lines(x, y, type="l") points(x, y, type="p")
Graphical parameters may also be supplied as arguments to this function (see par).
Data values with an NA in either x or y are not plotted by points. Also, lines does not draw to or from any such point, thus giving a break in the line segments.
The graphical parameter pch= can be used to plot special symbols at the points. Basic marks are: square (0); octagon (1); triangle (2); cross (3); X (4); diamond (5) and inverted triangle (6). To get superimposed versions of the above use the following arithmetic(!): 7==0+4; 8==3+4; 9==3+5; 10==1+3; 11==2+6; 12==0+3; 13==1+4; 14==0+2. Filled marks are square (15), octagon (16), triangle (17), and diamond (18). Use the mkh graphics parameter to control the size of these marks.
Using the numbers 32 through 126 for pch yields the 95 ASCII characters from space through tilde (see the SPLUS data set font). The numbers between 161 and 252 yield characters, accents, ligatures, or nothing, depending on the font (which is device dependent).
If a log scale is currently in effect for either the x- or y-axis, points and lines will plot the corresponding values on a log scale.
low <- ozone.quartile < 1.8*ozone.median - 35 plot(ozone.median, ozone.quartile, type="n") points(ozone.median[low], ozone.quartile[low], pch=15) points(ozone.median[!low], ozone.quartile[!low], pch=0)usa(xlim=range(ozone.xy$x), ylim=range(ozone.xy$y)) points(ozone.xy$x[low], ozone.xy$y[low], pch=15) points(ozone.xy$x[!low], ozone.xy$y[!low], pch=0)
# produce a plot of all the marks par(usr=c(-1,19,0,1)) for(i in 0:18) { points(i, .5, pch=i); text(i, .35, i) } text(9, .75, 'Samples of "pch=" Parameter') box()