\name{plot.calm} \alias{plot.calm} \title{Plot calibration graphs from calibration models} \description{ Produce graphics of calibration data, the fitted model as well as prediction and confidence intervals. } \usage{ plot.calm(x,...,xunit="",yunit="",measurand="",level=0.95) } \arguments{ \item{x}{ A calibration model of type \code{\link{calm}}. It is named x here because the generic plot method expects x to be its first argument. } \item{...}{ I just included this because I wanted to avoid the error messages from R CMD check that tell me I should read "Writing R extensions" which I did ... } \item{xunit}{ The unit of the given values on the x axis as a character vector. } \item{yunit}{ The unit of the y axis as a character vector. } \item{measurand}{ The name of what is being measured as a character vector. } \item{level}{ The confidence level of the confidence and prediction bands. Defaults to 0.95. } } \value{ A plot of the calibration data, of your fitted model as well as lines showing the confidence limits and the prediction limits. } \examples{ } \author{ Johannes Ranke \email{jranke@uni-bremen.de} \url{http://www.uft.uni-bremen.de/chemie/ranke} } \keyword{regression}