aes_position | R Documentation |
The following aesthetics can be used to specify the position of elements:
x
, y
, xmin
, xmax
, ymin
, ymax
, xend
, yend
.
x
and y
define the locations of points or of positions along a line
or path.
x
, y
and xend
, yend
define the starting and ending points of
segment and curve geometries.
xmin
, xmax
, ymin
and ymax
can be used to specify the position of
annotations and to represent rectangular areas.
In addition, there are position aesthetics that are contextual to the
geometry that they're used in. These are xintercept
, yintercept
,
xmin_final
, ymin_final
, xmax_final
, ymax_final
, xlower
, lower
,
xmiddle
, middle
, xupper
, upper
, x0
and y0
. Many of these are used
and automatically computed in geom_boxplot()
.
width
and height
The position aesthetics mentioned above like x
and y
are all location
based. The width
and height
aesthetics are closely related length
based aesthetics, but are not position aesthetics. Consequently, x
and y
aesthetics respond to scale transformations, whereas the length based
width
and height
aesthetics are not transformed by scales. For example,
if we have the pair x = 10, width = 2
, that gets translated to the
locations xmin = 9, xmax = 11
when using the default identity scales.
However, the same pair becomes xmin = 1, xmax = 100
when using log10 scales,
as width = 2
in log10-space spans a 100-fold change.
Geoms that commonly use these aesthetics: geom_crossbar()
,
geom_curve()
, geom_errorbar()
, geom_line()
, geom_linerange()
,
geom_path()
, geom_point()
, geom_pointrange()
, geom_rect()
,
geom_segment()
Scales that can be used to modify positions:
scale_continuous()
,
scale_discrete()
,
scale_binned()
,
scale_date()
.
See also annotate()
for placing annotations.
Other aesthetics documentation:
aes()
,
aes_colour_fill_alpha
,
aes_group_order
,
aes_linetype_size_shape
# Generate data: means and standard errors of means for prices
# for each type of cut
dmod <- lm(price ~ cut, data = diamonds)
cut <- unique(diamonds$cut)
cuts_df <- data.frame(
cut,
predict(dmod, data.frame(cut), se = TRUE)[c("fit", "se.fit")]
)
ggplot(cuts_df) +
aes(
x = cut,
y = fit,
ymin = fit - se.fit,
ymax = fit + se.fit,
colour = cut
) +
geom_pointrange()
# Using annotate
p <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(x = wt, y = mpg)) + geom_point()
p
p + annotate(
"rect", xmin = 2, xmax = 3.5, ymin = 2, ymax = 25,
fill = "dark grey", alpha = .5
)
# Geom_segment examples
p + geom_segment(
aes(x = 2, y = 15, xend = 2, yend = 25),
arrow = arrow(length = unit(0.5, "cm"))
)
p + geom_segment(
aes(x = 2, y = 15, xend = 3, yend = 15),
arrow = arrow(length = unit(0.5, "cm"))
)
p + geom_segment(
aes(x = 5, y = 30, xend = 3.5, yend = 25),
arrow = arrow(length = unit(0.5, "cm"))
)
# You can also use geom_segment() to recreate plot(type = "h")
# from base R:
set.seed(1)
counts <- as.data.frame(table(x = rpois(100, 5)))
counts$x <- as.numeric(as.character(counts$x))
with(counts, plot(x, Freq, type = "h", lwd = 10))
ggplot(counts, aes(x = x, y = Freq)) +
geom_segment(aes(yend = 0, xend = x), size = 10)
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.