\name{edges} \alias{edges} \alias{fancyarrows} \title{Draw Additional Edges on a Plotted Tree} \description{ \code{edges} draws edges on a plotted tree. \code{fancyarrows} enhances \code{\link[graphics]{arrows}} with triangle and harpoon heads; it can be called from \code{edges}. } \usage{ edges(nodes0, nodes1, arrows = 0, type = "classical", ...) fancyarrows(x0, y0, x1, y1, length = 0.25, angle = 30, code = 2, col = par("fg"), lty = par("lty"), lwd = par("lwd"), type = "triangle", ...) } \arguments{ \item{nodes0, nodes1}{vectors of integers giving the tip and/or node numbers where to start and to end the edges (eventually recycled).} \item{arrows}{an integer between 0 and 3; 0: lines (the default); 1: an arrow head is drawn at \code{nodes0}; 2: at \code{nodes1}; 3: both.} \item{type}{if the previous argument is not 0, the type of arrow head: \code{"classical"} (just lines, the default), \code{"triangle"}, \code{"harpoon"}, or any unambiguous abbreviations of these. For \code{fancyarrows} only the last two are available.} \item{x0, y0, x1, y1}{the coordinates of the start and end points for \code{fancyarrows} (these are not recycled and so should be vectors of the same length).} \item{length, angle, code, col, lty, lwd}{default options similar to those of \code{\link[graphics]{arrows}}.} \item{\dots}{further arguments passed to \code{\link[graphics]{segments}}.} } \details{ The first function is helpful when drawing reticulations on a phylogeny, especially if computed from the edge matrix. } \author{Emmanuel Paradis} \seealso{ \code{\link{plot.phylo}}, \code{\link{nodelabels}} } \examples{ set.seed(2) tr <- rcoal(6) plot(tr, "c") edges(10, 9, col = "red", lty = 2) edges(10:11, 8, col = c("blue", "green")) # recycling of 'nodes1' edges(1, 2, lwd = 2, type = "h", arrows = 3, col = "green") nodelabels() } \keyword{aplot}