Dear useRs, by a circular diagram representation I mean what you will get by entering this at your R promt:
pie(1:5) Nice to have R as a lingua franca :-) The folowing quote is from page 360 in this very interesting paper: @article{SpenceI2005, title = {No Humble Pie: The Origins and Usage of a Statistical Chart}, author = {Spence, I.}, journal = {Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics}, volume = {30}, pages = {353-368}, year = {2005} } QUOTE Like us, the French employ a gastronomical metaphor when they refer to Playfair's pie chart, but they have preferred instead to invoke the name of the wonderful round soft cheese from Normandy - the camembert. When I spent 4 months in Paris a few years ago, a friend invited my wife and me to lunch with her elderly father who lives in Rouen, Normandy, about an hour North of Paris. Her father inquired - coincidentally during the cheese course - what work I was doing in Paris; I replied that I was researching the activities of a Scot, William Playfair, during the revolutionary period. I told him that Playfair had invented several statistical graphs, including the pie chart, which I referred to, in French, as <<le camembert.>> After a stunned silence of perhaps a couple of seconds, the distinguished elderly gentleman looked me in the eye and exclaimed, <<Mon Dieu ! Notre camembert?>> UNQUOTE So, I'm just curious: how do you refer in your own language to this kind of graphic? How do you call it? Best, Jean -- Jean R. Lobry ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) Laboratoire BBE-CNRS-UMR-5558, Univ. C. Bernard - LYON I, 43 Bd 11/11/1918, F-69622 VILLEURBANNE CEDEX, FRANCE allo : +33 472 43 27 56 fax : +33 472 43 13 88 http://pbil.univ-lyon1.fr/members/lobry/ ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.