dev.cur()
dev.list()
dev.next(which = dev.cur())
dev.prev(which = dev.cur())
dev.off(which = dev.cur())
dev.set(which = dev.next())
dev.new(..., noRStudioGD = FALSE)
graphics.off()
width
and height
.dev.cur
returns a length-one named integer vector giving the
number and name of the active device, or 1, the null device, if none
is active.dev.list
returns the numbers of all open devices, except device
1, the null device. This is a numeric vector with a
names
attribute giving the device names, or NULL
is
there is no open device.dev.next
and dev.prev
return the number and name of the
next / previous device in the list of devices. This will be the null
device if and only if there are no open devices.dev.off
returns the number and name of the new active device
(after the specified device has been shut down).dev.set
returns the number and name of the new active device.dev.new
returns the return value of the device opened, usually
invisible NULL
.
"null device"
which is always open but is really a placeholder: any attempt to use
it will open a new device specified by
getOption("device")
). Devices are associated with a name (e.g., "X11"
or
"postscript"
) and a number in the range 1 to 63; the
"null device"
is always device 1. Once a device has been
opened the null device is not considered as a possible active device.
There is a list of open devices, and this is considered as a circular
list not including the null device. dev.next
and
dev.prev
select the next open device in the appropriate
direction, unless no device is open.
dev.off
shuts down the specified (by default the current)
device. If the current device is shut down and any other devices are
open, the next open device is made current. It is an error to
attempt to shut down device 1. graphics.off()
shuts down all
open graphics devices. Normal termination of a session runs the
internal equivalent of graphics.off()
.
dev.set
makes the specified device the active device. If there
is no device with that number, it is equivalent to dev.next
.
If which = 1
it opens a new device and selects that.
dev.new
opens a new device. Normally R will open a new device
automatically when needed, but this enables you to open further
devices in a platform-independent way. (For which device is used see
getOption("device")
.) Note that care is needed with
file-based devices such as pdf
and
postscript
and in that case file names such as
Rplots.pdf, Rplots1.pdf, ..., Rplots999.pdf are
tried in turn. Only named arguments are passed to the device, and
then only if they match the argument list of the device. Even so,
care is needed with the interpretation of e.g.\ifelse{latex}{\out{~}}{ } width
, and for
the standard bitmap devices units = "in", res = 72
is forced if
neither is supplied but both width
and height
are.
Devices
, such as postscript
, etc. layout
and its links for setting up plotting regions
on the current device.
## Not run: ## Unix-specific example
# x11()
# plot(1:10)
# x11()
# plot(rnorm(10))
# dev.set(dev.prev())
# abline(0, 1) # through the 1:10 points
# dev.set(dev.next())
# abline(h = 0, col = "gray") # for the residual plot
# dev.set(dev.prev())
# dev.off(); dev.off() #- close the two X devices
# ## End(Not run)
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