.- help for ^tabplot6^ .- Table of frequencies as one or more bar charts or histograms ------------------------------------------------------------ ^tabplot6^ [rowvar] colvar [^if^ exp] [^in^ range] [weight] [ ^, colpr colfr colpc rowpr rowfr rowpc xasis yasis w^idth^(^#^)^ ^z^ero graph_options ] Description ----------- ^tabplot6^ plots a table of frequencies in graphical form. It is intended for use when at least one of the variables shown is categorical. ^tabplot6^ colvar plots a vertical bar chart or histogram of the frequencies of colvar. The frequencies are regarded as one row of a multi-column table. ^tabplot6^ rowvar colvar plots the frequency of each combination of row and column as an array of bars with height proportional to frequency, that is, as a series of vertically stacked bar charts or histograms. The bars are unshaded. By default they take up 50% of the horizontal space: this may be varied directly by use of the ^width( )^ option. By default both variables are mapped in sort order to successive integers from 1 up, but original values are used as value labels: this may be varied by use of the ^xasis^ or ^yasis^ options. ^tabplot6^ is a renamed version of ^tabplot^ 1.0.1 of 26 February 1999, written for Stata 6. Users of Stata 8 on would switch to ^tabplot^ 2.0.0 or later. Remarks ------- ^tabplot6^ colvar differs from ^hist^: ^tabplot6^ allows the width of bars to be controlled, but not the shading. Thus bars may touch or not touch according to choice. ^hist^ behaves conversely, and bars always touch unless there are gaps in the data. ^tabplot6^, but not ^hist^, takes categorical variables coded as strings. ^hist^ always takes values literally. ^hist^ produces a maximum of 50 bins, whereas ^tabplot6^ is unlimited. ^tabplot6^ rowvar colvar, ^xasis^ may be useful for stacking histograms vertically. A typical protocol would be .^ gen Numvar = round(numvar, ^#^)^ .^ _crcslbl Numvar numvar^ .^ tabplot6 catvar Numvar, xasis w(^#^)^ Options ------- ^colpr^, ^colfr^, ^colpc^, ^rowpr^, ^rowfr^, ^rowpc^ scale frequencies to be proportions (fractions), adding to 1, or percents, adding to 100, of each column or row total. ^colpr^ and ^colfr^ are numerically equivalent but the text produced on the graph will be ^proportion^ or ^fraction^ respectively: the same distinction applies to ^rowpr^ and ^rowfr^. The ^col^* options are useful only when two variables are plotted. ^width(^#^)^ specifies the widths of the bars. The default is ^width(0.5)^. This may need changing with option ^xasis^. ^xasis^ and ^yasis^ specify that the x (column) and y (row) variables are to be treated literally (that is, numerically). Most commonly, ^xasis^ will be specified if the x variable is a measured scale or a graded variable with gaps. If values 1 to 5 are labelled A to E, but no 4 (D) is present in the data, ^xasis^ prevents a mapping to 1 (A) ... 4 (E). ^zero^ specifies that zeros are to be shown explicitly by bars of zero height, shown in practice by a discernible line. graph_options are options allowed with ^graph, twoway^, other than ^symbol^ and ^connect^, ^xlabel^ by itself and ^ylabel^ by itself. ^yreverse^ and ^yline( )^ may be useful. Note that these options do not include ^shading^. ^t1(" ")^ may be used to blank out the ^t1title( )^ that by default signals the maximum quantity plotted when two variables are specified. Examples -------- . ^tabplot6 rep78^ . ^tabplot6 for rep78^ . ^tabplot6 for mpg, xasis w(1)^ Author ------ Nicholas J. Cox, University of Durham, U.K. n.j.cox@@durham.ac.uk Also see -------- On-line: help for @graph@, @hist@, @histplot@ (if installed)