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Multiple density curves are plotted on the same plot. The function plots the density curves in the defined colors and linetypes, after having calculated the globally appropriate xlim- and ylim-values. A legend can directly be included.
PlotMultiDens(x, ...)# S3 method for default
PlotMultiDens(x, xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL, col = Pal(), lty = "solid",
lwd = 2, fill = NA, xlab = "x", ylab = "density", args.dens = NULL,
args.legend = NULL, na.rm = FALSE, flipxy = FALSE, ...)
# S3 method for formula
PlotMultiDens(formula, data, subset, na.action, …)
a list of vectors whose densities are to be plotted. Use split
to separate a vector by groups.
(See examples)
xlim, ylim of the plot.
colors of the lines, defaults to Pal()
, returning the default palette.
line type of the lines.
line widths for the lines.
colors for fill the area under the density curve. If set to NA
(default) there will be no color.
a title for the x, resp. y axis. Defaults to "x"
and "density"
.
list of additional arguments to be passed to the density
function.
If set to NULL
the defaults will be used. Those are n = 4096
(2^12) and kernel = "epanechnikov"
.
list of additional arguments to be passed to the legend
function.
Use args.legend = NA
if no legend should be added.
should NA
s be omitted? Defaults to FALSE
.
logical, should x- and y-axis be flipped? Defaults to FALSE
.
a formula of the form lhs ~ rhs
where lhs
gives the data values and rhs the corresponding groups.
an optional matrix or data frame (or similar: see model.frame
) containing the variables in the formula formula
.
By default the variables are taken from environment(formula)
.
an optional vector specifying a subset of observations to be used.
a function which indicates what should happen when the data contain NAs. Defaults to getOption("na.action")
.
the dots are passed to plot(...)
.
data.frame with 3 columns, containing the bw
, n
and kernel
parameters used for the list elements.
The number of rows correspond to the length of the list x.
All style arguments, density arguments and data list elements will be recycled if necessary.
The argument flipxy
leads to exchanged x- and y-values. This option can be used to plot density curves with a vertical orientation for displaying marginal densities.
# NOT RUN {
x <- rnorm(1000,0,1)
y <- rnorm(1000,0,2)
z <- rnorm(1000,2,1.5)
# the input of the following function MUST be a numeric list
PlotMultiDens(list(x=x,y=y,z=z))
# use area fill
PlotMultiDens(list(x=x,y=y,z=z), fill=SetAlpha(c("red","green","blue"), 0.4))
PlotMultiDens( x=split(d.pizza$delivery_min, d.pizza$driver), na.rm=TRUE
, main="delivery time ~ driver", xlab="delivery time [min]", ylab="density"
, lwd=1:7, lty=1:7
, panel.first=grid())
# this example demonstrates the definition of different line types and -colors
# an is NOT thought as recommendation for good plotting practice... :-)
# the formula interface
PlotMultiDens(delivery_min ~ driver, data=d.pizza)
# recyling of the density parameters
res <- PlotMultiDens(x=split(d.pizza$temperature, d.pizza$driver),
args.dens = list(bw=c(5,2), kernel=c("rect","epanechnikov")), na.rm=TRUE)
res
# compare bandwidths
PlotMultiDens(x=split(d.pizza$temperature, d.pizza$driver)[1],
args.dens = list(bw=c(1:5)), na.rm=TRUE,
args.legend=NA, main="Compare bw")
legend(x="topright", legend=gettextf("bw = %s", 1:5), fill=rainbow(5))
# }
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