| grid.edit {grid} | R Documentation | 
Changes the value of one of the slots of a grob and redraws the grob.
grid.edit(gPath, ..., strict = FALSE, grep = FALSE,
          global = FALSE, allDevices = FALSE, redraw = TRUE)
grid.gedit(..., grep = TRUE, global = TRUE)
editGrob(grob, gPath = NULL, ..., strict = FALSE, grep = FALSE,
         global = FALSE, warn = TRUE) 
grob | 
 A grob object.  | 
... | 
 Zero or more named arguments specifying new slot values.  | 
gPath | 
  A gPath object. For   | 
strict | 
 A boolean indicating whether the gPath must be matched exactly.  | 
grep | 
 A boolean indicating whether the   | 
global | 
  A boolean indicating whether the function should affect
just the first match of the   | 
warn | 
 A logical to indicate whether failing to find the specified gPath should trigger an error.  | 
allDevices | 
 A boolean indicating whether all open devices should be searched for matches, or just the current device. NOT YET IMPLEMENTED.  | 
redraw | 
 A logical value to indicate whether to redraw the grob.  | 
editGrob copies the specified grob and returns a modified
grob.
grid.edit destructively modifies a grob on the display list.
If redraw
is TRUE it then redraws everything to reflect the change.
Both functions call editDetails to allow a grob to perform
custom actions and validDetails to check that the modified grob
is still coherent.
grid.gedit (g for global) is just a convenience wrapper for
grid.edit with different defaults.
editGrob returns a grob object;  grid.edit returns NULL.
Paul Murrell
grob, getGrob,
addGrob, removeGrob.
grid.newpage()
grid.xaxis(name = "xa", vp = viewport(width=.5, height=.5))
grid.edit("xa", gp = gpar(col="red"))
# won't work because no ticks (at is NULL)
try(grid.edit(gPath("xa", "ticks"), gp = gpar(col="green")))
grid.edit("xa", at = 1:4/5)
# Now it should work
try(grid.edit(gPath("xa", "ticks"), gp = gpar(col="green")))