21

I am getting the feeling after doing some digging that this probably will not work and I will need to discover an alternate method but I am going to ask anyways.

I have to graphs that I want to plot on the same chart, by making use of par(mfrow=c(1,2))

My code for the graphs is as follows:

mTotal <- mean(data$Total)
mTotal

data$valence1[data$Total >= mTotal] <- "Above Mean"
data$valence1[data$Total < mTotal] <- "Below Mean"
data$valence2[data$Delta >= 0] <- "Positive"
data$valence2[data$Delta < 0] <- "Negative"

data

par(mfrow=c(1,2))

ggplot(data,
       aes(x = Index,
           y = Total,
           fill = valence1)) +
  geom_bar(stat = "identity",
           colour = "black",
           alpha = 0.618) +
  geom_hline(yintercept = mTotal,
             linetype = "dashed",
             colour = "red") + 
  annotate("text", x = 19, y = mTotal + 50,
           label = "Problem Period") + 
  xlab("Date") + 
  ylab("Ambulance Arrivals") +
  ggtitle("Ambulance Arrivals by Month
          Jan 2013 - Feb 2014")

maxDelta <- max(data$Delta)
maxDelta
minDelta <- min(data$Delta)
minDelta

ggplot(data,
       aes(x = Index,
           y = Delta,
           fill = valence2)) +
  geom_bar(stat = "identity",
           position = "identity",
           colour = "black",
           alpha = 0.618) +
  annotate("rect", xmin = 13.5, xmax = 24.5,
           ymin = minDelta, ymax = maxDelta,
           alpha = 0.3, fill = "blue") +
  annotate("text", x = 19, y = maxDelta + 25,
           label = "Problem Period") +
  xlab("Date") +
  ylab("Change in Arrivals") + 
  ggtitle("Change in Ambulance Arrivals Month over Month")

If this is not possible, then a direction to a better route would be appreciated.

Thank you,

3 Answers 3

32

Look at the gridExtra package and use grid.arrange instead. Works wonderfully with ggplot.

Just assign your first ggplot call to a variable (e.g. plot1) and the next to another (e.g. plot2) and do something like:

grid.arrange(plot1, plot2, nrow=1, ncol=2)
5
  • Thank you, this was a rather simple solution and did exactly what I wanted. Apr 25, 2014 at 12:53
  • What if I wanted to choose for plot1 and plot2 to be stacked and then say plot3 and plot4 to stack next to it. Similar to par(mfcol)
    – Bonono
    Nov 29, 2016 at 22:29
  • 1
    @Bonono Just set nrow and ncol to sensible values, and experiment to figure out whether the plots "fill" the layout left-to-right or top-to-bottom. Nov 29, 2016 at 23:08
  • Can I ask for a slight deviation on this question. this example is plotting plots that have been already created. I am after a solution where I create a ggplot() figure within a loop so don't have 6 objects to plot up at the end. I guess what I am trying to ask is can I set up a grid.arrange() and then add the figures within a loop? like I commonly do with par() in basic graphics R
    – Cyrillm_44
    Dec 16, 2016 at 5:36
  • @Cyrillm_44 it's prbly better as a separate question, but don't use a loop, use lapply or purrr::map and follow something like this — stackoverflow.com/questions/23570514/…
    – hrbrmstr
    Dec 16, 2016 at 11:12
6

mfrow is for use with base graphics. For ggplot2 you need a different approach, like the one mentioned by @hrbmstr, or this one:

library("ggplot2")
library("grid")

a <- qplot(x = rnorm(10))
b <- qplot(x = rnorm(10))

vplayout <- function(x, y) viewport(layout.pos.row = x, layout.pos.col = y)

grid.newpage()
pushViewport(viewport(layout = grid.layout(1, 2)))

print(a, vp = vplayout(1,1))
print(b, vp = vplayout(1,2))
1
  • Thank you for showing me an alternate method to hrbrmstrs' solution Apr 25, 2014 at 12:53
3

Late to the party, but I just had to deal with this and found a simple solution for multiplots simply by looking in the in the gridExtra package (builind on @hrbrmstr):

library("ggplot2")
library("gridExtra")
pl <- lapply(1:4, function(.x) qplot(1:10, rnorm(10), main=paste("plot", .x)))
marrangeGrob(pl, nrow=2, ncol=2)

Multi-plot with ggplot and grid

Just put you plot generating function in the lapplyand you're all set.

4
  • What if I wanted to choose for plot1 and plot2 to be stacked and then say plot3 and plot4 to stack next to it. Similar to par(mfcol)
    – Bonono
    Nov 29, 2016 at 22:30
  • 1
    @Bonono I assume this is what you will want library("ggplot2") library("gridExtra") pl <- lapply(1:4, function(.x) qplot(1:10, rnorm(10), main=paste("plot", .x))) lay <- rbind(c(1,3,4), c(2,3,4)) grid.arrange(grobs=pl,layout_matrix=lay) which will give you this. For further reference also see here
    – victor_v
    Nov 30, 2016 at 15:04
  • 1
    Thank you victor! Here's something even easier: stackoverflow.com/questions/40877386/…
    – Bonono
    Nov 30, 2016 at 15:55
  • Cool @Bonono! Thanks
    – victor_v
    Dec 1, 2016 at 9:02

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