Hi R folk I have a distance time graph for a locomotive and at various times different events occur on board the loco. I want to put a vertical line on the speed time graph for each event, but I want to colour each different kind of event differently to see visually whether there's any pattern to these events happening. I could just create a vector of colours and use abline which is easy obviously, but there's a different number of events for each loco and what I would like to do is to use rainbow to create a new palette for each graph
To illustrate I have some model code (made-up and v simplified) Real times are not necessarily whole numbers so there's not a one to one correspondence between times and index of time elements sec.time<-seq(0,100) distance<-c(rep(0, 10),rep(1,5),rep(2,20),rep(3,10),rep(4,20),rep(5,5),rep(6,31)) plot(sec.time,distance,type="l") horntime<-c(7,23,52,67,81,90) wipertime<-c(4,18,34,47,62,78,89) calltime<-c(27,58,93) abline(v=sec.time[horntime], col="red") abline(v=sec.time[wipertime], col="blue") abline(v=sec.time[calltime], col="green") what I want, in this case as there are three events, is to have horn in red, wiper in blue and call in green using rainbow with 3. The problem is that I can't see how to call rainbow using a sequence (for loop doesn't work) and putting horn/wiper/call as vectors in a list doesn't work as it's too recursive. I suppose that I could put horn/wiper/call etc into a matrix of width the longest vector and fill the other spaces with dummy -1 but this seems a bit inelegant and also in principle I'd like to be able to call rainbow in the desired way as I have to prepare various graphs of different aspects of loco behaviour If anyone has any ideas I'd be v grateful Thanks Nick [[alternative HTML version deleted]] ______________________________________________ R-help@r-project.org mailing list -- To UNSUBSCRIBE and more, see 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.