If you just want to see two different plotting windows open at the same time, use dev.new
, e.g.
plot(1:10)
dev.new()
plot(10:1)
If you want to draw two plots in the same window then, as Shane mentioned, set the mfrow
parameter.
par(mfrow = c(2,1))
plot(1:10)
plot(10:1)
If you want to try something a little more advanced, then you can take a look at lattice graphics or ggplot, both of which are excellent for creating conditioned plots (plots where different subsets of data appear in different frames).
A lattice example:
library(lattice)
dfr <- data.frame(
x = rep(1:10, 2),
y = c(1:10, 10:1),
grp = rep(letters[1:2], each = 10)
)
xyplot(y ~ x | grp, data = dfr)
A ggplot example. (You'll need to download ggplot from CRAN first.)
library(ggplot2)
qplot(x, y, data = dfr, facets = grp ~ .)
#or equivalently
ggplot(dfr, aes(x, y)) + geom_point() + facet_grid(grp ~ .)
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