• R语言文摘:Graphical Parameters


    原文地址:https://www.statmethods.net/advgraphs/parameters.html

    You can customize many features of your graphs (fonts, colors, axes, titles) through graphic options.

    One way is to specify these options in through the par( ) function. If you set parameter values here, the changes will be in effect for the rest of the session or until you change them again. The format is par(optionname=valueoptionname=value...)

    # Set a graphical parameter using par()

    par()              # view current settings
    opar <- par()      # make a copy of current settings
    par(col.lab="red") # red x and y labels 
    hist(mtcars$mpg)   # create a plot with these new settings 
    par(opar)          # restore original settings

    A second way to specify graphical parameters is by providing the optionname=value pairs directly to a high level plotting function. In this case, the options are only in effect for that specific graph.

    # Set a graphical parameter within the plotting function 
    hist(mtcars$mpg, col.lab="red")

    See the help for a specific high level plotting function (e.g. plot, hist, boxplot) to determine which graphical parameters can be set this way.

    The remainder of this section describes some of the more important graphical parameters that you can set.

    Text and Symbol Size

    The following options can be used to control text and symbol size in graphs.

     

    option description
    cex number indicating the amount by which plotting text and symbols should be scaled relative to the default. 1=default, 1.5 is 50% larger, 0.5 is 50% smaller, etc.
    cex.axis magnification of axis annotation relative to cex
    cex.lab magnification of x and y labels relative to cex
    cex.main magnification of titles relative to cex
    cex.sub magnification of subtitles relative to cex

     

    Plotting Symbols

    Use the pch= option to specify symbols to use when plotting points. For symbols 21 through 25, specify border color (col=) and fill color (bg=).

    plotting symbols

    Lines

    You can change lines using the following options. This is particularly useful for reference lines, axes, and fit lines.

     

    option description
    lty line type. see the chart below.
    lwd line width relative to the default (default=1). 2 is twice as wide.

     

    line types

    Colors

    Options that specify colors include the following.

     

    option description
    col Default plotting color. Some functions (e.g. lines) accept a vector of values that are recycled.
    col.axis color for axis annotation
    col.lab color for x and y labels
    col.main color for titles
    col.sub color for subtitles
    fg plot foreground color (axes, boxes - also sets col= to same)
    bg plot background color

     

    You can specify colors in R by index, name, hexadecimal, or RGB.
    For example col=1col="white", and col="#FFFFFF" are equivalent.

    The following chart was produced with code developed by Earl F. Glynn. See his Color Chart for all the details you would ever need about using colors in R.

    R color chart

    You can also create a vector of n contiguous colors using the functions rainbow(n)heat.colors(n)terrain.colors(n)topo.colors(n), and cm.colors(n).

    colors() returns all available color names.

    Fonts

    You can easily set font size and style, but font family is a bit more complicated.

     

    option description
    font Integer specifying font to use for text. 
    1=plain, 2=bold, 3=italic, 4=bold italic, 5=symbol
    font.axis font for axis annotation
    font.lab font for x and y labels
    font.main font for titles
    font.sub font for subtitles
    ps font point size (roughly 1/72 inch)
    text size=ps*cex
    family font family for drawing text. Standard values are "serif", "sans", "mono", "symbol". Mapping is device dependent.

     

    In windows, mono is mapped to "TT Courier New", serif is mapped to"TT Times New Roman", sans is mapped to "TT Arial", mono is mapped to "TT Courier New", and symbol is mapped to "TT Symbol" (TT=True Type). You can add your own mappings.

    # Type family examples - creating new mappings 
    plot(1:10,1:10,type="n")
    windowsFonts(
      A=windowsFont("Arial Black"),
      B=windowsFont("Bookman Old Style"),
      C=windowsFont("Comic Sans MS"),
      D=windowsFont("Symbol")
    )
    text(3,3,"Hello World Default")
    text(4,4,family="A","Hello World from Arial Black")
    text(5,5,family="B","Hello World from Bookman Old Style")
    text(6,6,family="C","Hello World from Comic Sans MS")
    text(7,7,family="D", "Hello World from Symbol")

    font example click to view

    Margins and Graph Size

    You can control the margin size using the following parameters.

     

    option description
    mar numerical vector indicating margin size c(bottom, left, top, right) in lines. default = c(5, 4, 4, 2) + 0.1
    mai numerical vector indicating margin size c(bottom, left, top, right) in inches
    pin plot dimensions (width, height) in inches

     

    For complete information on margins, see Earl F. Glynn's margin tutorial.

    Going Further

    See help(par) for more information on graphical parameters. The customization of plotting axes and text annotations are covered next section.

    To Practice

    Try this course on making graphs in R.

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/chickenwrap/p/10241164.html
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