[R] Fwd: Re: Creating "Envelope" around a plot

William Dunlap wdunlap at tibco.com
Mon Nov 2 17:51:54 CET 2015


Instead of computing the envelopes (of various radii) of paths and seeing
if they intersect
you could compute distances between paths and seeing if they are smaller
than a given
distance.  Computing the distance between 2 polylines is not difficult,
although computing
it quickly for very long sequences of line segments is more difficult.

Bill Dunlap
TIBCO Software
wdunlap tibco.com

On Mon, Nov 2, 2015 at 7:19 AM, WRAY NICHOLAS <nicholas.wray at ntlworld.com>
wrote:

>
> > ---------- Original Message ----------
> >     From: WRAY NICHOLAS <nicholas.wray at ntlworld.com>
> >     To: Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com>, r-help
> > <r-help at missing_domain>
> >     Date: at
> >     Subject: Re: [R] Creating "Envelope" around a plot
> >
> >
> >     Hi Dennis again, I see what you're getting at and it looks rather
> groovy
> >  but unfortunately what I actually need is the vector of the points on
> the
> > boundary (the graphics just being a way of checking that everything's as
> it
> > should be) and so it rather looks like I need to do a lot of calculating
> of
> > orthogonal vectors along straight stretches and circles round peaks
> >
> >     I'm looking to do an algorithmic filtration of strands which lie
> within
> > the "envelope" of other strands -- your method would allow visual "by
> hand"
> > inspection but unfortunately I've got hundreds of strands to compare!
> >
> >     But thanks again -- useful thoughts  Nick
> >
> >         > >
> > >         On 02 November 2015 at 15:03 Duncan Murdoch
> > > <murdoch.duncan at gmail.com> wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > >         On 02/11/2015 7:33 AM, WRAY NICHOLAS wrote:
> > >         > Hi I am plotting various strands of information, and I want
> to
> > >         > create an
> > >         > "envelope" around each line, so that the locus of the
> envelope is
> > >         > the boundary
> > >         > points no more than a fixed maximum distance from the plotted
> > >         > line, a bit like
> > >         > drawing a larger rectangle with paralle sides and curved
> compass
> > >         > corners around
> > >         > a smaller rectangle. Obviously I can work out how to do this
> in
> > >         > code
> > >         > (eventually) but I suspect it would take me a while and i was
> > >         > wondering whether
> > >         > there was some R function which I don't know about which
> creates
> > >         > sets of of
> > >         > points at a given maximal distance
> > >         >
> > >         > the lines are simple vectors, ie like this noddy example
> > >         >
> > >         > veca<-c(4,3,6,5,7,3,2,3,3,6,8,7)
> > >         > plot(veca,type="l",lwd=2)
> > >         >
> > >         > then I want to plot the locus of the boundary of all points
> no
> > >         > more than (say) 1
> > >         > unit from the line I imagine that one would have to provide a
> > >         > larger set of
> > >         > interpolated points between the actual points of veca, but I
> can
> > >         > do that no
> > >         > problem
> > >         >
> > >         > I'd be grateful if anyone out there in the R-ethervoid has
> any
> > >         > ideas
> > >
> > >         The graphics system will do this for you automatically if your
> > >         coordinate system has the same scale in x and y, and you use a
> > > really
> > >         huge line width. For example,
> > >
> > >         veca<-c(4,3,6,5,7,3,2,3,3,6,8,7)plot(veca, lwd=150, col="gray",
> > > type="l")lines(veca, lwd=2)
> > >
> > >
> > >         If you want to be 1 unit away in user coordinates and the x
> and y
> > > scales
> > >         are different, it will be a lot harder.
> > >
> > >         Duncan Murdoch
> > >
> > >     >
> >     >
> >
>
>
>
>         [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>
> ______________________________________________
> R-help at r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see
> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
> PLEASE do read the posting guide
> http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>

	[[alternative HTML version deleted]]



More information about the R-help mailing list