openair colours
Pre-defined openair colours and definition of user-defined colours
openColours(scheme = "default", n = 100)
scheme |
The pre-defined schemes are "increment", "default", "brewer1",
"heat", "jet", "hue", "greyscale", or a vector of R colour names e.g.
c("green", "blue"). It is also possible to supply colour schemes from the
Simplified versions of the Sequential colours are useful for ordered data where there is a need to show a difference between low and high values with colours going from light to dark. The pre-defined colours that can be supplied are: "Blues", "BuGn", "BuPu", "GnBu", "Greens", "Greys", "Oranges", "OrRd", "PuBu", "PuBuGn", "PuRd", "Purples", "RdPu", "Reds", "YlGn", "YlGnBu", "YlOrBr", "YlOrRd". Diverging palettes put equal emphasis on mid-range critical values and extremes at both ends of the data range. Pre-defined values are: "BrBG", "PiYG", "PRGn", "PuOr", "RdBu", "RdGy", "RdYlBu", "RdYlGn", "Spectral". Qualitative palettes are useful for differentiating between categorical data types. The pre-defined schemes are "Accent", "Dark2", "Paired", "Pastel1", "Pastel2", "Set1", "Set2", "Set3". A colorblind safe pallette "cbPalette" is available based on the work of: http://jfly.iam.u-tokyo.ac.jp/color/ Note that because of the way these schemes have been developed they only
exist over certain number of colour gradations (typically 3–10) — see
? |
n |
number of colours required. |
This in primarily an internal openair function to make it easy for users to select particular colour schemes, or define their own range of colours of a user-defined length.
Each of the pre-defined schemes have merits and their use will depend on a
particular situation. For showing incrementing concentrations e.g. high
concentrations emphasised, then "default", "heat", "jet" and "increment" are
very useful. See also the description of RColorBrewer
schemes for the
option scheme
.
To colour-code categorical-type problems e.g. colours for different pollutants, "hue" and "brewer1" are useful.
When publishing in black and white, "greyscale" is often convenient. With most openair functions, as well as generating a greyscale colour gradient, it also resets strip background and other coloured text and lines to greyscale values.
Failing that, the user can define their own schemes based on R colour names.
To see the full list of names, type colors()
into R.
Returns colour values - see examples below.
David Carslaw
# to return 5 colours from the "jet" scheme: cols <- openColours("jet", 5) cols # to interpolate between named colours e.g. 10 colours from yellow to # green to red: cols <- openColours(c("yellow", "green", "red"), 10) cols
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