Suppose I have the following
y <- rnorm(10)
b <- as.factor(sample(1:4,10,replace=T))
qplot(1:10, y, shape=b)
How do I change the shapes that are used using ggplot2
?
The ggplot way to do it would be to use scale_shape_manual
and provide the desired shapes in the values
argument:
qplot(1:10, y, shape=b) + scale_shape_manual(values = c(0, 5, 6, 15))
The shapes are the same as the usual 0-25 indexes: http://yusung.blogspot.com/2008/11/plot-symbols-in-r.html
size=4
needs to go inside the qplot
call, not separately. If you add an extra geom_point
, you're effectively creating a second layer. (This, incidentally, is why you shouldn't use qplot
-- it's confusing.)
ggplot(mydata, aes(color = MyVar1, fill = MyVar1)) + geom_point()
Jan 27, 2015 at 23:13
To complement Harlan's answer, here is a references for the available shapes - start from 0 at bottom left and read right then up (10y + x):
df <- data.frame(x=c(0:129))
ggplot(df, aes(x=x%%10, y=floor(x/10), shape=factor(x), colour=x, size=10)) +
geom_point() +
scale_shape_manual(values=df$x) + theme(legend.position='none') +
scale_x_continuous(breaks=0:10) + scale_y_continuous(breaks=0:12) +
scale_colour_hue() + scale_colour_gradientn(colours=rainbow(3))
> y <- rnorm(10)
> b <- as.factor(sample(1:4,10,replace=T))
> qplot(1:10, y, shape=b)
> qplot(1:10, y, pch=letters[1:10], cex=6)
Is this what you mean? I imagine you can use any of R's plotting characters...
This may not be a very 'ggplot' way of doing this though, but the man page does read "You can use it like you'd use the 'plot' function.". :-)
Error: scale_shape_discrete can deal with a maximum of 6 discrete values, but you have 10. See ?scale_manual for a possible alternative
Sep 5, 2011 at 19:24