| contourLines {grDevices} | R Documentation | 
Calculate Contour Lines
Description
Calculate contour lines for a given set of data.
Usage
contourLines(x = seq(0, 1, length.out = nrow(z)),
             y = seq(0, 1, length.out = ncol(z)),
             z, nlevels = 10,
             levels = pretty(range(z, na.rm = TRUE), nlevels))
Arguments
| x,y | locations of grid lines at which the values in  | 
| z | a matrix containing the values to be plotted ( | 
| nlevels | number of contour levels desired iff
 | 
| levels | numeric vector of levels at which to draw contour lines. | 
Details
contourLines draws nothing, but returns a set of contour lines.
There is currently no documentation about the algorithm. The source code is in ‘R_HOME/src/main/plot3d.c’.
Value
A list of contours, each itself a list with elements:
| level | The contour level. | 
| x | The x-coordinates of the contour. | 
| y | The y-coordinates of the contour. | 
See Also
options("max.contour.segments") for the maximal
complexity of a single contour line.
contour: Its ‘Examples’ demonstrate how
contourLines() can be drawn and are the same (as those from
contour()).
Examples
x <- 10*1:nrow(volcano)
y <- 10*1:ncol(volcano)
cl <- contourLines(x, y, volcano)
## summarize the sizes of each the contour lines :
cbind(lev = vapply(cl, `[[`, .5, "level"),
       n  = vapply(cl, function(l) length(l$x), 1))
z <- outer(-9:25, -9:25)
pretty(range(z), 10) # -300 -200 ... 600 700
utils::str(c2 <- contourLines(z))
   # no segments for {-300, 700};
   #  2 segments for {-200, -100, 0}
   #  1 segment  for  100:600