Anup, You should have provided some additional information, such as that the function 'hypsometric' is found in the hydroTSM contributed package. Nevertheless, here's what I did (maybe not elegant, but it works) :
(1) at the R command prompt simply type hypsometric -- the source code for the function 'hypsometric' will be written out (2) copy this source code into a text file and save it as hypsometric2.R (3) edit it as this or just copy this: hypsometric2 <- function (x, band = 1, main = "Hypsometric Curve", xlab = "Relative Area above Elevation, (a/A)", ylab = "Relative Elevation, (h/H)", col = "blue", ...) { if (class(x) != "SpatialGridDataFrame") stop("Invalid argument: 'class(x)' must be 'SpatialGridDataFrame'") band.error <- FALSE if (is.numeric(band) | is.integer(band)) { if ((band < 1) | (band > length(colnames(x@data)))) band.error <- TRUE } else if (is.character(band)) if (!(band %in% colnames(x@data))) band.error <- TRUE if (band.error) stop("Invalid argument: 'band' does not exist in 'x' !") mydem <- x@data[band] z.min <- min(mydem, na.rm = TRUE) z.max <- max(mydem, na.rm = TRUE) x.dim <- x@grid@cellsize[1] y.dim <- x@grid@cellsize[2] max.area <- length(which(!is.na(mydem))) * x.dim * y.dim res <- plot.stepfun(ecdf(as.matrix(mydem)), lwd = 0, cex.points = 0) z.mean.index <- which(round(res$y, 3) == 0.5)[1] z.mean <- res$t[z.mean.index] relative.area <- (1 - res$y[-1]) relative.elev <- (res$t[-c(1, length(res$t))] - z.min)/(z.max - z.min) plot(relative.area, relative.elev, xaxt = "n", yaxt = "n", main = main, xlim = c(0, 1), ylim = c(0, 1), type = "l", ylab = ylab, xlab = xlab, col = col, ...) Axis(side = 1, at = seq(0, 1, by = 0.05), labels = TRUE) Axis(side = 2, at = seq(0, 1, by = 0.05), labels = TRUE) f <- splinefun(relative.area, relative.elev, method = "monoH.FC") hi <- integrate(f = f, lower = 0, upper = 1) legend("topright", c(paste("Min Elev. :", round(z.min, 2), "[m.a.s.l.]", sep = " "), paste("Mean Elev.:", round(z.mean, 1), "[m.a.s.l.]", sep = " "), paste("Max Elev. :", round(z.max, 1), "[m.a.s.l.]", sep = " "), paste("Max Area :", round(max.area/1e+06, 1), "[km2]", sep = " "), "", paste("Integral value :", round(hi$value, 3), sep = " "), paste("Integral error :", round(hi$abs.error, 3), sep = " ")), bty = "n", cex = 0.9, col = c("black", "black", "black"), lty = c(NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL)) curve_data<-data.frame(relative.area,relative.elev) return(curve_data) } (4) rather than calling hypsometric(dem), for example, first do this: source(hypsometric2.R) (5) then call: data<-hypsometric2(dem) (6) you can see the x.y pairs by typing: data at the R prompt. (7) verify that the data are what you expect, by typing this at the R prompt: plot(data) which should give the same plot as hypsometric2(dem) and hypsometric(dem) without the embellishments and labeling... Tom On Fri, Apr 26, 2013 at 8:52 AM, Anup khanal <za...@hotmail.com> wrote: > Dear exports,I have created a hypsometric curve (area-elevation curve) for > my watershed by using simple command hypsometric(X,main="Hypsometric > Curve", xlab="Relative Area above Elevation, (a/A)", > ylab="Relative Elevation, (h/H)", col="blue")It plots the hypsometric > curve in "RGraphics window", My question is how can I export values which > is used to create this plot? I mean I want to know the value in y axis for > certain x value. > Thanks in advance ! > > ..................Anup KhanalNorwegian Institute of science and Technology > (NTNU)Trondheim, NorwayMob:(+47) 45174313 > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > ______________________________________________ > 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. > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ 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.