, don't forget to add xaxs='i', yaxs='i'...
Jean Coursol
--
Quoting Renaud Lancelot [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Try levelplot in package lattice instead of filled.contour: you will
be able to annotate the plot using the grid package. Moreover, you can
remove
Perhaps Destroy key is unknown by Tcl; it is not in the
Event modifiers table in Welch Book...
But try with Control-L or Shift-Control_L, it runs
(but not with Control_L-Shift ??).
Use xmodmap to see the current mappings from keys to modifiers.
Jean Coursol
On Wed, 2 Aug 2006, Franco Mendolia
for( i in levels(mydata$myfactor) ) {
d = mydata[mydata$myfactor==i,]
write.table(d, paste('d', i, '.data', sep='') )
}
Jean Coursol
Quoting Dimitri Szerman [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi,
I searched for this in the mailing list, but found no results.
I have a large dataframe ( dim(mydata
To illustrate (?) Professor Ripley comments, I send you an example (stolen in
various places...).
Note the tkwm.resizable(tt, 0, 0) directive that prevents the window rescaling
(if not,the coordinates will not be correct).
#
# Getting the mouse coords with TclTk
#
# Two possibilities: tkrplot
understand recursive indexing.
With not modified saveP,
saveP[[c(1,2)]]
[[1]]
.Primitive(plot.window)
[[2]]
[1] 1 10
[[3]]
[1] 1 10
[[4]]
[1]
[[5]]
[1] NA
# OK
saveP[[c(1,2,2)]]
Error: recursive indexing failed at level 2
# why not [1] 1 10 ??
Jean Coursol
- horner(z)
nchar(zh)
[1] 2404
parse(text = zh) # = Segmentation fault (it ran one time !!!)
# The R solution (VR S programming p 95)
as.function.polynomial - function(p) {
function(x) { v - 0; for (a in rev(p)) v - a + x*v; v }
}
# is running perfectly...
Jean Coursol