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stripchart
produces one dimensional scatter plots (or dot
plots) of the given data. These plots are a good alternative to
boxplot
s when sample sizes are small.
stripchart(x, …)# S3 method for formula
stripchart(x, data = NULL, dlab = NULL, …,
subset, na.action = NULL)
# S3 method for default
stripchart(x, method = "overplot", jitter = 0.1, offset = 1/3,
vertical = FALSE, group.names, add = FALSE,
at = NULL, xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL,
ylab = NULL, xlab = NULL, dlab = "", glab = "",
log = "", pch = 0, col = par("fg"), cex = par("cex"),
axes = TRUE, frame.plot = axes, …)
the data from which the plots are to be produced. In the
default method the data can be specified as a single numeric
vector, or as list of numeric vectors, each corresponding to
a component plot. In the formula
method, a symbolic
specification of the form y ~ g
can be given,
indicating the observations in the vector y
are to be
grouped according to the levels of the factor
g
. NA
s are allowed in the data.
a data.frame (or list) from which the variables in
x
should be taken.
an optional vector specifying a subset of observations to be used for plotting.
a function which indicates what should happen
when the data contain NA
s. The default is to ignore missing
values in either the response or the group.
additional parameters passed to the default method, or by
it to plot.window
, points
,
axis
and title
to control the appearance
of the plot.
the method to be used to separate coincident points.
The default method "overplot"
causes such points to be
overplotted, but it is also possible to specify "jitter"
to
jitter the points, or "stack"
have coincident points
stacked. The last method only makes sense for very granular data.
when method = "jitter"
is used, jitter
gives the amount of jittering applied.
when stacking is used, points are stacked this many line-heights (symbol widths) apart.
when vertical is TRUE
the plots are drawn
vertically rather than the default horizontal.
group labels which will be printed alongside (or underneath) each plot.
logical, if true add the chart to the current plot.
numeric vector giving the locations where the charts should
be drawn, particularly when add = TRUE
;
defaults to 1:n
where n
is the number of boxes.
labels: see title
.
alternate way to specify axis labels: see ‘Details’.
plot limits: see plot.window
.
on which axes to use a log scale: see
plot.default
Graphical parameters: see par
.
Axis control: see plot.default
.
Extensive examples of the use of this kind of plot can be found in Box, Hunter and Hunter or Seber and Wild.
The dlab
and glab
labels may be used instead of xlab
and ylab
if those are not specified. dlab
applies to the
continuous data axis (the X axis unless vertical
is TRUE
),
glab
to the group axis.
# NOT RUN {
x <- stats::rnorm(50)
xr <- round(x, 1)
stripchart(x) ; m <- mean(par("usr")[1:2])
text(m, 1.04, "stripchart(x, \"overplot\")")
stripchart(xr, method = "stack", add = TRUE, at = 1.2)
text(m, 1.35, "stripchart(round(x,1), \"stack\")")
stripchart(xr, method = "jitter", add = TRUE, at = 0.7)
text(m, 0.85, "stripchart(round(x,1), \"jitter\")")
stripchart(decrease ~ treatment,
main = "stripchart(OrchardSprays)",
vertical = TRUE, log = "y", data = OrchardSprays)
stripchart(decrease ~ treatment, at = c(1:8)^2,
main = "stripchart(OrchardSprays)",
vertical = TRUE, log = "y", data = OrchardSprays)
# }
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