plot3d(x, ...)
"plot3d"(x, y, z,
xlab, ylab, zlab, type = "p", col,
size, lwd, radius,
add = FALSE, aspect = !add,
xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL, zlim = NULL,
forceClipregion = FALSE, ...)
"plot3d"(x, xlab = "x", ylab = "y", zlab = "z", type = c("shade", "wire", "dots"),
add = FALSE, ...)
decorate3d(xlim, ylim, zlim,
xlab = "x", ylab = "y", zlab = "z",
box = TRUE, axes = TRUE, main = NULL, sub = NULL,
top = TRUE, aspect = FALSE, expand = 1.03,
...)
xyz.coords
for details.z = 0
, and 'n' for nothing. For the mesh3d
method, one of
'shade', 'wire', or 'dots'. Partial matching is used.
plot3d
, if not NULL
, set clipping
limits for the plot. In decorate3d
, these are used
for the labels.par3d
, material3d
or decorate3d
.plot3d
is called for the side effect of drawing the plot; a vector
of object IDs is returned.decorate3d
adds the usual decorations to a plot: labels, axes, etc.
xlim
, ylim
or zlim
are specified,
they should be length two vectors giving lower and upper
clipping limits for the corresponding coordinate. NA
limits will be ignored. If any clipping limits are given, then the data will be
plotted in a newly created subscene within the current one;
otherwise plotting will take place directly in the current
subscene. This subscene is named "clipregion"
in the results. Use forceClipregion = TRUE
to force creation of this
subscene even without specifying limits.plot3d
is a partial 3D analogue of plot.default.Missing values in the data are skipped, as in standard graphics.
If aspect
is TRUE
, aspect ratios of c(1, 1, 1)
are passed to
aspect3d
. If FALSE
, no aspect adjustment is done. In other
cases, the value is passed to aspect3d
.
With type = "s"
, spheres are drawn centered at the specified locations.
The radius may be controlled by size
(specifying the size relative
to the plot display, with the default size = 3
giving a radius
about 1/20 of the plot region) or radius
(specifying it on the data scale
if an isometric aspect ratio is chosen, or on an average scale
if not).
plot.default
,
open3d
, par3d
.
There are plot3d.function
and plot3d.deldir
methods for plotting surfaces.
open3d()
x <- sort(rnorm(1000))
y <- rnorm(1000)
z <- rnorm(1000) + atan2(x, y)
plot3d(x, y, z, col = rainbow(1000))
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