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\name{barp}
\alias{barp}
\title{A bar plotting routine}
\description{Display a bar plot}
\usage{
barp(height,width=0.4,names.arg=NULL,legend.lab=NULL,legend.pos=NULL,
col=NULL,border=par("fg"),main=NULL,xlab="",ylab="",xlim=NULL,ylim=NULL,
staxx=FALSE,staxy=FALSE, height.at=NULL,height.lab=NULL,
cex.axis=par("cex.axis"),pch=NULL,cylindrical=FALSE,shadow=FALSE,
do.first=NULL,ylog=FALSE,srt=NA)
}
\arguments{
\item{height}{A numeric vector, matrix or data frame that will be represented
as the heights of bars.}
\item{width}{Half the width of a single bar or group of bars in X axis units.}
\item{names.arg}{The labels for the bars or groups of bars.}
\item{legend.lab}{Labels for an optional legend. If NULL, no legend is
displayed.}
\item{legend.pos}{Optional position for the legend as a list with \samp{x}
and \samp{y} components. If this is NULL, \samp{locator} will be called.}
\item{col}{The fill colors for the bars. The default is no fill.}
\item{border}{The border for the bars.}
\item{main}{The title at the top of the plot.}
\item{xlab,ylab}{The labels for the X and Y axes respectively.}
\item{xlim,ylim}{Optional horizontal and vertical limits for the plot.}
\item{staxx,staxy}{Whether to use \link{staxlab} to stagger the
X or Y axis tick labels.}
\item{height.at}{Optional positions of the tick marks on the Y axis.}
\item{height.lab}{Optional tick labels for the Y axis.}
\item{cex.axis}{Character expansion for the axis labels.}
\item{pch}{Symbol(s) to fill the bars. See Details.}
\item{cylindrical}{Whether to give the bars a cylindrical appearance
by shading them.}
\item{shadow}{Whether to place a shadow behind the bars.}
\item{do.first}{An optional expression that will be evaluated before anything
else is displayed on the plot. Useful for background colors or lines.}
\item{ylog}{Logical for whether a log scale is to be used. see details.}
\item{srt}{Rotation of axis labels if staxx or staxy is TRUE (see \samp{staxlab}.}
}
\value{
A list containing two components of the same form as \samp{height}:
\item{x}{The centers of the bars displayed.}
\item{y}{The heights of the bars.}
}
\details{
\samp{barp} displays a bar plot similar to \samp{barplot} but with axes and
horizontal bar positions more like \samp{plot}. Bars or groups of bars are
centered on integral X values, and so both the width and spacing of the bars
are controlled by a single number. If \samp{height} is a vector, single bars
representing each value will be displayed centered at \samp{1:length(height)}.
If \samp{height} is a matrix, 2D array, or data frame, a group of bars will be
drawn for each column, with the values of the group taken from the rows of that
column. The values from \samp{freq} or \samp{brkdn} in the prettyR package can
be used as the \samp{height} argument. The value from \samp{table} can also be
passed as \samp{height}, as can a 2D array returned from the \samp{by} function.
Bars are empty by default but fill colors can be defined in several ways.
If a single color is passed, all bars will be the same color. If \samp{height}
is a vector, colors will be recycled or some will be ignored if the length of
\samp{col} is
not equal to that of \samp{height}. If \samp{height} is a matrix or data frame,
the user may pass a vector of colors equal to the number of rows in \samp{height}
or a matrix of colors of the same dimensions as \samp{height}. Other sequences
of color will probably not result in an easy to interpret plot.
\samp{barp} is intended to simplify illustrating categorical data for which both
the variable designations and the categories are names, as on many multiple
choice questions. \samp{height.at} and \samp{height.lab} allow the user to place
labels on the vertical axis, usually representing the options. If \samp{staxx}
or \samp{staxy} are TRUE, the labels on the horizontal or vertical axes
respectively will be staggered, allowing the user to use many or lengthy variable
or value labels. If \samp{srt} is not NA, these labels will be rotated by that
value as angles in degrees instead of staggered.
