Learn R Programming

rgl (version 0.111.6)

grid3d: Add a grid to a 3D plot

Description

This function adds a reference grid to an RGL plot.

Usage

grid3d(side, at = NULL, col = "gray", lwd = 1, lty = 1, n = 5)

Value

A vector or matrix of object ids is returned invisibly.

Arguments

side

Where to put the grid; see the Details section.

at

How to draw the grid; see the Details section.

col

The color of the grid lines.

lwd

The line width of the grid lines. (Currently only lty = 1 is supported.)

lty

The line type of the grid lines.

n

Suggested number of grid lines; see the Details section.

Author

Ben Bolker and Duncan Murdoch

Details

This function is similar to grid in classic graphics, except that it draws a 3D grid in the plot.

The grid is drawn in a plane perpendicular to the coordinate axes. The first letter of the side argument specifies the direction of the plane: "x", "y" or "z" (or uppercase versions) to specify the coordinate which is constant on the plane.

If at = NULL (the default), the grid is drawn at the limit of the box around the data. If the second letter of the side argument is "-" or is not present, it is the lower limit; if "+" then at the upper limit. The grid lines are drawn at values chosen by pretty with n suggested locations. The default locations should match those chosen by axis3d with nticks = n.

If at is a numeric vector, the grid lines are drawn at those values.

If at is a list, then the "x" component is used to specify the x location, the "y" component specifies the y location, and the "z" component specifies the z location. Missing components are handled using the default as for at = NULL.

Multiple grids may be drawn by specifying multiple values for side or for the component of at that specifies the grid location.

See Also

axis3d

Examples

Run this code
x <- 1:10
y <- 1:10
z <- matrix(outer(x - 5, y - 5) + rnorm(100), 10, 10)
open3d()
persp3d(x, y, z, col = "red", alpha = 0.7, aspect = c(1, 1, 0.5))
grid3d(c("x", "y+", "z"))

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab