gf_freqpoly {ggformula} | R Documentation |
Formula interface to geom_freqpoly()
Description
Visualise the distribution of a single continuous variable by dividing
the x axis into bins and counting the number of observations in each bin.
Histograms (geom_histogram()
) display the counts with bars; frequency
polygons (geom_freqpoly()
) display the counts with lines. Frequency
polygons are more suitable when you want to compare the distribution
across the levels of a categorical variable.
Usage
gf_freqpoly(
object = NULL,
gformula = NULL,
data = NULL,
...,
alpha,
color,
group,
linetype,
linewidth,
binwidth,
bins,
center,
boundary,
xlab,
ylab,
title,
subtitle,
caption,
geom = "path",
stat = "bin",
position = "identity",
show.legend = NA,
show.help = NULL,
inherit = TRUE,
environment = parent.frame()
)
Arguments
object |
When chaining, this holds an object produced in the earlier portions of the chain. Most users can safely ignore this argument. See details and examples. |
gformula |
A formula with shape |
data |
The data to be displayed in this layer. There are three options: If A A |
... |
Additional arguments. Typically these are
(a) ggplot2 aesthetics to be set with |
alpha |
Opacity (0 = invisible, 1 = opaque). |
color |
A color or a formula used for mapping color. |
group |
Used for grouping. |
linetype |
A linetype (numeric or "dashed", "dotted", etc.) or a formula used for mapping linetype. |
linewidth |
A numerical line width or a formula used for mapping linewidth. |
binwidth |
The width of the bins. Can be specified as a numeric value
or as a function that calculates width from unscaled x. Here, "unscaled x"
refers to the original x values in the data, before application of any
scale transformation. When specifying a function along with a grouping
structure, the function will be called once per group.
The default is to use the number of bins in The bin width of a date variable is the number of days in each time; the bin width of a time variable is the number of seconds. |
bins |
Number of bins. Overridden by |
center , boundary |
bin position specifiers. Only one, |
xlab |
Label for x-axis. See also |
ylab |
Label for y-axis. See also |
title , subtitle , caption |
Title, sub-title, and caption for the plot.
See also |
geom , stat |
Use to override the default connection between
|
position |
Position adjustment, either as a string naming the adjustment
(e.g. |
show.legend |
logical. Should this layer be included in the legends?
|
show.help |
If |
inherit |
A logical indicating whether default attributes are inherited. |
environment |
An environment in which to look for variables not found in |
Value
a gg object
Specifying plot attributes
Positional attributes (a.k.a, aesthetics) are specified using the formula in gformula
.
Setting and mapping of additional attributes can be done through the
use of additional arguments.
Attributes can be set can be set using arguments of the form attribute = value
or
mapped using arguments of the form attribute = ~ expression
.
In formulas of the form A | B
, B
will be used to form facets using
facet_wrap()
or facet_grid()
.
This provides an alternative to
gf_facet_wrap()
and
gf_facet_grid()
that is terser and may feel more familiar to users
of lattice.
Evaluation
Evaluation of the ggplot2 code occurs in the environment of gformula
.
This will typically do the right thing when formulas are created on the fly, but might not
be the right thing if formulas created in one environment are used to create plots
in another.
See Also
Examples
data(penguins, package = "palmerpenguins")
gf_histogram(~ bill_length_mm | species, alpha = 0.2, data = penguins, bins = 20) |>
gf_freqpoly(~bill_length_mm, data = penguins, color = ~species, bins = 20)
gf_freqpoly(~bill_length_mm, color = ~species, data = penguins, bins = 20)
gf_dens(~bill_length_mm, data = penguins, color = "navy") |>
gf_freqpoly(after_stat(density) ~ bill_length_mm,
data = penguins,
color = "red", bins = 20
)