A couple of things that I did not see mentioned by the others:
Generally statistics plots work better in .png files than in .jpg
files due to the type of compression each uses (detailed image plots
and some surface plots may be the exception), though that may be out
of your control (some journals
Ah, I misread the querent as wanting four plots of three panels each, not a
single plot with three panels. Since that's not true, Jim's is the best
solution (but mind the missing commas in the iris subsets).
Sarah
On Apr 28, 2012, at 8:28 AM, Jim Lemon wrote:
> On 04/28/2012 08:40 PM, Tejas K
On 04/28/2012 08:40 PM, Tejas Kale wrote:
Hello!
I have a 'for' loop that generates a plot with each iteration. I would
either like the plots to be stacked one below the other in a single
.jpg file or be stored in three different files with each file being
named dynamically. The following code i
I don't think jpeg supports pages, but you have other options, including one
you asked about:
Use a device like pdf() that supports pages and don't call dev.off() until the
loop has finished.
Use paste() to give each graph a separate name, rather than overwriting them at
each iteration, such as
Hello!
I have a 'for' loop that generates a plot with each iteration. I would
either like the plots to be stacked one below the other in a single
.jpg file or be stored in three different files with each file being
named dynamically. The following code is an illustration of my query
(but does not
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