histogram(formula,
data,
type = c("percent", "count", "density"),
nint = if(is.factor(x)) length(levels(x))
else round(log2(length(x))+1),
endpoints = range(x[!na.x]),
breaks = if(is.factor(x)) seq(0.5, length = length(levels(x))
+ 1) else do.breaks(endpoints, nint),
equal.widths = FALSE,
...)densityplot(formula, data, n = 50, plot.points = TRUE, ref = FALSE,
...)
~ x | g1 * g2 * ...
indicates that histograms or Kernel Density estimates of x
should be produced conditioned on the levels of the (optional)
variables g1,g2,.... When the conditionibreaks is
unspecified in the call.breaks is unspecified.type that makes sense
is density.Usually all panels use the same brea
breaks=NULL.
If TRUE, equally spaced bins will be selected, otherwise,
approximately equal area bins will be selected (this would mean that
the breakpoints will not be equally spacex values
should be plotted.densityplot, if the default panel function is
used, then arguments appropriate to density can be
included. This can control the details of how the Kehistogram draws Conditional Histograms, while
densityplot draws Conditional Kernel Density Plots. The
density estimate in densityplot is actually calculated using
the function density, and all arguments accepted by it can be
passed (as ...) in the call to densityplot to control
the output. See documentation of density for details. (Note: The
default value of the argument n of density is changed to
50.)
These and all other high level Trellis functions have several
arguments in common. These are extensively documented only in the
help page for xyplot, which should be consulted to learn more
detailed usage.xyplot,
panel.histogram,
density,
panel.densityplot,
panel.mathdensity,
Latticerequire(stats)
data(singer)
histogram( ~ height | voice.part, data = singer, nint = 17,
endpoints = c(59.5, 76.5), layout = c(2,4), aspect = 1,
xlab = "Height (inches)")
histogram( ~ height | voice.part, data = singer,
xlab = "Height (inches)", type = "density",
panel = function(x, ...) {
panel.histogram(x, ...)
panel.mathdensity(dmath = dnorm, col = "black",
args = list(mean=mean(x),sd=sd(x)))
} )
densityplot( ~ height | voice.part, data = singer, layout = c(2, 4),
xlab = "Height (inches)", bw = 5)Run the code above in your browser using DataLab