These are the default panel functions for levelplot
and
contourplot
. Also documented is an alternative raster-based
panel function for use with levelplot
.
panel.levelplot(x, y, z,
subscripts,
at = pretty(z),
shrink,
labels,
label.style = c("mixed", "flat", "align"),
contour = FALSE,
region = TRUE,
col = add.line$col,
lty = add.line$lty,
lwd = add.line$lwd,
border = "transparent",
border.lty = 1,
border.lwd = 0.1,
...,
region.type = c("grid", "contour"),
col.regions = regions$col,
alpha.regions = regions$alpha,
identifier = "levelplot")
panel.contourplot(...)panel.levelplot.raster(x, y, z,
subscripts,
at = pretty(z),
...,
col.regions = regions$col,
alpha.regions = regions$alpha,
interpolate = FALSE,
identifier = "levelplot")
Variables defining the plot.
Integer vector indicating what subset of x
, y
and
z
to draw.
Numeric vector giving breakpoints along the range of
z
. See levelplot
for details.
Either a numeric vector of length 2 (meant to work as both x and y components), or a list with components x and y which are numeric vectors of length 2. This allows the rectangles to be scaled proportional to the z-value. The specification can be made separately for widths (x) and heights (y). The elements of the length 2 numeric vector gives the minimum and maximum proportion of shrinkage (corresponding to min and max of z).
Either a logical scalar indicating whether the labels are to be
drawn, or a character or expression vector giving the labels
associated with the at
values. Alternatively, labels
can be a list with the following components:
labels
:a character or expression vector giving the labels. This can be omitted, in which case the defaults will be used.
col, cex, alpha
:graphical parameters for label texts
fontfamily, fontface, font
:font used for the labels
Controls how label positions and rotation are determined. A value
of "flat"
causes the label to be positioned where the contour
is flattest, and the label is not rotated. A value of
"align"
causes the label to be drawn as far from the
boundaries as possible, and the label is rotated to align with the
contour at that point. The default is to mix these approaches,
preferring the flattest location unless it is too close to the
boundaries.
A logical flag, specifying whether contour lines should be drawn.
A logical flag, specifying whether inter-contour regions should be filled with appropriately colored rectangles.
Graphical parameters for contour lines.
Border color for rectangles used when region=TRUE
.
Graphical parameters for the border
Extra parameters.
A character string, one of "grid"
and "contour"
. The
former (the default) uses a grid of rectangles to display the
colors for the level plot; the latter uses a grid of polygons, mimicking
the behavior of filled.contour
, which gives a smoother
appearance at the cost of increased processing time.
The "contour"
option requires x
and y
to be
complete, in the sense that it must include all possible
combinations in the underlying grid. However, z
values are
allowed to be missing.
A vector of colors, or a function to produce a vecor of colors, to
be used if region=TRUE
. Each interval defined by at
is assigned a color, so the number of colors actually used is one
less than the length of at
. See level.colors
for details on how the color assignment is done.
numeric scalar controlling transparency of facets
logical, passed to grid.raster
.
A character string that is prepended to the names of grobs that are created by this panel function.
Deepayan Sarkar Deepayan.Sarkar@R-project.org.
The functionality of region.type = "contour"
is based on code
borrowed from the gridGraphics package, written by Zhijian
(Jason) Wen and Paul Murrell and ported to lattice by Johan Larsson.
The same panel function is used for both levelplot
and
contourplot
(which differ only in default values of some
arguments). panel.contourplot
is a simple wrapper to
panel.levelplot
.
When contour=TRUE
, the contourLines
function is used to
calculate the contour lines.
panel.levelplot.raster
is an alternative panel function that
uses the raster drawing abilities in R 2.11.0 and higher (through
grid.raster
). It has fewer options (e.g., can only
render data on an equispaced grid), but can be more efficient. When
using panel.levelplot.raster
, it may be desirable to render the
color key in the same way. This is possible, but must be done
separately; see levelplot
for details.
levelplot
,
level.colors
,
contourLines
,
filled.contour
require(grid)
levelplot(rnorm(10) ~ 1:10 + sort(runif(10)), panel = panel.levelplot)
suppressWarnings(plot(levelplot(rnorm(10) ~ 1:10 + sort(runif(10)),
panel = panel.levelplot.raster,
interpolate = TRUE)))
levelplot(volcano, panel = panel.levelplot.raster)
levelplot(volcano, panel = panel.levelplot.raster,
col.regions = hcl.colors, cuts = 30, interpolate = TRUE)
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