[R] Lattice: How to color the data points in splom() according to the panel they are plotted?
Deepayan Sarkar
deepayan.sarkar at gmail.com
Sun Jan 17 10:39:21 CET 2010
On Sat, Jan 16, 2010 at 11:56 PM, Peter Ehlers <ehlers at ucalgary.ca> wrote:
> Marius Hofert wrote:
>>
>> Dear ExpeRts,
>>
>> I have the scatter plot matrix as given below. I would like the different
>> "sub-plots" in the scatter plot matrix to be colored differently. How do I
>> get all points shown in the upper-left plot (on position (1,1) in the
>> scatter plot matrix) to be plotted in blue, and the points shown in the plot
>> to the right (on position (1,2) in the scatter plot matrix) to be plotted in
>> red? More generally, how can I provide a matrix of colors to be used by
>> splom() such that all data points in the corresponding sub-plot of the
>> scatter plot matrix are shown in the specified color?
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Marius
>>
>> Here is the code:
>>
>> library(lattice)
>>
>> entrymat=matrix(0,nrow=3,ncol=3)
>> entrymat[1,2]="black"
>> entrymat[1,3]="blue"
>> entrymat[2,3]="red"
>> entrymat=t(entrymat)
>>
>> splom(~iris[,1:3],superpanel=function(z,...){
>>
>> mymat.df=data.frame(rows=as.vector(row(entrymat)),cols=as.vector(col(entrymat)),entries=as.vector(entrymat))
>> mymat.df=subset(mymat.df,cols<rows)
>> with(mymat.df,{
>> panel.text(x=rows,y=cols,labels=entries)
>> })
>>
>> panel.pairs(z,upper.panel=panel.splom,lower.panel=function(...){},...)
>> },varnames=c("1","2","3")
>> )
>
> I think that you will have to modify panel.pairs to get what
> you want. But I must admit that I can't see why you would
> want such a plot. What's achieved by having different
> colours in different subpanels? And you would lose the
> ability to colour groups differently (or things would become
> really complicated and messy).
Thanks, I was going to say the same thing, except that it would be
conceptually simpler just to add the 'i' and 'j' values as arguments
to the "panel" function (the 'pargs' variable). The colors could then
be passed through as part of the ... arguments, and the relevant entry
extracted in the panel function.
The other option is to keep a global counter and increment it inside
the panel function, and choosing colors based on that counter and
knowledge of the order in which panels are drawn. Not very elegant,
but the least intrusive solution I can think of.
-Deepayan
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