Apply Smoothing to Function Values
Applies smoothing to the values in selected columns of a function value table.
## S3 method for class 'fv' Smooth(X, which = "*", ..., method=c("smooth.spline", "loess"), xinterval=NULL)
X |
Values to be smoothed.
A function value table (object of class |
which |
Character vector identifying which columns of the table
should be smoothed. Either a vector containing names
of columns, or one of the wildcard strings |
... |
Extra arguments passed to |
method |
Smoothing algorithm. A character string, partially matched
to either |
xinterval |
Optional. Numeric vector of length 2 specifying a range of x values. Smoothing will be performed only on the part of the function corresponding to this range. |
The command Smooth.fv
applies smoothing to the function values in
a function value table (object of class "fv"
).
Smooth.fv
is a method for the generic function
Smooth
.
The smoothing is performed either by
smooth.spline
or by
loess
.
Smoothing is applied to every column (or to each of the selected columns) of function values in turn, using the function argument as the x coordinate and the selected column as the y coordinate. The original function values are then replaced by the corresponding smooth interpolated function values.
The optional argument which
specifies which of the
columns of function values in x
will be smoothed.
The default (indicated by the wildcard which="*"
)
is to smooth all function values, i.e.\ all columns except the
function argument. Alternatively which="."
designates
the subset of function values that are displayed in the default plot.
Alternatively which
can be a character vector containing the
names of columns of x
.
If the argument xinterval
is given, then
smoothing will be performed only in the specified range
of x values.
Another function value table (object of class "fv"
)
of the same format.
Adrian Baddeley Adrian.Baddeley@curtin.edu.au
and Rolf Turner r.turner@auckland.ac.nz
data(cells) G <- Gest(cells) plot(G) plot(Smooth(G, df=9), add=TRUE)
Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.