Tessellation Using Polar Coordinates
Create a tessellation with tiles defined by polar coordinates (radius and angle).
polartess(W, ..., nradial = NULL, nangular = NULL,
radii = NULL, angles = NULL,
origin = NULL, sep = "x")W |
A window (object of class |
... |
Ignored. |
nradial |
Number of tiles in the radial direction.
A single integer.
Ignored if |
nangular |
Number of tiles in the angular coordinate.
A single integer.
Ignored if |
radii |
The numeric values of the radii, defining the tiles in the radial
direction. A numeric vector, of length at least 2, containing
nonnegative numbers in increasing order. The value |
angles |
The numeric values of the angles defining the tiles in the angular coordinate. A numeric vector, of length at least 2, in increasing order, containing angles in radians. |
origin |
Location to be used as the origin of the polar coordinates.
Either a numeric vector of length 2 giving the spatial location
of the origin, or one of the strings
|
sep |
Argument passed to |
A tessellation will be formed from tiles defined by intervals in the polar coordinates r (radial distance from the origin) or θ (angle from the horizontal axis) or both. These tiles look like the cells on a dartboard.
If the argument radii is given, tiles will be demarcated
by circles centred at the origin, with the specified radii.
If radii is absent but nradial is given,
then radii will default to a sequence
of nradial+1 radii equally spaced from zero to the maximum
possible radius. If neither radii nor nradial are given,
the tessellation will not include circular arc boundaries.
If the argument angles is given, tiles will be demarcated
by lines emanating from the origin at the specified angles.
The angular values can be any real numbers; they will be interpreted
as angles in radians modulo 2*pi,
but they must be an increasing sequence of numbers.
If angles is absent but nangular is given,
then angles will default to a sequence
of nangular+1 angles equally spaced from 0 to 2*pi.
If neither angles nor nangular are given,
the tessellation will not include linear boundaries.
A tessellation (object of class "tess").
Adrian Baddeley Adrian.Baddeley@curtin.edu.au.
Y <- c(2.8, 1.5)
plot(polartess(letterR, nangular=6, radii=(0:4)/2, origin=Y),
do.col=TRUE)Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.