Wow, this works, Gabor, but I am mystified. I would have tought an expression needed the word expression, and/or a text string needed to be within quotes. What is happening here, exactly? Why the use of "~"? I tried without and it no longer works.
Thanks in advance, Denis Le 07-03-18 à 08:59, Gabor Grothendieck a écrit : > Sorry, legend= was omitted: > > plot(1:10) > legend("topleft", legend = This ~ study ~ italic(n) == 3293) > > On 3/18/07, Chabot Denis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Thank you Marc, Jim and Gabor, >> >> I like the solution with "expression", nice and simple. Gabor, your >> solution did not work, probably just a matter of putting the text >> inside an expression? >> >> However it would be nice if the help system pointed to it. A search >> on "italics" brought me nothing, one on "italic" gave me 4 hits, none >> useful. And reading the help on plotmath, I found no mention of >> italic >> (). Where can we suggest additions to the help system? >> >> I must plead guilty to have forgotten a RSiteSearch before posting. I >> just did and I think I might have figured out something out there. >> But your answers were nice and to the point! >> >> Cheers, >> >> Denis >> Le 07-03-17 à 23:30, Marc Schwartz a écrit : >> >> > On Sat, 2007-03-17 at 21:56 -0500, Marc Schwartz wrote: >> >> On Sat, 2007-03-17 at 22:01 -0400, Chabot Denis wrote: >> >>> Hi, >> >>> >> >>> As part of the legend to a plot, I need to have the "n" in >> italics >> >>> because it is a requirement of the journal I aim to publish in: >> >>> "This study, n = 3293" >> >>> >> >>> Presently I have: >> >>> legend(20, 105, "This study, n = 3293", pch=1, col=rgb >> (0,0,0,0.5), >> >>> pt.cex=0.3, cex=0.8, bty="n") >> >>> >> >>> I suppose I could leave a blank in place of the "n", then issue a >> >>> text call where I'd use font=3 for a single letter, "n". But >> it will >> >>> be tricky to find the exact location to use. >> >>> >> >>> Is there a way to switch to font=3 just for one letter within a >> >>> string? >> >>> >> >>> Thanks in advance, >> >>> >> >>> Denis Chabot >> >> >> >> Denis, >> >> >> >> Try something like this: >> >> >> >> plot(20, 100) >> >> >> >> leg <- legend(20, 105, "This study, = 3293", pch = 1, >> >> col=rgb(0,0,0,0.5), pt.cex = 0.3, cex = 0.8, >> >> bty = "n") >> >> >> >> text(leg$text$x + strwidth("This study, ", cex = 0.8), >> >> leg$text$y, "n", font = 3, cex = 0.8, adj = c(0, 0.5)) >> >> >> >> >> >> Note that legend returns a list structure, which contains the x >> and y >> >> coordinates of the start of the text strings that are plotted. So >> >> I get >> >> that information for your line of text. >> >> >> >> Next, I use strwidth() to calculate, in user coordinates, the >> >> length of >> >> the characters preceding the 'n', including spaces. We add that >> >> distance to the x coordinate returned in the legend call. >> >> >> >> I also use the 'adj' argument in the text() call, so that it is in >> >> synch >> >> with the same parameters in legend() for alignment with the other >> >> letters. >> >> >> >> See ?strwidth for more information. >> >> >> >> You may have to tweak the horizontal spacing of the 'n' a bit, >> >> depending >> >> upon the rest of your graph. >> > >> > Denis, >> > >> > I thought of another approach, using plotmath. >> > >> > First, create a text expression, specifying that the 'n' should be >> > italicized. Then use that expression in the legend() call. >> > >> > txt <- expression(paste("This study, ", italic(n), " = 3293")) >> > >> > plot(20, 100) >> > >> > legend(20, 105, txt, pch = 1, col=rgb(0,0,0,0.5), >> > pt.cex = 0.3, cex = 0.8, bty = "n") >> > >> > >> > That's easier that the first solution. See ?plotmath >> > >> > HTH, >> > >> > Marc Schwartz >> > >> > >> >> ______________________________________________ R-help@stat.math.ethz.ch mailing list 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.