126

I'm new to R but I've made numerous correlation plots with smaller data sets. However, when I try to plot a large dataset (2gb+), I can produce the plot just fine, but the legend doesn't show up. Any advice? or alternatives?

library(gplots)
r.cor <- cor(r)
layout(matrix(c(1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,2,2), 5, 2, byrow = TRUE))
par(oma=c(5,7,1,1))
cx <- rev(colorpanel(25,"yellow","black","blue"))
leg <- seq(min(r.cor,na.rm=T),max(r.cor,na.rm=T),length=10)
image(r.cor,main="Correlation plot Normal/Tumor data",axes=F,col=cx)
axis(1, at=seq(0,1,length=ncol(r.cor)), labels=dimnames(r.cor)[[2]], 
    cex.axis=0.9,las=2)
axis(2,at=seq(0,1,length=ncol(r.cor)), labels=dimnames(r.cor)[[2]],
     cex.axis=0.9,las=2)
image(as.matrix(leg),col=cx,axes=T)     

Error in plot.new() : figure margins too large

tmp <- round(leg,2)
axis(1,at=seq(0,1,length=length(leg)), labels=tmp,cex.axis=1)
2
  • 1
    You should provide us with a reproducible example demonstrating ills you're having. stackoverflow.com/questions/12765668/… Oct 7, 2012 at 8:34
  • 1
    I tried all of the above, and nothing worked. However, once in a while (at least for a newbie like me), the data in a matrix or data.frame can have been coerced into some type you weren't aware of. In that case, use "as.numeric" before your data to make sure this isn't the problem. Feb 14, 2017 at 8:58

14 Answers 14

167

This error can occur in Rstudio simply because your "Plots" pane is just barely too small. Try zooming your "Files, Plots, Packages, Help, Viewer" and see if it helps!

5
  • 10
    This solved my problem! I had expanded the "Environment" window, shrinking the "Plots", etc. window. I just had to expand the window. Thank you!
    – Rock Lee
    Nov 11, 2014 at 22:21
  • Agreed, this affected my RStudio as well, and just expanding the window helped.
    – Kingz
    May 27, 2015 at 6:31
  • Sometimes I accidentally end up with a number of panes due to using par(). par(mfrow=c(1,1)) can reset you to one pane.
    – Matt
    Feb 24, 2016 at 17:56
  • 1
    it was very weird error for me since I am new to R. Never had any issues before with any other languages/IDE where IDE layout will impact my code!!
    – Adarsha
    Jul 20, 2016 at 9:02
  • For me, the reason was that the x-axis names (written vertically) were too long. Enlarging the plot window helped but the error was caused by too little space for the name.
    – sdittmar
    Mar 23, 2019 at 20:07
93

The problem is that the small figure region 2 created by your layout() call is not sufficiently large enough to contain just the default margins, let alone a plot.

More generally, you get this error if the size of the plotting region on the device is not large enough to actually do any plotting. For the OP's case the issue was having too small a plotting device to contain all the subplots and their margins and leave a large enough plotting region to draw in.

RStudio users can encounter this error if the Plot tab is too small to leave enough room to contain the margins, plotting region etc. This is because the physical size of that pane is the size of the graphics device. These are not independent issues; the plot pane in RStudio is just another plotting device, like png(), pdf(), windows(), and X11().

Solutions include:

  1. reducing the size of the margins; this might help especially if you are trying, as in the case of the OP, to draw several plots on the same device.

  2. increasing the physical dimensions of the device, either in the call to the device (e.g. png(), pdf(), etc) or by resizing the window / pane containing the device

  3. reducing the size of text on the plot as that can control the size of margins etc.

Reduce the size of the margins

Before the line causing the problem try:

par(mar = rep(2, 4))

then plot the second image

image(as.matrix(leg),col=cx,axes=T)

You'll need to play around with the size of the margins on the par() call I show to get this right.

Increase the size of the device

You may also need to increase the size of the actual device onto which you are plotting.

