1
ggplot() + 
  geom_histogram(data = df1, aes(x=meanf,fill = "g", color="g"), alpha = 0.6,binwidth = 0.02)+
  geom_histogram(data = df2, aes(x=meanf,fill = "b", color="b"), alpha = 0.4,binwidth = 0.02)+
  scale_colour_manual(name="N1", values=c("g" = "green", "b"="blue"), labels=c("b"="1", "g"="2")) +
  scale_fill_manual(name="N2", values=c("g" = "green", "b"="blue"), labels=c("b"="1", "g"="2"))+
  theme_bw()+
  ggsave('temp.jpg')

I am getting the plot with histogram counts, but I want to scale it between 0 and 1. From this question Normalizing y-axis in histograms in R ggplot to proportion , I understand how to do it for one dataframe, but what if I'm using two dataframes, as in my question?

enter image description here

2 Answers 2

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geom_histogram(data = df1, aes(y = ..ncount..,x=meanf,fill = "g", color="g"))

should do it.

If you want both histograms be normalized by the same divisor:

First get the y-range of the original histogram first. Refer here

ggobj <- ggplot() + 
  geom_histogram(data = df1, aes(x=meanf,fill = "g", color="g"), alpha = 0.6,binwidth = 0.02)+
  geom_histogram(data = df2, aes(x=meanf,fill = "b", color="b"), alpha = 0.4,binwidth = 0.02)

y_max <- ggplot_build(ggobj)$panel$ranges[[1]]$y.range[2] 

Then recreate your histogram and scale it with the y_range that you got.

p <- ggplot() + 
      geom_histogram(data = df1, aes(y_max=y_max, y=..count../y_max,x=meanf,fill = "g", color="g"), alpha = 0.6,binwidth = 0.02)+
      geom_histogram(data = df2, aes(y_max=y_max, y=..count../y_max,x=meanf,fill = "b", color="b"), alpha = 0.4,binwidth = 0.02)
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  • When I divide by y_range, I am getting this error even though y_range exists: Error in eval(expr, envir, enclos) : object 'y_range' not found Jul 27, 2015 at 22:34
  • Alright, you can't use an environment variable with the special ggplot variables like ..count.., so you need to redefine it in aes. I fixed the code, it should work now.
    – Onur
    Jul 28, 2015 at 13:32
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Scale the data first! Just create a temporary dataset that has its y-axis scaled between 0 and a certain number--divide everything by that certain number (if you want the top-most to be 1.00, set the divisor to the top number).

2
  • No need for a temporary dataset, you can provide an equation in the plot’s aesthetics. Jul 27, 2015 at 20:54
  • @maximusdooku Apologies, I hadn’t seen the restriction of using two datasets - ..count.. / max(..count..) only seems to work for a single one, which makes sense. Jul 27, 2015 at 21:15

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