\name{barlabels} \alias{barlabels} \title{Label the bars on a barplot} \description{Displays labels on a plot, usually a bar plot.} \usage{ barlabels(xpos,ypos,labels=NULL,cex=1,prop=0.5,miny=0,offset=0,...) } \arguments{ \item{xpos}{A vector, matrix or data frame of x positions for the labels.} \item{ypos}{A vector, matrix or data frame of y positions for the labels.} \item{labels}{The labels to display. Defaults to the values of y.} \item{cex}{Relative size of the labels. See \samp{text}.} \item{prop}{The proportion of \samp{ypos} at which to place the labels. Defaults to 0.5 (the middle).} \item{miny}{The minimum value at which to display labels.} \item{offset}{Amount to horizontally offset successive labels in case of vertical overlaps.} \item{...}{Extra arguments passed to \samp{boxed.labels}.} } \details{ \samp{barlabels} places labels on a plot at horizontal positions \samp{xpos} and vertical positions \samp{ypos} * \samp{pos}. The typical use of this function is to place labels on bars, by default in the middle of the bars. To put labels just over the tops of the bars, set \samp{prop} to 1 and add a constant amount to \samp{ypos}. } \value{nil} \author{Jim Lemon} \seealso{\link{boxed.labels}} \examples{ heights<-c(14,20,9,31,17) barpos<-barplot(heights,main="A redundant bar plot") # show the usual value labels on the bars barlabels(barpos,heights) # now with stacked bars and offsets heights<-matrix(sample(c(1,2,10,15),20,TRUE),ncol=4) barpos<-barplot(heights,main="Another redundant bar plot") barlabels(barpos,heights,offset=0.1) # finally use barp for the plot barpos<-barp(heights,main="A third and final bar plot",col=2:6, names.arg=paste("Day",1:4)) barlabels(barpos$x,barpos$y,matrix(LETTERS[1:5],nrow=5,ncol=4)) } \keyword{misc}