# (R) Plotting quantile regression coefficient distribution with quantreg package [duplicate]

Possible Duplicate:
Multiple plots with high-level plotting functions, especially plot.rqs()

I'm running 18 quantile regressions with one dependent and one independent variable. I want a $6 * 3$ tile plot of the distributions of the 18 slope estimates across $\tau = 0.01,0.02,...,0.99$.

Here's what I've been able to do so far:

require(quantreg)

op <- par(xlab="")
y=rnorm(200)
x=rnorm(200)
plot(summary(rq(y~x,tau=1:99/100)),parm=2,main="",mfrow=c(6,3),mar=c(0.5,2,2,2))
par(new=TRUE)
plot(summary(rq(y~x,tau=1:99/100)),parm=2,main="",mfrow=c(6,3),mar=c(0.5,2,2,2))


The second plot goes all the way to the bottom right, and when I try a third time it's not even in the graph window.

I've tried to put the par(mfrow=c(6,3)) outside of the plot() but it didn't work.

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## marked as duplicate by casperOne♦Aug 25 '12 at 15:47

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There are 50 or more warnings. What shows up when you type warnings() ? –  Peter Flom Aug 24 '12 at 0:24
It's just "In rq.fit.br(x, y, tau = tau, ci = TRUE, ...) : Solution may be nonunique". Happens all the time doesn't matter what variables you're using. It's from rq(), not from plot(). –  user1125946 Aug 24 '12 at 0:30
@DWin My data is the y and x that I generated in the code that I supplied. –  user1125946 Aug 24 '12 at 4:12
I don't think you can use par statements in the plot statement. What does parm=2 do? –  smillig Aug 24 '12 at 8:22
see the top answer to this question. –  Roland Aug 24 '12 at 8:43

## 2 Answers

The default behavior of plot.summary.rqs is to construct a tile plot with one plot for each parameter, which may be what you have been accustomed to seeing, but as Roland says it is using par() in a manner that defeats your efforts. You can overcome this a couple of ways. One would be to redo the function. But if you want to leave the function unchanged, you could just make an auxillary function (a copy of the original with a new name) that comments out the par calls (there are 2) and use it for your subsequent plotting within the framework.

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I've tried to create a new function that's identical to plot.summary.rqs, with the only difference being (following what you said) that both instances of par(mfrow = mfrow_orig, mar = mar_orig) were commented out with #. Then I copied your code (with par(new=TRUE) in between each call) and the first call of the new function made a graph that took up the whole graphical device (instead of being small and adhering to my desired mfrow). –  user1125946 Aug 25 '12 at 3:30
No need for the par(new=TRUE). Notice I did not use it in my screenshot. The layout gets populated one by one after it gets set up by the first call. I think the new=TRUE will overwrite the first plot and defeat your purpose. –  BondedDust Aug 25 '12 at 4:42
I tried it first without par(new=TRUE) and it didn't work. Let plot2 be a function that's identical to plot.summary.rqs in every way except for the fact that the two par(.....) rows have been deleted. Then I run the four lines --- Line 1: y=rnorm(200), Line 2: x=rnorm(200), Line 3: plot(summary(rq(y~x,tau=1:99/100)),parm=2,main="",mfrow=c(6,3),mar=c(0.5,2,2,2)‌​), Line 4: plot2(summary(rq(y~x,tau=1:99/100)),parm=2,main="",mar=c(0.5,2,2,2)), and there will be a graphical device window with one plot and no tiling as I want with mfrow. –  user1125946 Aug 25 '12 at 4:53
My apologies. I realize now I had commented out the second par() call in making a modified copy of plot.summary.rqs so that it would not restore the original par settings. So I now have a plot.summary.rqs with the second par(.) commented out and one plot2.summary.rqs with both par commented out. ( And use no new=TRUE). –  BondedDust Aug 25 '12 at 6:33
You can add an ,xaxt=NULL argument to the argument list and ,xaxt=xaxt to the plot call in the function and then xaxt="n" in the console call. –  BondedDust Aug 25 '12 at 7:20

First of all, I would worry about those warnings.

The problem is that plot.summary.rqs sets and resets the plotting parameters, which is not nice imho. One solution would be to define your own plotting function based on plot.summary.rqs without this feature.

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(1) I'll give that a go, thanks. However, I will wait for a few more days in case someone knows because so many papers do the tiled plot and I can't see anyone complaining on R forums so it's probably the way I'm coding it. (2) (1:99)/100 is the same as 1:99/100. –  user1125946 Aug 24 '12 at 8:20