
Create a contour plot, or add contour lines to an existing plot.
contour(x, …)# S3 method for default
contour(x = seq(0, 1, length.out = nrow(z)),
y = seq(0, 1, length.out = ncol(z)),
z,
nlevels = 10, levels = pretty(zlim, nlevels),
labels = NULL,
xlim = range(x, finite = TRUE),
ylim = range(y, finite = TRUE),
zlim = range(z, finite = TRUE),
labcex = 0.6, drawlabels = TRUE, method = "flattest",
vfont, axes = TRUE, frame.plot = axes,
col = par("fg"), lty = par("lty"), lwd = par("lwd"),
add = FALSE, …)
locations of grid lines at which the values in z
are
measured. These must be in ascending order. By default, equally
spaced values from 0 to 1 are used. If x
is a list
,
its components x$x
and x$y
are used for x
and y
, respectively. If the list has component z
this
is used for z
.
a matrix containing the values to be plotted (NA
s are
allowed). Note that x
can be used instead of z
for
convenience.
number of contour levels desired iff
levels
is not supplied.
numeric vector of levels at which to draw contour lines.
a vector giving the labels for the contour lines. If
NULL
then the levels are used as labels, otherwise this is
coerced by as.character
.
cex
for contour labelling. This is an absolute
size, not a multiple of par("cex")
.
logical. Contours are labelled if TRUE
.
character string specifying where the labels will be
located. Possible values are "simple"
, "edge"
and
"flattest"
(the default). See the ‘Details’ section.
if NULL
, the current font family and face are used
for the contour labels. If a character vector of length 2 then
Hershey vector fonts are used for the contour labels. The first
element of the vector selects a typeface and the second element
selects a fontindex (see text
for more information).
The default is NULL
on graphics devices with high-quality
rotation of text and c("sans serif", "plain")
otherwise.
x-, y- and z-limits for the plot.
logical indicating whether axes or a box
should be drawn, see plot.default
.
color for the lines drawn.
line type for the lines drawn.
line width for the lines drawn.
logical. If TRUE
, add to a current plot.
additional arguments to plot.window
,
title
, Axis
and box
,
typically graphical parameters such as cex.axis
.
contour
is a generic function with only a default method in
base R.
The methods for positioning the labels on contours are "simple"
(draw at the edge of the plot, overlaying the contour line),
"edge"
(draw at the edge of the plot, embedded in the contour
line, with no labels overlapping) and "flattest"
(draw on the flattest section of the contour, embedded in the
contour line, with no labels overlapping). The second and third may
not draw a label on every contour line.
For information about vector fonts, see the
help for text
and Hershey
.
Notice that contour
interprets the z
matrix as a table of
f(x[i], y[j])
values, so that the x axis corresponds to row
number and the y axis to column number, with column 1 at the bottom,
i.e.a 90 degree counter-clockwise rotation of the conventional textual
layout.
Alternatively, use contourplot
from the
lattice package where the formula
notation allows
to use vectors x
, y
, and z
of the same length.
There is limited control over the axes and frame as arguments
col
, lwd
and lty
refer to the contour lines
(rather than being general graphical parameters). For more control,
add contours to a plot, or add axes and frame to a contour plot.
Becker, R. A., Chambers, J. M. and Wilks, A. R. (1988) The New S Language. Wadsworth & Brooks/Cole.
options("max.contour.segments")
for the maximal
complexity of a single contour line.
contourLines
, filled.contour
for color-filled contours,
contourplot
(and
levelplot
) from package lattice.
Further, image
and the graphics demo which can be
invoked as demo(graphics)
.
# NOT RUN {
require(grDevices) # for colours
x <- -6:16
op <- par(mfrow = c(2, 2))
contour(outer(x, x), method = "edge", vfont = c("sans serif", "plain"))
z <- outer(x, sqrt(abs(x)), FUN = "/")
image(x, x, z)
contour(x, x, z, col = "pink", add = TRUE, method = "edge",
vfont = c("sans serif", "plain"))
contour(x, x, z, ylim = c(1, 6), method = "simple", labcex = 1,
xlab = quote(x[1]), ylab = quote(x[2]))
contour(x, x, z, ylim = c(-6, 6), nlev = 20, lty = 2, method = "simple",
main = "20 levels; \"simple\" labelling method")
par(op)
## Persian Rug Art:
x <- y <- seq(-4*pi, 4*pi, len = 27)
r <- sqrt(outer(x^2, y^2, "+"))
opar <- par(mfrow = c(2, 2), mar = rep(0, 4))
for(f in pi^(0:3))
contour(cos(r^2)*exp(-r/f),
drawlabels = FALSE, axes = FALSE, frame = TRUE)
rx <- range(x <- 10*1:nrow(volcano))
ry <- range(y <- 10*1:ncol(volcano))
ry <- ry + c(-1, 1) * (diff(rx) - diff(ry))/2
tcol <- terrain.colors(12)
par(opar); opar <- par(pty = "s", bg = "lightcyan")
plot(x = 0, y = 0, type = "n", xlim = rx, ylim = ry, xlab = "", ylab = "")
u <- par("usr")
rect(u[1], u[3], u[2], u[4], col = tcol[8], border = "red")
contour(x, y, volcano, col = tcol[2], lty = "solid", add = TRUE,
vfont = c("sans serif", "plain"))
title("A Topographic Map of Maunga Whau", font = 4)
abline(h = 200*0:4, v = 200*0:4, col = "lightgray", lty = 2, lwd = 0.1)
## contourLines produces the same contour lines as contour
plot(x = 0, y = 0, type = "n", xlim = rx, ylim = ry, xlab = "", ylab = "")
u <- par("usr")
rect(u[1], u[3], u[2], u[4], col = tcol[8], border = "red")
contour(x, y, volcano, col = tcol[1], lty = "solid", add = TRUE,
vfont = c("sans serif", "plain"))
line.list <- contourLines(x, y, volcano)
invisible(lapply(line.list, lines, lwd=3, col=adjustcolor(2, .3)))
par(opar)
# }
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