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I have 2 datasets, with different size. How do I simply plot them and have each with a different color and a legend? So in this case, the legend would be count1, count2, and the legend title is something I choose, let's say: mylegend. What do I need to change or add to the following commands?

x <- data.frame(Q=1:10, count1=21:30)
y <- data.frame(Q=seq(1,10,0.5), count2=seq(11,20, 0.5))
ggplot() + geom_line(data=x, aes(x=Q, y=count1)) + geom_point(data=y, aes(x=Q, y=count2)) 

1 Answer 1

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The easiest solution is to combine your data in the same data.frame, then set the aesthetics (aes) in ggplot.

Here is one way you can combine everything:

df <- data.frame(Q = c(x$Q, y$Q), 
             count = c(x$count1, y$count2),
             type = c(rep("count1", 10), rep("count2", 19))
             )

But you can also use commands like rbind() or melt() (from the reshape2 library).

With the data combined into one data.frame:

ggplot(df, aes(x=Q, y=count, colour=type)) + geom_point() + geom_line() + 
   scale_colour_discrete(name="mylegend")

This is a basic example, and I highly recommend Hadley Wickham's ggplot2 book, as well just searching google (Stack Overflow, R Cookbook, etc) for solutions to specific plotting problems or more ways to customize your plots. enter image description here

2
  • Thank you Oshun. Is there anyway I can change the legend (count1, count2) to something else say, a custom text, plot1, plot2?
    – asiehh
    Jul 15, 2015 at 19:21
  • Yes, there are several ways depending on your goal. For example, you can set more properties in scale_colour_discrete(). It's not worth covering the different solutions in an answer comment. You can google "ggplot legends" for some examples.
    – oshun
    Jul 16, 2015 at 4:06

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