% File src/library/stats/man/biplot.Rd % Part of the R package, https://www.R-project.org % Copyright 1995-2018 R Core Team % Distributed under GPL 2 or later \name{biplot} \alias{biplot} \alias{biplot.default} \title{Biplot of Multivariate Data} \usage{ biplot(x, \dots) \method{biplot}{default}(x, y, var.axes = TRUE, col, cex = rep(par("cex"), 2), xlabs = NULL, ylabs = NULL, expand = 1, xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL, arrow.len = 0.1, main = NULL, sub = NULL, xlab = NULL, ylab = NULL, \dots) } \arguments{ \item{x}{The \code{biplot}, a fitted object. For \code{biplot.default}, the first set of points (a two-column matrix), usually associated with observations.} \item{y}{The second set of points (a two-column matrix), usually associated with variables.} \item{var.axes}{If \code{TRUE} the second set of points have arrows representing them as (unscaled) axes.} \item{col}{A vector of length 2 giving the colours for the first and second set of points respectively (and the corresponding axes). If a single colour is specified it will be used for both sets. If missing the default colour is looked for in the \code{\link{palette}}: if there it and the next colour as used, otherwise the first two colours of the palette are used.} \item{cex}{The character expansion factor used for labelling the points. The labels can be of different sizes for the two sets by supplying a vector of length two.} \item{xlabs}{A vector of character strings to label the first set of points: the default is to use the row \I{dimname} of \code{x}, or \code{1:n} if the \I{dimname} is \code{NULL}.} \item{ylabs}{A vector of character strings to label the second set of points: the default is to use the row \I{dimname} of \code{y}, or \code{1:n} if the \I{dimname} is \code{NULL}.} \item{expand}{An expansion factor to apply when plotting the second set of points relative to the first. This can be used to tweak the scaling of the two sets to a physically comparable scale.} \item{arrow.len}{The length of the arrow heads on the axes plotted in \code{var.axes} is true. The arrow head can be suppressed by \code{arrow.len = 0}.} \item{xlim, ylim}{Limits for the x and y axes in the units of the first set of variables.} \item{main, sub, xlab, ylab, \dots}{graphical parameters.} } \description{ Plot a biplot on the current graphics device. } \details{ A biplot is plot which aims to represent both the observations and variables of a matrix of multivariate data on the same plot. There are many variations on biplots (see the references) and perhaps the most widely used one is implemented by \code{\link{biplot.princomp}}. The function \code{biplot.default} merely provides the underlying code to plot two sets of variables on the same figure. Graphical parameters can also be given to \code{biplot}: the size of \code{xlabs} and \code{ylabs} is controlled by \code{cex}. } \section{Side Effects}{ a plot is produced on the current graphics device. } \references{ K. R. Gabriel (1971). The biplot graphical display of matrices with application to principal component analysis. \emph{Biometrika}, \bold{58}, 453--467. \doi{10.2307/2334381}. J.C. Gower and D. J. Hand (1996). \emph{Biplots}. Chapman & Hall. } \seealso{\code{\link{biplot.princomp}}, also for examples.} \keyword{hplot} \keyword{multivariate}