If you’re running R through Rstudio, then the easiest way to save your image is to click on the “Export” button in the Plot panel (i.e., the area in Rstudio where all the plots have been appearing). T...If you’re running R through Rstudio, then the easiest way to save your image is to click on the “Export” button in the Plot panel (i.e., the area in Rstudio where all the plots have been appearing). The reason for this is that my experience with the graphical device provided by Rstudio has led me to suspect that it still has a bunch on non-standard (or possibly just undocumented) features, and so I don’t quite trust that it always does what I expect.
What’s the good of being able to draw pretty pictures in SPSS if you can’t save them and send them to friends to brag about how awesome your data is? How do you save the picture? SPSS actually makes t...What’s the good of being able to draw pretty pictures in SPSS if you can’t save them and send them to friends to brag about how awesome your data is? How do you save the picture? SPSS actually makes this pretty easy. Once you have produced a graph, you can right-click on the picture in the output window and select Export: That will open this screen: