\name{plotCtDensity} \Rdversion{1.1} \alias{plotCtDensity} %- Also NEED an '\alias' for EACH other topic documented here. \title{Distribution plot for qPCR Ct values.} \description{Function for plotting the density distribution of Ct values from high-throughput qPCR data.} \usage{ plotCtDensity(q, cards = TRUE, xlab = "Ct", ylab = "Density", col, main = NULL, legend = TRUE, lwd = 2, ...) } \arguments{ \item{q}{object of class qPCRset. } \item{cards}{vector, the numbers of the cards to plot. Defaults to TRUE = all cards.} \item{xlab}{character string, label for the x-axis.} \item{ylab}{character string, label for the y-axis.} \item{col}{vector of colours to use, defaults to different colour for each card.} \item{main}{character string, plot title.} \item{legend}{logical, whether to include a colour legend or not.} \item{lwd}{numeric, the width of the lines.} \item{\dots}{any other arguments will be passed to the \code{matplot} function.} } \details{The distribution of Ct values in the qPCRset \code{q} is calculated using \code{density}. } \value{A plot is created on the current graphics device.} \author{Heidi Dvinge} \seealso{\code{\link{matplot}}, \code{\link{density}} } \examples{ # Loading the data data(qPCRraw) # Make plot with all samples or just a few plotCtDensity(qPCRraw) plotCtDensity(qPCRraw, cards=c(1,4)) } \keyword{hplot}