scale_manual {ggplot2} | R Documentation |
Create your own discrete scale
Description
These functions allow you to specify your own set of mappings from levels in the data to aesthetic values.
Usage
scale_colour_manual(
...,
values,
aesthetics = "colour",
breaks = waiver(),
na.value = "grey50"
)
scale_fill_manual(
...,
values,
aesthetics = "fill",
breaks = waiver(),
na.value = "grey50"
)
scale_size_manual(..., values, breaks = waiver(), na.value = NA)
scale_shape_manual(..., values, breaks = waiver(), na.value = NA)
scale_linetype_manual(..., values, breaks = waiver(), na.value = "blank")
scale_linewidth_manual(..., values, breaks = waiver(), na.value = NA)
scale_alpha_manual(..., values, breaks = waiver(), na.value = NA)
scale_discrete_manual(aesthetics, ..., values, breaks = waiver())
Arguments
... |
Arguments passed on to
|
values |
a set of aesthetic values to map data values to. The values
will be matched in order (usually alphabetical) with the limits of the
scale, or with |
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 |
breaks |
One of:
|
na.value |
The aesthetic value to use for missing ( |
Details
The functions scale_colour_manual()
, scale_fill_manual()
, scale_size_manual()
,
etc. work on the aesthetics specified in the scale name: colour
, fill
, size
,
etc. However, the functions scale_colour_manual()
and scale_fill_manual()
also
have an optional aesthetics
argument that can be used to define both colour
and
fill
aesthetic mappings via a single function call (see examples). The function
scale_discrete_manual()
is a generic scale that can work with any aesthetic or set
of aesthetics provided via the aesthetics
argument.
Color Blindness
Many color palettes derived from RGB combinations (like the "rainbow" color
palette) are not suitable to support all viewers, especially those with
color vision deficiencies. Using viridis
type, which is perceptually
uniform in both colour and black-and-white display is an easy option to
ensure good perceptive properties of your visualizations.
The colorspace package offers functionalities
to generate color palettes with good perceptive properties,
to analyse a given color palette, like emulating color blindness,
and to modify a given color palette for better perceptivity.
For more information on color vision deficiencies and suitable color choices see the paper on the colorspace package and references therein.
See Also
The documentation for differentiation related aesthetics.
The documentation on colour aesthetics.
The manual scales and manual colour scales sections of the online ggplot2 book.
Other size scales: scale_size()
, scale_size_identity()
.
Other shape scales: scale_shape()
, scale_shape_identity()
.
Other linetype scales: scale_linetype()
, scale_linetype_identity()
.
Other alpha scales: scale_alpha()
, scale_alpha_identity()
.
Other colour scales:
scale_alpha()
,
scale_colour_brewer()
,
scale_colour_continuous()
,
scale_colour_gradient()
,
scale_colour_grey()
,
scale_colour_hue()
,
scale_colour_identity()
,
scale_colour_steps()
,
scale_colour_viridis_d()
Examples
p <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(mpg, wt)) +
geom_point(aes(colour = factor(cyl)))
p + scale_colour_manual(values = c("red", "blue", "green"))
# It's recommended to use a named vector
cols <- c("8" = "red", "4" = "blue", "6" = "darkgreen", "10" = "orange")
p + scale_colour_manual(values = cols)
# You can set color and fill aesthetics at the same time
ggplot(
mtcars,
aes(mpg, wt, colour = factor(cyl), fill = factor(cyl))
) +
geom_point(shape = 21, alpha = 0.5, size = 2) +
scale_colour_manual(
values = cols,
aesthetics = c("colour", "fill")
)
# As with other scales you can use breaks to control the appearance
# of the legend.
p + scale_colour_manual(values = cols)
p + scale_colour_manual(
values = cols,
breaks = c("4", "6", "8"),
labels = c("four", "six", "eight")
)
# And limits to control the possible values of the scale
p + scale_colour_manual(values = cols, limits = c("4", "8"))
p + scale_colour_manual(values = cols, limits = c("4", "6", "8", "10"))