\samp{barp} allows two enhancements that may be useful in those areas where fancy
plots are appreciated. One is to give the bars a cylindrical look by shading the
color. The other is to place an apparent shadow behind each bar. Both of these
effects appear as though the light is coming from the upper left, and this is
hard coded. You can add error bars by calling \samp{dispbars}, but many advise
against this.
If \samp{legend.lab} is not NULL, a legend will be displayed. If
\samp{legend.pos} is NA, \samp{locator} is called to place the legend. On
Windows, the alert may not appear on the console, and the function will
appear to hang unless the user clicks on the console window or the plot.
The \samp{ylog} argument produces a log scale on the y axis. Currently,
neither \samp{pretty} nor \samp{axTicks} seems to produce a nice set of axis
ticks, so it is best to pass the positions of these in \samp{height.at}.
If the \samp{pch} argument is not NULL, barp will display white bars filled
with the symbols specified in \samp{pch}. With grouped bars, this must be a
matrix with the same form as the \samp{col} argument. This option allows a
black and white bar plot to be produced.
}
\author{Jim Lemon}
\seealso{\link{staxlab}, \link{barplot}, \link{cylindrect},
\link{gradient.rect}}
\examples{
# get some extra room on the left
par(mar=c(5,5,4,2))
# make up some happiness data, as so many seem to do
happyday<-data.frame(Monday=c(2.3,3.4),Tuesday=c(2.8,3.3),Wednesday=c(3.2,3.1),
Thursday=c(3.6,2.8),Friday=c(4.2,2.6),Saturday=c(4.5,2.9),Sunday=c(4.1,2.8))
happylabels<-c("Utterly dashed","Rather mopey","Indifferent","Somewhat elated",
"Euphoric")
barp(happyday,names.arg=names(happyday),legend.lab=c("Slaves","Unemployed"),
legend.pos=list(x=2,y=4.5),col=c("#ee7700","#3333ff"),main="9AM happiness by weekday",
xlab="Day of week",ylab="Happiness rating",ylim=c(1,5),staxx=TRUE,staxy=TRUE,
height.at=1:5,height.lab=happylabels,cex.axis=0.9,cylindrical=TRUE,
shadow=TRUE)
# now do a plot with colors scaled to the sex ratio (real data!)
sexratio<-c(0.24,0.35,0.09,0.59,0.63,0.34,0.7,0.6)
# the fun ratings are once again a pack of lies
funrating<-c(3.2,3.5,1.5,5.4,4.5,2.7,6.8,4.9)
funstudy<-c("Astronomy","Chemistry","Economics","Anthropology","Linguistics",
"Math/Stats","Psychology","Sociology")
funlabels<-c("Torture","Agony","Boredom","Neutral","Entertaining","Exhilarating",
"Maniacal")
# xrange is used to get the colors to match the 0-100% scale
barp(funrating,names.arg=funstudy,main="Fun ratings for various areas of study",
col=color.scale(sexratio,c(0.2,1),c(0.2,0.4),c(1,0.4),xrange=c(0,1)),
xlab="Study",ylab="Rating",height.at=1:7,height.lab=funlabels,ylim=c(1,7),
staxx=TRUE,staxy=TRUE,cex.axis=0.9)
# here we want the full scale from zero to one
color.legend(2,6,4,6.4,legend=c("100\% guys","100\% girls"),
rect.col=color.scale(seq(0,1,by=0.25),c(0.2,1),c(0.2,0.4),c(1,0.4)))
par(mar=c(5,4,4,2))
# use barp to display a multiple histogram
h1<-table(cut(rnorm(100,4),breaks=seq(0,8,by=2)))
h2<-table(cut(rnorm(100,4),breaks=seq(0,8,by=2)))
h3<-table(cut(rnorm(100,4),breaks=seq(0,8,by=2)))
hmat<-matrix(c(h1,h2,h3),nrow=3,byrow=TRUE)
barp(hmat,names.arg=names(h1),width=0.45,col=2:4,
main="Multiple histogram using barp",xlab="Bins",ylab="Frequency")
legend(3.8,50,c("h1","h2","h3"),fill=2:4)
}
\keyword{misc}
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