## S3 method for class 'ppp':
pixellate(x, W=NULL, \dots, weights = NULL, padzero=FALSE)## S3 method for class 'ppp':
as.im(X, \dots)
"ppp").as.mask to determine
    the pixel resolution"owin") determining
    the pixel raster."im").pixellate.ppp and as.im.ppp
  convert a spatial point pattern x into a pixel
  image, by counting the number of points (or the total weight of
  points) falling in each pixel.   Calling as.im.ppp is equivalent to
  calling pixellate.ppp with its default arguments.
  Note that pixellate.ppp is more general than as.im.ppp
  (it has additional arguments for greater flexibility).
  The functions as.im.ppp and pixellate.ppp
  are methods for the generic functions as.im
  and pixellate respectively,
  for the class of point patterns.
  The pixel raster (in which points are counted) is determined
  by the argument W if it is present (for pixellate.ppp only).
  In this case W should be a binary mask (a window object of
  class "owin" with type "mask").
  Otherwise the pixel raster is determined by
  extracting the window containing x and converting it to a
  binary pixel mask using as.mask. The arguments
  ... are passed to as.mask to
  control the pixel resolution.
  If weights is NULL, then for each pixel
  in the mask, the algorithm counts how many points in x fall
  in the pixel. This count is usually either 0 (for a pixel with no data
  points in it) or 1 (for a pixel containing one data point) but may be
  greater than 1. The result is an image with these counts as its pixel values.
  If weights is given, it should be a numeric vector of the same
  length as the number of points in x. For each pixel, the
  algorithm finds the total weight associated with points in x that fall
  in the given pixel. The result is an image with these total weights
  as its pixel values.
  By default (if zeropad=FALSE) the resulting pixel image has the same
  spatial domain as the window of the point pattern x. If
  zeropad=TRUE then the resulting pixel image has a rectangular
  domain; pixels outside the original window are assigned the value zero.
pixellate,
  im, as.im,
  density.ppp, Smooth.ppp.data(humberside)
  plot(pixellate(humberside))Run the code above in your browser using DataLab