Thanks for the feedback, sir. I believe you are in a position to help work on that area of graphics just like in Eviews and STATA where freedom is given to configure the number of variables to plot after estimation, and even the kind of decomposition. 

As you can as well see that there is a bug in the package already, I believe it is high time to help us work jointly on these areas. 

Moreover, in the SVAR package, the option for a joint graph would be a good thing if can be made available in the next version.

Thanks. 

On Sun, 15 Jan 2023, 11:56 pm Sven Schreiber, <sven.schreiber@fu-berlin.de> wrote:
Am 14.01.2023 um 19:03 schrieb Olasehinde Timmy:
Thanks for the swift response, sir. First, it would be appreciated if this function could be reconsidered for us who don't have much scripting experience. 

I remembered vividly that this limitation wasn't present in some previous versions.

Are you sure? I don't actively remember, but I also don't think anything has changed in that area. When I previously wrote about a 2x2 plot, this was rubbish, for 4 variables of course you already get a 4x4 plot, and 5x5 would be quite big indeed. But again, I agree that today's larger screens could accommodate a little more.

Perhaps an idea would be to enable a middle road between an individual plot and all N^2 plots at once, namely N row-wise joint plots or something like that.

Anyway, with respect to the multiplot package, it so happens that we've almost finished a slightly updated version, and once that's ready we might give an explicit example with VAR IRFs.

BTW, I'm seeing there's a bug with 5 variables when I try to see the multiple residual plot (not an IRF plot): there are only three panels and some plots are overlaid over others.

cheers

sven

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