Learn R Programming

Epi (version 0.6.2)

tabplot: Graphical display of a 2-way contingency table

Description

Entries in a table are plotted as rectangles proportional to the entry in the table. Width of rectangles are proportional to column totals, height proportional to entries within each column, hence areas are proportional to entries in the table.

Usage

tabplot( M,
         col,
      border = "black",
         lwd = 2,
     collabs = TRUE,
     rowlabs = NULL,
       equal = FALSE,
         las = 1,
        main = NULL,
    cex.main = 1.0,
       vaxis = FALSE )

Arguments

M
Two-way table
col
colors to use for coloring within each column. Defaults to a grayscale. May also be a function that takes an integer argument, as e.g. rainbow().
border
color of borders around rectangles.
lwd
width of the lines around rectangles.
collabs
should colums be labelled.
rowlabs
character "r" or "l": rows labelled on left or right side
equal
should colums be plotted of equal width? If yes a plot similar to that obtainable from barplot is the result.
las
how should labelling be rotated.
main
heading for the plot
cex.main
character expansion for the heading.
vaxis
should a vertical axis be drawn. If character it gives the side where it is drawn.

Value

  • NULL. The function is used for its sideeffects.

Details

The function offers a few more facilities for two-way tables than mosaicplot, but is restricted to two-way tables as input.

See Also

See Also barplot, plot.table, mosaicplot

Examples

Run this code
b <- sample( letters[1:4], 300, replace=TRUE, prob=c(3,1,2,4)/10 )
a <- rnorm( 300 ) - as.integer( factor( b ) ) / 8
tb <- table( cut( a, -3:2 ), b )
tabplot( tb )
tabplot( tb, rowlabs="right", col=heat.colors )

# Very similar plots
ptb <- sweep( tb, 2, apply( tb, 2, sum ), "/" )
par( mfrow=c(2,2) )
barplot( ptb, space=0 )
tabplot( tb, equal=TRUE, lwd=1 )
tabplot( tb, equal=TRUE, lwd=1, rowlabs="l" )
tabplot( tb, equal=FALSE, lwd=1, rowlabs="l" )

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab