F_1_panel.bwplot {lattice} | R Documentation |
This is the default panel function for bwplot
.
panel.bwplot(x, y, box.ratio = 1, box.width = box.ratio / (1 + box.ratio), horizontal = TRUE, pch, col, alpha, cex, font, fontfamily, fontface, fill, varwidth = FALSE, notch = FALSE, notch.frac = 0.5, ..., levels.fos, stats = boxplot.stats, coef = 1.5, do.out = TRUE, identifier = "bwplot")
x, y |
numeric vector or factor. Boxplots drawn for each unique value of
|
box.ratio |
ratio of box thickness to inter box space |
box.width |
thickness of box in absolute units; overrides
|
horizontal |
logical. If FALSE, the plot is ‘transposed’ in the sense that
the behaviours of x and y are switched. x is now the
‘factor’. Interpretation of other arguments change
accordingly. See documentation of |
pch, col, alpha, cex, font, fontfamily, fontface |
graphical
parameters controlling the dot. |
fill |
color to fill the boxplot |
varwidth |
logical. If TRUE, widths of boxplots are proportional to the number of points used in creating it. |
notch |
if |
notch.frac |
numeric in (0,1). When |
stats |
a function, defaulting to |
coef, do.out |
passed to |
levels.fos |
numeric values corresponding to positions of the factor or shingle variable. For internal use. |
... |
further arguments, ignored. |
identifier |
A character string that is prepended to the names of grobs that are created by this panel function. |
Creates Box and Whisker plot of x
for every level of
y
(or the other way round if horizontal=FALSE
). By
default, the actual boxplot statistics are calculated using
boxplot.stats
. Note that most arguments controlling the
display can be supplied to the high-level bwplot
call directly.
Although the graphical parameters for the dot representing the median
can be controlled by optional arguments, many others can not. These
parameters are obtained from the relevant settings parameters
("box.rectangle"
for the box, "box.umbrella"
for the
whiskers and "plot.symbol"
for the outliers).
Deepayan Sarkar Deepayan.Sarkar@R-project.org
bwplot(voice.part ~ height, data = singer, xlab = "Height (inches)", panel = function(...) { panel.grid(v = -1, h = 0) panel.bwplot(...) }, par.settings = list(plot.symbol = list(pch = 4))) bwplot(voice.part ~ height, data = singer, xlab = "Height (inches)", notch = TRUE, pch = "|")