[R] Thinning Lattice Plot
David L Carlson
dcarlson at tamu.edu
Tue Jul 31 01:15:25 CEST 2012
You might also check ?pdf on your system. On Windows the default is for
compression. Your code creates a 186K file although it is slow to load
reflecting the overhead from decompressing the file.
----------------------------------------------
David L Carlson
Associate Professor of Anthropology
Texas A&M University
College Station, TX 77843-4352
> -----Original Message-----
> From: r-help-bounces at r-project.org [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-
> project.org] On Behalf Of David Winsemius
> Sent: Monday, July 30, 2012 5:47 PM
> To: Elliot Joel Bernstein
> Cc: r-help at r-project.org
> Subject: Re: [R] Thinning Lattice Plot
>
>
> On Jul 30, 2012, at 2:13 PM, Elliot Joel Bernstein wrote:
>
> > Is there an easy way to "thin" a lattice plot? I often create plots
> > from
> > large data sets, and use the "pdf" command to save them to a file,
> > but the
> > resulting files can be huge, because every point in the underlying
> > dataset
> > is rendered in the plot, even though it isn't possible to see that
> > much
> > detail.
> >
> > For example:
> >
> > require(Hmisc)
> > x <- rnorm(1e6)
> >
> > pdf("test.pdf")
> > Ecdf(x)
> > dev.off()
> >
> > The resulting pdf files is 31MB. Is there any easy way to get a
> > smaller pdf
> > file without having to manually prune the dataset?
>
> There are plotting routines that display the density of distributions.
> I use hexbin fairly frequently but that is for 2d plots. If you
> wanted the ECDF of a 1d vector, you could use cumsum() on the output
> of hist() or quantile() with suitable arguments to their parameters to
> control the degree of aggregation. Either of these yields an 8KB file
> on my machine.
>
> > pdf("test.pdf")
> > xyplot( cumsum(hist(x, plot=F)$intensities) ~ hist(x, plot=F)
> $breaks )
> > dev.off()
> quartz
> 2
>
> > pdf("test.pdf")
> > xyplot( (0:100)/100 ~ quantile(x, prob=(0:100)/100) )
> > dev.off()
> quartz
> 2
>
>
>
> >
> > Thanks.
> >
> > - Elliot
> >
> > --
> > Elliot Joel Bernstein, Ph.D. | Research Associate | FDO Partners, LLC
> > 134 Mount Auburn Street | Cambridge, MA | 02138
> > Phone: (617) 503-4619 | Email: elliot.bernstein at fdopartners.com
> >
>
> David Winsemius, MD
> Alameda, CA, USA
>
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