par.settings argument in a high level call
simpleTheme(col, alpha, cex, pch, lty, lwd, font, fill, border, col.points, col.line, alpha.points, alpha.line)col is used for components
"plot.symbol", "plot.line", "plot.polygon",
"superpose.symbol", "superpose.line", and
"superpose.polygon". col.points overrides
col, but is used only for "plot.symbol" and
"superpose.symbol". Similarly, col.line overrides
col for "plot.line" and "superpose.line".
The arguments can be vectors, but only the first component is used
for scalar targets (i.e., the ones without "superpose" in
their name).
col, etc., apply.
plot.symbol (for which only the first component is
used) and superpose.symbol (for which the arguments can be
vectors).
plot.line (for which only the first component is
used) and superpose.line (for which the arguments can be
vectors).
plot.symbol,
plot.polygon, superpose.symbol, and
superpose.polygon. plot.polygon and superpose.polygon. theme argument to
trellis.device and trellis.par.set, or
as the par.settings argument to any high level lattice function
such as xyplot.
trellis.device for details). This theme is used to
obtain defaults for various graphical parameters, and in particular,
the auto.key argument works on the premise that the same source
is used for both the actual graphical encoding and the legend. The
easiest way to specify custom settings for a particular display is to
use the par.settings argument, which is usually tedious to
construct as it is a nested list. The simpleTheme function can
be used in such situations as a wrapper that generates a suitable list
given parameters in simple name=value form, with the nesting
made implicit. This is less flexible, but straightforward and
sufficient in most situations.trellis.device, xyplot,
Lattice
str(simpleTheme(pch = 16))
dotplot(variety ~ yield | site, data = barley, groups = year,
auto.key = list(space = "right"),
par.settings = simpleTheme(pch = 16),
xlab = "Barley Yield (bushels/acre) ",
aspect=0.5, layout = c(1,6))
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