Plot (!) a Trellis Object

USAGE:

print.trellis(x, position, split, more = F) 

ARGUMENTS:

x
a Trellis object i.e. an object of class trellis.
position
a vector of 4 numbers, typically c(xmin, ymin, xmax, ymax) that give the lower-left and upper-right corners of a rectangle in which the Trellis plot of x is to be positioned. The coordinate system for this rectangle is [0-1] in both the x and y directions.
split
a vector of 4 integers, c(x,y,nx,ny), that says to position the current plot at the x,y position in a regular array of nx by ny plots.
more
a logical flag that tells whether more plotting is to be carried out on the current page after x is drawn.

VALUE:

an invisible version of x.

SIDE EFFECTS:

print.trellis causes the Trellis object x to be plotted on the page. It is ordinarily called automatically by the standard print loop when the top-level expression produces a Trellis object. However, it can be called explicitly if the user wants to control plot positioning by the use of the arguments split or position. By default, the object occupies the full page aside from any outer margins that are in effect.
It is generally a bad idea to try to position any multi-page trellis objects.

SEE ALSO:

.

EXAMPLES:

# print two trellis objects, one above the other, on a single page 
print.trellis(obj1, split = c(1,1,1,2), more = T)  # bottom 
print.trellis(obj2, split = c(1,2,1,2), more = F)  # top