On 17/05/2011 8:24 AM, Pierre Bruyer wrote:
Thank you for your answer, but the function spline() (and a lot of other 
function in R)  can't take in its parameters the original contour which are 
define by a vector, i.e. :


If you post some reproducible code to generate the contours, someone will show you how to use splines to interpolate them.

Duncan Murdoch

        ##creation of breaks for colors
        i<-1 
        paliers<- c(-1.0E300)
        while(i<=length(level[,1]))
        {
                paliers<- c(paliers,level[i,1])
                i<- i+1
        }
        paliers<- c(paliers, 1.0E300)



Le 17 mai 2011 à 13:05, Duncan Murdoch a écrit :

>  On 11-05-17 5:58 AM, Pierre Bruyer wrote:
>>  I'm a French developer (so I am sorry if my english is not perfect). I have 
a problem to smooth the contours of a map. I have a dataset with 3 columns, x, y and 
z, where x and y are the coordinates of my points and z is evaluate to a qualitative 
elevation and his representation is a set of colors, which is define by levels.
>>
>>  The problem is the curve of my contour is so linear, and I would like a 
more continuous contour. I use the function fitted.contour to draw my map.
>
>  If you use a finer grid of x,y values you'll get shorter segments and they 
will look smoother.
>
>  You might be able to use a smooth interpolator (e.g. spline()) rather than 
linear interpolation, but those occasionally do strange things e.g.
>
>  x<- c(1:4, 5.9, 6:10)
>  y<- c(1:4,   7, 6:10)
>  plot(spline(x,y, n=200), type="l")
>  points(x,y)
>
>  where one point is out of line with the others, but the curve 
overcompensates in order to stay smooth.
>
>  Duncan Murdoch


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