Relatedly, since the plot() function – which we’ll discuss shortly – is a generic (see Section 4.11, you might not be surprised to learn that one of its special cases is a boxplot: specifically, if yo...Relatedly, since the plot() function – which we’ll discuss shortly – is a generic (see Section 4.11, you might not be surprised to learn that one of its special cases is a boxplot: specifically, if you use plot() where the first argument x is a factor and the second argument y is numeric, then the result will be a boxplot, showing the values in y, with a separate boxplot for each level.
Relatedly, since the plot() function – which we’ll discuss shortly – is a generic (see Section 4.11, you might not be surprised to learn that one of its special cases is a boxplot: specifically, if yo...Relatedly, since the plot() function – which we’ll discuss shortly – is a generic (see Section 4.11, you might not be surprised to learn that one of its special cases is a boxplot: specifically, if you use plot() where the first argument x is a factor and the second argument y is numeric, then the result will be a boxplot, showing the values in y, with a separate boxplot for each level.