The artefacts that you see are a normal result of using bitmap graphics devices. I have tried to explain these below:
I have looked at your figures in Eye of Gnome, with anti-aliasing turned off (Menu Edit/Preferences; Tab "Image View"; option "Smooth images when zoomed"). I recommend that you do the same. > png('test.png',antialias='none') # type is 'cairo' > plot(1:10) > dev.off() > ## result: no fuzziness at all but the box is missing > ## the top and left border lines > ## http://www.piccdrop.com/images/1229495388.png Cairo works in real (double precision) coordinates. But the line must be converted to bitmap to be displayed. When this is done without anti-aliasing, it is quite possible for a thin horizontal or vertical line to pass in-between the points on a grid that are sampled to form the bitmap image, and hence disappear. > png('test.png') # type is 'cairo' > plot(1:10) > dev.off() > ## result: box lines fuzzy at top and left, and appears > ## darker and thicker where the axes are overplotted > ## http://www.piccdrop.com/images/1229495327.png With anti-aliasing, a horizontal or vertical line may appear as a 1 pixel wide black line, but is more likely to appear as a 2 pixel wide grey line. When two such grey lines are over-plotted, they will create a darker grey line. The overplotted line also appears thicker, but this is an optical illusion. > png('test.png',type='Xlib') > plot(1:10) > dev.off() > ## result: no fuzziness at all and no lines missing > ## http://www.piccdrop.com/images/1229495428.png Xlib works in integer coordinates. When a line is plotted in Xlib, the start and end coordinates are cast to integer before plotting. Hence horizontal/vertical lines will always appear, with a width of 1 pixel and overplotting does not change the appearance of a line. Martyn On Wed, 2008-12-17 at 01:36 -0800, Y-H Chen wrote: > On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 12:54 AM, Prof Brian Ripley > <rip...@stats.ox.ac.uk> wrote: > > Your PDF problems indicate a broken viewer. How were you viewing PDF? > > You are absolutely correct about the PDF files; I've since checked the > PDF files in other viewers and have not been able to reproduce the > problem. There was definitely something wrong with my default viewer. > I am most certainly embarrassed. > > As for the PNG files: I've viewed the PNG files on two different > systems, in various viewers. On a Fedora system in Eye of Gnome, > Firefox, Epiphany, GIMP, and gThumb. And, on a Windows system in > Paint, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and GIMP. I see blurriness in all > of these viewers for all of the files I originally claimed difficultly > with (as mentioned in my last message, I don't see blurriness in the > images produced via type='Xlib'). I'll do more tests on other systems > once I get the chance, but that's what I see at the moment. The files > are linked to in the text file I provided, and you are all invited to > check those out if you are interested. > > ______________________________________________ > 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. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- This message and its attachments are strictly confidenti...{{dropped:8}} ______________________________________________ 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.