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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T11:46:16+00:00 2026-05-22T11:46:16+00:00

In the example below I would like to be able to control when I

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In the example below I would like to be able to control when I go to the next plot by a using mouse click (or keyboard entry)

for (i in 1:5){
    plot(1:i)
    Sys.sleep(1)
    #add something here that requests mouse click to proceed
}

Is this possible? There is a setting in the X11() help file caled ‘clickToConfirm’ but I can’t work out what that does.

It would also be helpful to me to be to be able to scroll back and forth through plots using the arrow keys. Is this possible?

Currently if I need to look at lots of plots I output them into a big .pdf file and scroll though them all there, but that is a bit cumbersome.

Thanks

Tom

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T11:46:17+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 11:46 am

    In R, that would be done by setting par(ask=TRUE). Try the following code, which shows how to reset the par when exiting the function :

    op <- par(ask=TRUE)
    for (i in 1:5){
        plot(1:i)
    }
    par(op)
    

    If you want to keep a history to browse through, you can either open a window and click on recording in the History menu, or you can open the window yourself with the history on. Demonstrated in a function :

    plot.fun <- function(){
        windows(record=TRUE) # opens a window and starts recording
        op <- par(ask=TRUE)
        on.exit(par(op))
    
        for (i in 1:5){
            plot(1:i)
        }
        windows.options(record=FALSE) #stops recording.
    }
    plot.fun()
    

    This will however keep all previous plots in the history for browsing as well, so if you run this code 3 times you’ll have 15 plots in the plot history. Also note that the open plot window will keep on recording until you turn off the recording in the menu.

    You can play with the plot history, as you’ll have a variable .SavedPlots which contains the saved plot history. It can be cleared using the menu History > clear history in the plot window. If you want to clear the history from the console, you could hack that by

    .SavedPlots <- NULL 
    

    But I advise you not to do this, as changing the .SavedPlots variable can cause R to crash.

    See also ?windows and ?recordPlot for a bit more information. But as you’re getting close to the internal code of R, be warned that you can get pretty awkward behaviour if you start playing around with these things.

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