Given several objects which are capable of being plotted, create a list containing these objects as if they were successive layers of a plot. The list can then be plotted in different ways.
layered(..., plotargs = NULL, LayerList=NULL)
A list, belonging to the class "layered"
.
There are methods for plot
, "["
,
"shift"
, "affine"
, "rotate"
and "rescale"
.
Objects which can be plotted by plot
.
Default values of the plotting arguments for each of the objects.
A list of lists of arguments of the form name=value
.
A list of objects.
Incompatible with ...
.
Adrian Baddeley Adrian.Baddeley@curtin.edu.au
and Rolf Turner r.turner@auckland.ac.nz
Layering is a simple mechanism for controlling a high-level plot that is composed of several successive plots, for example, a background and a foreground plot. The layering mechanism makes it easier to issue the plot command, to switch on or off the plotting of each individual layer, to control the plotting arguments that are passed to each layer, and to zoom in.
Each individual layer in the plot should be saved as an object
that can be plotted using plot
. It will typically belong to
some class, which has a method for the generic function plot
.
The command layered
simply saves the objects ...
as a list of class "layered"
. This list can then be plotted by
the method plot.layered
. Thus, you only need to
type a single plot
command to produce the multi-layered plot.
Individual layers of the plot can be switched on or off, or
manipulated, using arguments to plot.layered
.
The argument plotargs
contains default values of the
plotting arguments for each layer. It should be a list, with one
entry for each object in ...
. Each entry of plotargs
should be a list of arguments in the form name=value
, which are
recognised by the plot
method for the relevant layer.
The plotargs
can also include an argument named .plot
specifying (the name of) a function to perform the plotting
instead of the generic plot
.
The length of plotargs
should either be equal to the
number of layers, or equal to 1. In the latter case it will be
replicated to the appropriate length.
plot.layered
,
methods.layered
,
as.layered
,
[.layered
,
layerplotargs
.
D <- distmap(cells)
L <- layered(D, cells)
L
L <- layered(D, cells,
plotargs=list(list(ribbon=FALSE), list(pch=16)))
plot(L)
layerplotargs(L)[[1]] <- list(.plot="contour")
plot(L)
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab