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spatstat (version 1.60-1)

raster.x: Cartesian Coordinates for a Pixel Raster

Description

Return the \(x\) and \(y\) coordinates of each pixel in a pixel image or binary mask.

Usage

raster.x(w, drop=FALSE)
 raster.y(w, drop=FALSE)
 raster.xy(w, drop=FALSE)

Arguments

w

A pixel image (object of class "im") or a mask window (object of class "owin" of type "mask").

drop

Logical. If TRUE, then coordinates of pixels that lie outside the window are removed. If FALSE (the default) then the coordinates of every pixel in the containing rectangle are retained.

Value

raster.xy returns a list with components x and y which are numeric vectors of equal length containing the pixel coordinates.

If drop=FALSE, raster.x and raster.y return a matrix of the same dimensions as the pixel grid in w, and giving the value of the \(x\) (or \(y\)) coordinate of each pixel in the raster.

If drop=TRUE, raster.x and raster.y return numeric vectors.

Details

The argument w should be either a pixel image (object of class "im") or a mask window (an object of class "owin" of type "mask").

If drop=FALSE (the default), the functions raster.x and raster.y return a matrix of the same dimensions as the pixel image or mask itself, with entries giving the \(x\) coordinate (for raster.x) or \(y\) coordinate (for raster.y) of each pixel in the pixel grid.

If drop=TRUE, pixels that lie outside the window w (or outside the domain of the image w) are removed, and raster.x and raster.y return numeric vectors containing the coordinates of the pixels that are inside the window w.

The function raster.xy returns a list with components x and y which are numeric vectors of equal length containing the pixel coordinates.

See Also

owin, as.mask, pixelcentres

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
  u <- owin(c(-1,1),c(-1,1)) # square of side 2
  w <- as.mask(u, eps=0.01) # 200 x 200 grid
  X <- raster.x(w)
  Y <- raster.y(w)
  disc <- owin(c(-1,1), c(-1,1), mask=(X^2 + Y^2 <= 1))
  
# }
# NOT RUN {
plot(disc)
# }
# NOT RUN {
  # approximation to the unit disc
# }

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