Question on R lattice graphics
Hi, Ignore the last email - R has plotted the number of data points (100) I have and using that as a scale rather than the normalised data values Sorry to be a pest!! Julie Julie Hope (NERC PhD Student) Sediment Ecology Research Group, University of St Andrews & School of Geoscience, Bangor University Scottish Oceans Institute University of St Andrews, East Sands St Andrews, Fife KY16 8LB Tel No: 01334 463469 / Email: jah23 at st-andrews.ac.uk Web: http://synergy.st-andrews.ac.uk/serg
On 19 November 2014 18:48, Julie Hope <jah23 at st-andrews.ac.uk> wrote:
Hi, I am currently using the lattice library and trellis graphs to explore my data. Without going into too much detail of the data I just have a question about how dot plot in the lattice library scales things... I have normalised data that I am exploring as a function of time partitioned by Date *dotplot(NormCarbs ~ time | date)* I also wanted to look at this Normalised data as a function of a conc, again partitioned by Date *dotplot(NormCarbs ~ ugml1 | date)* For the first plot above - the Normcarbs on Y axis is the scale of my original data (0 - 0.1) - (I have very low values) However when the second plot above is run in R, my scale jumps to 1-100 on the Y axis for NormCarbs? I have no idea if the fact that the ugml1 on the X axis is in the region 0 - 350 ugml1 has anything to do with this? Is R correcting to keep both variables in the same order of magnitude? The NormCarbs data for each plot are both draw from the same column of data in my csv file in which the values are between 0 - 0.1. The second plot looks great actually, I'm just wondering what R is doing. The code above is all I have specified? Is it scaling it to allow me to see the data better? I can't really decipher the first plots data as everything is so close together so it would be good to be able to control this to allow me to explore the data better before I start to If so, is there a way for me to control this (i.e. by controlling the scaling) What is R doing mathematically to my data to get this? *Any help on this would be very much appreciated. * *Thank you!* *Julie* Julie Hope (NERC PhD Student) Sediment Ecology Research Group, University of St Andrews & School of Geoscience, Bangor University Scottish Oceans Institute University of St Andrews, East Sands St Andrews, Fife KY16 8LB Tel No: 01334 463469 / Email: jah23 at st-andrews.ac.uk Web: http://synergy.st-andrews.ac.uk/serg