\name{plot.table} \alias{plot.table} \title{Plot Methods for `table' Objects} \description{ This is a method of the generic \code{plot} function for (contingency) \code{\link{table}} objects. Whereas for two- and more dimensional tables, a \code{\link{mosaicplot}} is drawn, one-dimensional ones are plotted \dQuote{bar like}. } \usage{ %% Improvement ideas: see code definition, currently in ../R/plot.R \method{plot}{table}(x, type = "h", ylim = c(0, max(x)), lwd = 2, xlab = NULL, ylab = NULL, frame.plot = is.num, \dots) } \arguments{ \item{x}{a \code{\link{table}} (like) object.} \item{type}{plotting type.} \item{ylim}{range of y-axis.} \item{lwd}{line width for bars when \code{type = "h"} is used in the 1D case.} \item{xlab, ylab}{x- and y-axis labels.} \item{frame.plot}{logical indicating if a frame (\code{\link{box}}) should be drawn in the 1D case. Defaults to true when \code{x} has \code{\link{dimnames}} coerceable to numbers.} \item{\dots}{further graphical arguments, see \code{\link{plot.default}}.} } \details{ The current implementation (R 1.2) is somewhat experimental and will be improved and extended. } \seealso{\code{\link{plot.factor}}, the \code{\link{plot}} method for factors.} \examples{ ## 1-d tables (Poiss.tab <- table(N = rpois(200, lam= 5))) plot(Poiss.tab, main = "plot(table(rpois(200, lam=5)))") plot(table(state.division)) ## 4-D : plot(Titanic, main ="plot(Titanic, main= *)") } \keyword{hplot} \keyword{category}