X-Git-Url: https://git.donarmstrong.com/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=man%2Fsubtreeplot.Rd;h=ce6863ecdde096270d3e6b73fdf88f58d8a7d76b;hb=68231d0918c593b45fdfa419c6a58e10b1c993b9;hp=c9f80cee949ee3ded03824a218ef4561410da23d;hpb=a3ddfc06dd47c560b3ec5869ac104b0c68441eb1;p=ape.git diff --git a/man/subtreeplot.Rd b/man/subtreeplot.Rd index c9f80ce..ce6863e 100644 --- a/man/subtreeplot.Rd +++ b/man/subtreeplot.Rd @@ -6,13 +6,13 @@ (supposedly large) and a portion of it determined by clicking on the nodes of the phylogeny. On exit, returns the last subtree visualized. } \usage{ -subtreeplot(phy, wait=FALSE, ...) +subtreeplot(x, wait=FALSE, ...) } \arguments{ \item{x}{an object of class \code{"phylo"}.} \item{wait}{a logical indicating whether the node beeing processed should be printed (useful for big phylogenies).} - \item{...}{further arguments passed to \code{plot.phylo}.} + \item{\dots}{further arguments passed to \code{plot.phylo}.} } \details{ This function aims at easily exploring very large trees. The main argument is @@ -28,6 +28,7 @@ subtreeplot(phy, wait=FALSE, ...) \code{\link{plot.phylo}}, \code{\link{drop.tip}}, \code{\link{subtrees}} } \examples{ +\dontrun{ #example 1: simple tree1<-rtree(50) #random tree with 50 leaves tree2<-subtreeplot(tree1, wait=TRUE) # on exit, tree2 will be a subtree of tree1. @@ -36,4 +37,5 @@ tree2<-subtreeplot(tree1, wait=TRUE) # on exit, tree2 will be a subtree of tree1 tree1<-rtree(60) tree2<-subtreeplot(subtreeplot(subtreeplot(tree1))) #allows three succssive zooms. } +} \keyword{hplot}