scale_color_okabeito {see} | R Documentation |
Okabe-Ito color palette
Description
The Okabe-Ito color palette was proposed by Okabe and Ito (2008) as a qualitative color palette that is accessible to people with a variety of forms of color vision deficiency. In addition to being accessible, it includes 9 vivid colors that are readily nameable and include colors that correspond to major primary and secondary colors (e.g., red, yellow, blue).
Usage
scale_color_okabeito(
palette = "full",
reverse = FALSE,
order = 1:9,
aesthetics = "color",
...
)
scale_fill_okabeito(
palette = "full",
reverse = FALSE,
order = 1:9,
aesthetics = "fill",
...
)
scale_colour_okabeito(
palette = "full",
reverse = FALSE,
order = 1:9,
aesthetics = "color",
...
)
scale_colour_oi(
palette = "full",
reverse = FALSE,
order = 1:9,
aesthetics = "color",
...
)
scale_color_oi(
palette = "full",
reverse = FALSE,
order = 1:9,
aesthetics = "color",
...
)
scale_fill_oi(
palette = "full",
reverse = FALSE,
order = 1:9,
aesthetics = "fill",
...
)
Arguments
palette |
Character name of palette. Depending on the color scale, can
be |
reverse |
Boolean indicating whether the palette should be reversed. |
order |
A vector of numbers from 1 to 9 indicating the order of colors to use
(default: |
aesthetics |
A vector of names of the aesthetics that this scale
should be applied to (e.g., |
... |
Additional arguments to pass to |
Details
The Okabe-Ito palette is included in the base R grDevices::palette.colors()
.
These functions make this palette easier to use with ggplot2.
The original Okabe-Ito palette's "yellow" color is "#F0E442"
. This color is
very bright and often does not show up well on white backgrounds (see
here)
for a discussion of this issue). Accordingly, by default, this function uses
a darker more "amber" color for "yellow" ("#F5C710"
). This color is the
"yellow" color used in base R >4.0's default color palette.
The palettes "full"
and "black_first"
use this darker yellow color. For
the original yellow color suggested by Okabe and Ito ("#F0E442"
), use
palettes "full_original"
or "black_first_original"
.
The Okabe-Ito palette is only available as a discrete palette. For color-accessible continuous variables, consider the viridis palettes.
References
Okabe, M., & Ito, K. (2008). Color universal design (CUD): How to make figures and presentations that are friendly to colorblind people. https://jfly.uni-koeln.de/color/#pallet (Original work published 2002)
Examples
library(ggplot2)
library(see)
ggplot(iris, aes(x = Species, y = Sepal.Length, fill = Species)) +
geom_boxplot() +
theme_modern() +
scale_fill_okabeito()
ggplot(iris, aes(x = Species, y = Sepal.Length, fill = Species)) +
geom_violin() +
theme_modern() +
scale_fill_oi(palette = "black_first")
# for the original brighter yellow color suggested by Okabe and Ito
ggplot(iris, aes(x = Species, y = Sepal.Length, fill = Species)) +
geom_violin() +
theme_modern() +
scale_fill_oi(palette = "full")
ggplot(iris, aes(x = Species, y = Sepal.Length, fill = Species)) +
geom_violin() +
theme_modern() +
scale_fill_oi(order = c(1, 5, 6, 2, 4, 3, 7))