Description Usage Arguments Details See Also Examples
scale_*_gradient
creates a two colour gradient (low-high),
scale_*_gradient2
creates a diverging colour gradient (low-mid-high),
scale_*_gradientn
creates a n-colour gradient.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 | scale_colour_gradient(..., low = "#132B43", high = "#56B1F7",
space = "Lab", na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar",
aesthetics = "colour")
scale_fill_gradient(..., low = "#132B43", high = "#56B1F7",
space = "Lab", na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar",
aesthetics = "fill")
scale_colour_gradient2(..., low = muted("red"), mid = "white",
high = muted("blue"), midpoint = 0, space = "Lab",
na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar", aesthetics = "colour")
scale_fill_gradient2(..., low = muted("red"), mid = "white",
high = muted("blue"), midpoint = 0, space = "Lab",
na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar", aesthetics = "fill")
scale_colour_gradientn(..., colours, values = NULL, space = "Lab",
na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar", aesthetics = "colour",
colors)
scale_fill_gradientn(..., colours, values = NULL, space = "Lab",
na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar", aesthetics = "fill",
colors)
|
... |
Arguments passed on to
|
low, high |
Colours for low and high ends of the gradient. |
space |
colour space in which to calculate gradient. Must be "Lab" - other values are deprecated. |
na.value |
Colour to use for missing values |
guide |
Type of legend. Use |
aesthetics |
Character string or vector of character strings listing the
name(s) of the aesthetic(s) that this scale works with. This can be useful, for
example, to apply colour settings to the |
mid |
colour for mid point |
midpoint |
The midpoint (in data value) of the diverging scale. Defaults to 0. |
colours, colors |
Vector of colours to use for n-colour gradient. |
values |
if colours should not be evenly positioned along the gradient
this vector gives the position (between 0 and 1) for each colour in the
|
Default colours are generated with munsell and
mnsl(c("2.5PB 2/4", "2.5PB 7/10"))
. Generally, for continuous
colour scales you want to keep hue constant, but vary chroma and
luminance. The munsell package makes this easy to do using the
Munsell colour system.
scales::seq_gradient_pal()
for details on underlying
palette
Other colour scales: scale_alpha
,
scale_colour_brewer
,
scale_colour_grey
,
scale_colour_hue
,
scale_colour_viridis_d
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 | df <- data.frame(
x = runif(100),
y = runif(100),
z1 = rnorm(100),
z2 = abs(rnorm(100))
)
# Default colour scale colours from light blue to dark blue
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_point(aes(colour = z2))
# For diverging colour scales use gradient2
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_point(aes(colour = z1)) +
scale_colour_gradient2()
# Use your own colour scale with gradientn
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_point(aes(colour = z1)) +
scale_colour_gradientn(colours = terrain.colors(10))
# Equivalent fill scales do the same job for the fill aesthetic
ggplot(faithfuld, aes(waiting, eruptions)) +
geom_raster(aes(fill = density)) +
scale_fill_gradientn(colours = terrain.colors(10))
# Adjust colour choices with low and high
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_point(aes(colour = z2)) +
scale_colour_gradient(low = "white", high = "black")
# Avoid red-green colour contrasts because ~10% of men have difficulty
# seeing them
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