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These functions create and draw a polygon. The final point will automatically be connected to the initial point.
grid.polygon(x=c(0, 0.5, 1, 0.5), y=c(0.5, 1, 0.5, 0),
id=NULL, id.lengths=NULL,
default.units="npc", name=NULL,
gp=gpar(), draw=TRUE, vp=NULL)
polygonGrob(x=c(0, 0.5, 1, 0.5), y=c(0.5, 1, 0.5, 0),
id=NULL, id.lengths=NULL,
default.units="npc", name=NULL,
gp=gpar(), vp=NULL)
A numeric vector or unit object specifying x-locations.
A numeric vector or unit object specifying y-locations.
A numeric vector used to separate locations in x
and
y
into multiple polygons. All locations with the same
id
belong to the same polygon.
A numeric vector used to separate locations in x
and
y
into multiple polygons. Specifies consecutive blocks of
locations which make up separate polygons.
A string indicating the default units to use
if x
, y
, width
, or height
are only given as numeric vectors.
A character identifier.
An object of class gpar
, typically the output
from a call to the function gpar
. This is basically
a list of graphical parameter settings.
A logical value indicating whether graphics output should be produced.
A Grid viewport object (or NULL).
A grob object.
Both functions create a polygon grob (a graphical object describing a
polygon), but only grid.polygon
draws the polygon (and then only if draw
is TRUE
).
# NOT RUN {
grid.polygon()
# Using id (NOTE: locations are not in consecutive blocks)
grid.newpage()
grid.polygon(x=c((0:4)/10, rep(.5, 5), (10:6)/10, rep(.5, 5)),
y=c(rep(.5, 5), (10:6/10), rep(.5, 5), (0:4)/10),
id=rep(1:5, 4),
gp=gpar(fill=1:5))
# Using id.lengths
grid.newpage()
grid.polygon(x=outer(c(0, .5, 1, .5), 5:1/5),
y=outer(c(.5, 1, .5, 0), 5:1/5),
id.lengths=rep(4, 5),
gp=gpar(fill=1:5))
# }
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