Dan N. You'll need to provide something to make this reproducible.
Typically that would be a very **small** example created with random data or dput your data. In addition you'd need to explain what TA is, since I think that might be the issue. Also some additional info like platform, additional things you tried (e.g. running in R - to remove the potential for Rpy to be a cause). You can also try using chart_Series, add_TA, add_BBands and add_Vo to see if that fixes your issue. That is the new version of chartSeries that isn't 'complete', but it is much nicer for most basic things. In general the 'is this broken?' is a non-starter for help, since it places the additional burden of recreating your environment on the helper. In this case, the helper is also the person who helped the first time by writing and providing the code that you are using. Of course all of this is in the posting guide(s). Best, Jeff On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 1:23 PM, Dan N. <[email protected]> wrote: > Notice the numbers running up the left hand side of the graph, covering the > y-axis. > > - using Python rpy2. > - create charts using Quantmod, example code below > > robjects.r['pdf'](file=filename) > robjects.r['chartSeries'](dataf, subset=subset, theme="white", TA=TA) > robjects.r['dev.off']() > > Any ideas? > > > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-finance > -- Subscriber-posting only. If you want to post, subscribe first. > -- Also note that this is not the r-help list where general R questions > should go. > -- Jeffrey Ryan [email protected] www.lemnica.com _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-sig-finance -- Subscriber-posting only. If you want to post, subscribe first. -- Also note that this is not the r-help list where general R questions should go.
