nndist(X, ..., method="C")
  ## S3 method for class 'ppp':
nndist(X, \dots, method="C")
  ## S3 method for class 'default':
nndist(X, Y=NULL, \dots, method="C")nndist.ppp, the argument X should be a point
    pattern (object of class "ppp").
    For nndist.default, typically X and <nndist.ppp
    and nndist.default."C" and "interpreted".  The function nndist is generic, with
  a method for point patterns (objects of class "ppp")
  and a default method.
  The method for point patterns expects a single
  point pattern argument X and returns the vector of its
  nearest neighbour distances.
  The default method expects that X and Y will determine
  the coordinates of a set of points. Typically X and
  Y would be numeric vectors of equal length. Alternatively
  Y may be omitted and X may be a list with two components
  named x and y, or a matrix or data frame with two columns.
  
  The argument method is not normally used. It is
  retained only for checking the validity of the software.
  If method = "interpreted" then the distances are
  computed using interpreted R code only. If method="C"
  (the default) then C code is used. 
  The C code is faster by two to three orders of magnitude
  and uses much less memory.
  
  If there is only one point (if x has length 1),
  then a nearest neighbour distance of Inf is returned.
  If there are no points (if x has length zero)
  a numeric vector of length zero is returned.
  To identify which point is the nearest neighbour of a given point,
  use nnwhich.
  To use the nearest neighbour distances for statistical inference,
  it is often advisable to use the edge-corrected empirical distribution,
  computed by Gest.
pairdist,
  Gest,
  nnwhich.data(cells)
   d <- nndist(cells)
   x <- runif(100)
   y <- runif(100)
   d <- nndist(x, y)
   # Stienen diagram
   plot(cells %mark% (nndist(cells)/2), markscale=1)Run the code above in your browser using DataLab