Frank E Harrell Jr Professor and ChairmanSchool of Medicine
Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University
On Sat, 14 Aug 2010, David Winsemius wrote:
On Aug 14, 2010, at 9:59 AM, Frank Harrell wrote:
Once you guys figure all this out, I'm glad to modif
On Aug 14, 2010, at 9:59 AM, Frank Harrell wrote:
Once you guys figure all this out, I'm glad to modify bplot to pass
more arguments lattice if needed.
As always, Frank, I appreciate your support. In this case I think it's
not needed. What seems to be needed is simply the correct use of
Once you guys figure all this out, I'm glad to modify bplot to pass
more arguments lattice if needed.
Frank E Harrell Jr Professor and ChairmanSchool of Medicine
Department of Biostatistics Vanderbilt University
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010, David Winsemius wrote:
O
On Aug 13, 2010, at 11:25 PM, Duncan Mackay wrote:
Hi David
I do not know if you have done something like this.
I had tried a few efforts like that, starting with an examination of
str(bp.plot) as you demonstrate.
I tried str(bp.plot) which gave the section about the regions (for
colou
Hi David
I do not know if you have done something like this.
I tried str(bp.plot) which gave the section about the regions (for colours) as:
$ panel.args.common:List of 8
..$ x : num [1:2500] 27 28 29 29.9 30.9 ...
..$ y : num [1:2500] 141 141 141 141 141 ...
..$ z : num [1:
I have a plot produced by function bplot (package = rms) that is
really a lattice plot (class="trellis"). It is similar to this plot
produced by a very minor modification of the first example on the
bplot help page:
requiere(rms)
n <- 1000# define sample size
set.seed(17) # so can rep
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