma = c(6, 0, 5, 0))
par(mar=c(0, 5.1, 0, 5.1))
plot(y1,xaxt="n",type="n") #1st plot
par(mar=c(0, 5.1, 0, 5.1))
plot(y2,xaxt="n",type="n") #2nd plot
#try to draw lines onto each plot on the scre
Hi,
Suppose I already have two plots on the same screen, and I want to draw
lines in each of them. Is that possible in R? It seems that once you have
two plots on the screen, you can only draw lines in the the last plot, never
the 1st. Here is what I mean:
#some data
y1=rnorm(1:3)
y2=rnorm(1:3)
17 matches
Mail list logo