1

I need to plot some discrete predictions with probability intervals in ggplot2, but I'm having some problems.

I have the following data.frame

city    pred    min.80    max.80
BH      100     50        150
RJ      120     80        140
SP      90      80        100

I want a plot with the cities on y-axis and the predicted values on x-axis. For each discrete value of y, there should be a horizontal bar with its range being the min.80 and max.80 values. My idea is to use geom_rect from ggplot2 for doing it.

I've tried the following code, but the problem is that I'm converting the discrete variable to continuous in order to plot it, and I lose their values on the label.

> ggplot(df) + geom_rect(aes(xmin=min.80, xmax=max.80, ymin=as.numeric(city)-0.4,
+ ymax=as.numeric(city)+0.4))

Is there another way to do it?

2 Answers 2

4

I suggest you use the geom pointrange or crossbar:

ggplot(df, aes(x=city)) + 
  geom_pointrange(aes(ymin=min.80, ymax=max.80, y=pred)) +
  coord_flip()

enter image description here

ggplot(df, aes(x=city)) + 
  geom_crossbar(aes(ymin=min.80, ymax=max.80, y=pred)) +
  coord_flip()

enter image description here

2
  • +1 Yeah, that's what I was thinking too. FYI: stat = "identity" is the default for both, I believe.
    – joran
    Jun 25, 2012 at 15:34
  • @joran Nice catch, thank you. I started to write a solution using geom_bar and the stat="identity" was an artefact from that...
    – Andrie
    Jun 25, 2012 at 15:38
0

I think you want to keep the y axis as a factor (y=city). This kind of (estimate+interval) data is probably is better done with something like geom_pointrange. After all, the "height" of the rectangle doesn't have an interpretation.

If you have to have the errorbars be horizontal, I've done this before in two ways:

  1. using coord_flip()
  2. Last time I tried coord_flip(), it was a bit limited, so I sometimes also recreated the geom_pointrange() functionality by combining geom_hline() with geom_point().

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