Learn R Programming

sp (version 0.9-78)

bpy.colors: blue-pink-yellow color scheme that prints well on black/white printers

Description

Create a vector of `n' ``contiguous'' colors.

Usage

bpy.colors(n = 100, cutoff.tails = 0.1, alpha = 1.0)

Arguments

n
number of colors (>= 1) to be in the palette
cutoff.tails
tail fraction to be cut off on each side. If 0, this palette runs from black to white; by cutting off the tails, it runs from blue to yellow, which looks nicer.
alpha
numeric; alpha transparency, 0 is fully transparent, 1 is opaque.

Value

  • A character vector, `cv', of color names. This can be used either to create a user-defined color palette for subsequent graphics by `palette(cv)', a `col=' specification in graphics functions or in `par'.

References

see http://www.ihe.uni-karlsruhe.de/mitarbeiter/vonhagen/palette.en.html; gnuplot has this color map.

See Also

rainbow, cm.colors

Examples

Run this code
bpy.colors(10)
p <- expand.grid(x=1:30,y=1:30)
p$z <- p$x + p$y
coordinates(p) <- c("x", "y")
gridded(p) <- TRUE
image(p, col = bpy.colors(100), asp = 1)
# require(lattice)
# trellis.par.set("regions", list(col=bpy.colors())) # make this default pallette

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab