I need it to look like this:
R^2 = some values
And I've tried the code below but it wouldn't work, it came out as "R (expression (^2)) = some values" instead:
text (25, 200, paste ("R (expression (^2)) =", round (rsquarelm2, 2)))
I need it to look like this:
R^2 = some values
And I've tried the code below but it wouldn't work, it came out as "R (expression (^2)) = some values" instead:
text (25, 200, paste ("R (expression (^2)) =", round (rsquarelm2, 2)))
You don't want a character vector, but an expression, hence this
expression(R^2 == 0.85)
is what you need. In this case, you want to substitute in the result of another R operation. For that you want substitute()
or bquote()
. I find the latter easier to work with:
rsquarelm2 <- 0.855463
plot(1:10, 1:10, type = "n")
text(5, 5, bquote(R^2 == .(round(rsquarelm2, 2))))
With bquote()
, anything in .( )
is evaluated and the result is included in the expression returned.
The paste
function returns a string, not an expression. I prefer to use bquote
for cases like this:
text(25, 200, bquote( R^2 == .(rs), list(rs=round(rsquarelm2,2))))
How to include formatting and mathematical values in plots is FAQ 7.13.
For example, if
ahat
is an estimator of your parametera
of interest, use
title(substitute(hat(a) == ahat, list(ahat = ahat)))
(note that it is
‘==’
and not‘=’
). Sometimesbquote()
gives a more compact form, e.g.,title(bquote(hat(a) = .(ahat)))
where subexpressions enclosed in
‘.()’
are replaced by their values.
demo(plotmath)
is also useful.
In this case, you can use either
title(substitute(R^2 = rsq, list(rsq = format(rsquarelm2, digits = 2))))
or
title(bquote(R^2 == .(format(rsquarelm2, digits = 2))))
(format
is more appropriate here than round
, since you want to control how the value is displayed rather than creating an approximation of the value itself.)