The first three chapters of Paul Murrell (2006) R Graphics (Chapman & Hall), which Marcin cited, provides a very detailed and useful overview of traditional graphics in R. The rest of the book is devoted to 'lattice' and 'grid' graphics; unfortunately, I have so far not been able to translate that text into improved, routine use of those capabilities. You may also wish to consider Deepayan Sarkar (2008) Lattice: Multivariate Data Visualization with R (Springer). I have not read this book, but it looks like it may make it much easier for someone to master 'lattice' graphics from self-study of a book. Hope this helps. Spencer Graves

Roberto Laforgia wrote:
See the following link:

http://www.amazon.com/Graphics-Computer-Science-Data-Analysis/dp/158488486X/ref=wl_itt_dp?ie=UTF8&coliid=I3TIYS7LRDPIED&colid=1ZQCB91VGW5UR

Regards,

R.L.

Marcin Kozak wrote:
Hi all,

I am looking for a book from which one could learn a wide range of
graphics in R, from the very beginning topics to those advanced
(though not necessarily concerned with a particular method or topic).
I don't look for a list of such books since this is on R's web page, I
am rather interested in your opinion on these books - which you would
recommend. The quality of writing and presentation, easiness of
understanding by non-experts, and such things are all what counts.

Many thanks in advance,
Marcin

--
"Build up your weaknesses until they become your strong points" -- Knute
Rockne

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