A final tip, save the par() defaults before changing them, so change your existing par() call to:

op <- par(oma=c(5,7,1,1))

then at the end of plotting do

par(op)
2
  • Ah, thank you for the clarification. I was manipulating layout(matrix()) instead. Appreciate the help! Oct 7, 2012 at 18:45
  • 3
    this was the right hint for me. I had to increase the image size, or decrease the resolution in png(filename="myfile.png", res=150, width = 1000, height = 1000) Mar 6, 2017 at 10:37
75

If you get this message in RStudio, clicking the 'broomstick' figure "Clear All Plots" in Plots tab and trying plot() again may work.

enter image description here

4
  • 1
    This is the best answer.
    – NewbieDave
    Feb 2, 2016 at 21:06
  • 16
    graphics.off()
    – rawr
    Mar 30, 2016 at 16:58
  • I like this answer
    – O.rka
    Apr 3, 2016 at 14:35
  • This is really the best answer. Thanks. Apr 5, 2016 at 9:21
27

This sometimes happen in RStudio. In order to solve it you can attempt to plot to an external window (Windows-only):

windows() ## create window to plot your file
## ... your plotting code here ...
dev.off() 
5
  • 1
    This is a better answer than buying a bigger monitor. There is also an x11() command that should work on Linux.
    – Ron Jensen
    Jun 2, 2016 at 16:17
  • 1
    The most appropriate answer ever. Thanks. Nov 28, 2018 at 15:56
  • any equivalent for MacOSX ?
    – TeYaP
    Mar 6, 2019 at 13:02
  • I tried this solution when I get Error in plot.new() : figure margins too large error in RStudio when drawing OLS-CUSUM, and it worked miraculously. Many thanks jobligado. Apr 28, 2020 at 19:59
  • For me, dev.off() closed the window, so if you'd like to see it in addition to plotting it, I would skip that line
    – BGranato
    Oct 16, 2020 at 14:32
21

I got this error in R Studio, and was simply fixed by making the sidebar bigger by clicking and dragging on its edge from right to left.

Picture here: https://janac.medium.com/error-in-plot-new-figure-margins-too-large-in-r-214621b4b2af

4
  • 2
    this was the winner. Why is this even a thing?
    – colin
    Jan 1, 2017 at 16:06
  • 2
    None of the other solutions worked for me except this one.
    – zsad512
    Nov 29, 2017 at 16:24
  • 1
    Don't know how or why, but this also was the only solution that worked for me.
    – TheSciGuy
    Feb 12, 2020 at 16:07
  • If this answer helped you, feel free to clap for this article: janac.medium.com/… Dec 8, 2020 at 15:22
10

Check if your object is a list or a vector. To do this, type is.list(yourobject). If this is true, try renaming it x<-unlist(yourobject). This will make it into a vector you can plot.

1
  • This did it for me (using png() / dev.off() in Rstudio).
    – knowah
    Jun 23, 2015 at 22:00
5

enter image description here

Just zoom this area if you use RStudio.

4

I found this error today. Initially, I was trying to output it to a .jpeg file with low width and height.

jpeg("method1_test.jpg", width=900, height=900, res=40)

Later I increased the width and height to:

jpeg("method1_test.jpg", width=1900, height=1900, res=40)

The error was not there. :)

You can also play with the resolution, if the resolution is high, you need more width and height.

2

I had this error when I was trying to plot high dimensional data. If that's what is going on with you, try multidimensional scaling: http://www.statmethods.net/advstats/mds.html

2

I struggled with this error for weeks (using RStudio). I tried moving the plot window bigger and smaller, but that did not consistently help. When I moved (dragged) the application to my bigger monitor, the problem disappeared! I was stunned... so many wasted hours... I knew my code was correct...

1

If margin is low, then it is always better to start with new plotting device:

dev.new()
# plot()
# save your plot
dev.off()

You will never get margin error, unless you plot something large which can not be accommodated.

0

RStudio Plots canvas is limiting the plot width and heights. However if you make your plot from Rmarkdown code chunk, it works without canvas field limitation because plotting area set according to the paper size.

For instance:

    ```{r}
#inside of code chunk in Rmarkdown
        grid <- par(mfrow=c(4, 5))
        plot(faithful, main="Faithful eruptions")
        plot(large.islands, main="Islands", ylab="Area")
        ...
        par(grid)
    ```
0

I found the same error today. I have tried the "Clear all Plots" button, but it was giving me the same error. Then this trick worked for me, Try to increase the plot area by dragging. It will help you for sure.

0

I have just use the Clear all plots then again give the plot command and it was helpfull

1
  • 1
    Welcome to SO. Please can you explain why this is the answer.
    – Mike Poole
    Jul 22, 2019 at 7:21

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