panel.pairs {lattice} | R Documentation |
This is the default superpanel function for splom
.
panel.pairs(z, panel = "panel.splom", lower.panel = panel, upper.panel = panel, diag.panel = "diag.panel.splom", as.matrix = FALSE, groups = NULL, panel.subscripts, subscripts, pscales = 5, prepanel.limits = function(x) if (is.factor(x)) levels(x) else extend.limits(range(as.numeric(x), finite = TRUE)), varname.col, varname.cex, varname.font, varname.fontfamily, varname.fontface, axis.text.col, axis.text.cex, axis.text.font, axis.text.fontfamily, axis.text.fontface, axis.line.col, axis.line.lty, axis.line.lwd, ...) diag.panel.splom(x = NULL, varname = NULL, limits, at = NULL, lab = NULL, draw = TRUE, varname.col, varname.cex, varname.lineheight, varname.font, varname.fontfamily, varname.fontface, axis.text.col, axis.text.alpha, axis.text.cex, axis.text.font, axis.text.fontfamily, axis.text.fontface, axis.line.col, axis.line.alpha, axis.line.lty, axis.line.lwd, ...)
z |
The data frame used for the plot. |
panel, lower.panel, upper.panel |
The panel function used to display each pair of variables. If
specified, lower.panel and upper.panel are used for
panels below and above the diagonal respectively.
|
diag.panel |
The panel function used for the diagonals. See arguments to
diag.panel.splom to know what arguments this function is
passed when called.
|
as.matrix |
logical. If TRUE , the layout of the panels will have origin
on the top left instead of bottom left (similar to
pairs ). This is in essence the same functionality as provided
by as.table for the panel layout
|
groups |
Grouping variable, if any |
panel.subscripts |
logical specifying whether the panel function accepts an argument
named subscripts .
|
subscripts |
The indices of the rows of z that are to be
displayed in this (super)panel.
|
pscales |
Controls axis labels, passed down from splom .
If pscales is a single number, it indicates the approximate
number of equally-spaced ticks that should appear on each axis. If
pscales is a list, it should have one component for each
column in z , each of which itself a list with the following
valid components:
at : a numeric vector specifying tick locations
labels : character vector labels to go with at
limits : numeric 2-vector specifying axis limits (should be
made more flexible at some point to handle factors)
These are specifications on a per-variable basis, and used on all four sides in the diagonal cells used for labelling. Factor variables are labelled with the factor names. Use pscales=0
to supress the axes entirely.
|
prepanel.limits |
The ‘regular’ high level lattice plots
such as xyplot use the prepanel function for deciding
on axis limits from data. This function serves a similar function,
and works on a per-variable basis, by calculating the limits, which
can be overridden by the corresponding limits component in
the pscales list.
|
x |
data vector corresponding to that row / column (which will be the same for diagonal ‘panels’). |
varname |
(scalar) character string or expression that is to be written centred within the panel |
limits |
numeric of length 2, or, vector of characters, specifying the scale for that panel (used to calculate tick locations when missing) |
at |
locations of tick marks |
lab |
optional labels for tick marks |
draw |
logical, specifying whether to draw the tick marks and labels. If
FALSE , only variable names are written
|
varname.col, varname.cex, varname.lineheight, varname.font,
varname.fontfamily, varname.fontface |
graphical parameters for the variable name in each diagonal panel |
axis.text.col, axis.text.cex, axis.text.font,
axis.text.fontfamily, axis.text.fontface, axis.line.col,
axis.line.lty, axis.line.lwd, axis.text.alpha, axis.line.alpha |
graphical parameters for axis tick marks and labels |
... |
extra arguments passed on to panel ,
lower.panel , upper.panel and diag.panel from
panel.pairs . Currently ignored by diag.panel.splom . |
panel.pairs
is the function that is actually passed in as the
panel
function in a trellis object produced by splom (taking
the panel
function as its argument).
Deepayan Sarkar Deepayan.Sarkar@R-project.org