\name{C_01_trellis.device} \alias{trellis.device} \alias{standard.theme} \alias{canonical.theme} \alias{col.whitebg} \title{ Initializing Trellis Displays } \description{ Initialization of a display device with appropriate graphical parameters. } \usage{ trellis.device(device = getOption("device"), color = !(dev.name == "postscript"), theme = lattice.getOption("default.theme"), new = TRUE, retain = FALSE, \dots) standard.theme(name, color) canonical.theme(name, color) col.whitebg() } \arguments{ \item{device}{ function (or the name of one as a character string) that starts a device. Admissible values depend on the platform and how \R was compiled (see \code{\link{Devices}}), but usually \code{"pdf"}, \code{"postscript"}, \code{"png"}, \code{"jpeg"} and at least one of \code{"X11"}, \code{"windows"} and \code{"quartz"} will be available. } \item{color}{ logical, whether the initial settings should be color or black and white. Defaults to \code{FALSE} for postscript devices, \code{TRUE} otherwise. Note that this only applies to the initial choice of colors, which can be overridden using \code{theme} or subsequent calls to \code{\link{trellis.par.set}} (and by arguments supplied directly in high level calls for some settings). } \item{theme}{ list of components that changes the settings of the device opened, or, a function that when called produces such a list. The function name can be supplied as a quoted string. These settings are only used to modify the default settings (determined by other arguments), and need not contain all possible parameters. A possible use of this argument is to change the default settings by specifying \code{lattice.options(default.theme = "col.whitebg")}. For back-compatibility, this is initially (when lattice is loaded) set to \code{options(lattice.theme)}. If \code{theme} is a function, it will not be supplied any arguments, however, it is guaranteed that a device will already be open when it is called, so one may use \code{.Device} inside the function to ascertain what device has been opened. } \item{new}{ logical flag indicating whether a new device should be started. If \code{FALSE}, the options for the current device are changed to the defaults determined by the other arguments. } \item{retain}{ logical. If \code{TRUE} and a setting for this device already exists, then that is used instead of the defaults for this device. By default, pre-existing settings are overwritten (and lost). } \item{name}{ name of the device for which the setting is required, as returned by \code{.Device} } \item{\dots}{ additional parameters to be passed to the \code{device} function, most commonly \code{file} for non-screen devices, as well as \code{height}, \code{width}, etc. See the help file for individual devices for admissible arguments. } } \details{ Trellis Graphics functions obtain the default values of various graphical parameters (colors, line types, fonts, etc.) from a customizable \dQuote{settings} list. This functionality is analogous to \code{\link{par}} for standard \R graphics and, together with \code{\link{lattice.options}}, mostly supplants it (\code{\link{par}} settings are mostly ignored by Lattice). Unlike \code{\link{par}}, Trellis settings can be controlled separately for each different device type (but not concurrently for different instances of the same device). \code{standard.theme} and \code{col.whitebg} produce predefined settings (a.k.a. themes), while \code{trellis.device} provides a high level interface to control which \dQuote{theme} will be in effect when a new device is opened. \code{trellis.device} is called automatically when a \code{"trellis"} object is plotted, and the defaults can be used to provide sufficient control, so in a properly configured system it is rarely necessary for the user to call \code{trellis.device} explicitly. The \code{standard.theme} function is intended to provide device specific settings (e.g. light colors on a grey background for screen devices, dark colors or black and white for print devices) which were used as defaults prior to \R 2.3.0. However, these defaults are not always appropriate, due to the variety of platforms and hardware settings on which \R is used, as well as the fact that a plot created on a particular device may be subsequently used in many different ways. For this reason, a \dQuote{safe} default is used for all devices from \R 2.3.0 onwards. The old behaviour can be reinstated by setting \code{standard.theme} as the default \code{theme} argument, e.g. by putting \code{options(lattice.theme = "standard.theme")} in a startup script (see the entry for \code{theme} above for details). } \value{ \code{standard.theme} returns a list of components defining graphical parameter settings for Lattice displays. It is used internally in \code{trellis.device}, and can also be used as the \code{theme} argument to \code{trellis.par.set}, or even as \code{theme} in \code{trellis.device} to use the defaults for another device. \code{canonical.theme} is an alias for \code{standard.theme}. \code{col.whitebg} returns a similar (but smaller) list that is suitable as the \code{theme} argument to \code{trellis.device} and \code{\link{trellis.par.set}}. It contains settings values which provide colors suitable for plotting on a white background. Note that the name \code{col.whitebg} is somewhat of a misnomer, since it actually sets the background to transparent rather than white. } \note{ Earlier versions of \code{trellis.device} had a \code{bg} argument to set the background color, but this is no longer supported. If supplied, the \code{bg} argument will be passed on to the device function; however, this will have no effect on the Trellis settings. It is rarely meaningful to change the background alone; if you feel the need to change the background, consider using the \code{theme} argument instead. } \references{ Sarkar, Deepayan (2008) "Lattice: Multivariate Data Visualization with R", Springer. \url{http://lmdvr.r-forge.r-project.org/} } \author{ Deepayan Sarkar \email{Deepayan.Sarkar@R-project.org}} \seealso{ \code{\link{Lattice}} for an overview of the \code{lattice} package. \code{\link{Devices}} for valid choices of \code{device} on your platform. \code{\link{trellis.par.get}} and \code{\link{trellis.par.set}} can be used to query and modify the settings \emph{after} a device has been initialized. The \code{par.settings} argument to high level functions, described in \code{\link{xyplot}}, can be used to attach transient settings to a \code{"trellis"} object. } \keyword{dplot}