5
###Load libraries

library(ggplot2)
library(gtable)

###Build plot

d <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(x=gear)) + 
            geom_bar(aes(y=gear), stat="identity", position="dodge") +
            facet_wrap(~cyl)

###Change height of strip text

g <- ggplotGrob(d)
g$heights[[3]] = unit(2,"in")
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(g)

Obtained result (ggplot2_2.0.0)

enter image description here

Expected result (ggplot2_1.0.1)

enter image description here

Question

What in middle earth is going on here?

5
  • @Axeman I did. Diagram 2, under the heading "Expected result".
    – shekeine
    Jan 27, 2016 at 20:31
  • @konvas, As stated in the question, the problem is on Mac, on Linux everything works fine. sessionInfo on mac correctly reports ggplot2_2.0.0, same for Linux. Running the sample code in Linux yields the expected result, but not on Mac. Rstudio has been exonerated as well. Thanks.
    – shekeine
    Feb 8, 2016 at 15:18
  • @Konvas Thanks for pointing that out, after digging and tinkering with various ggplot2 versions, I have found that this only happens in ggplot2_2.0.0. The Issue is OS independent too (whew) i.e. versions before ggplot2_2.0.0 give the expected result on Os X. I have edited the question accordingly.
    – shekeine
    Feb 8, 2016 at 20:14
  • +one but for what it's worth, I like the obtained result better than the expected result
    – C8H10N4O2
    Feb 8, 2016 at 20:58
  • @C8H10N4O2 No, you should not like the expected result. If you had multiple ggplots with facet titles of varying lengths angled at say, 45 degrees (hence different strip.text heights) and then arrangeGrob-ed them you would see why ;-)
    – shekeine
    Feb 8, 2016 at 22:22

1 Answer 1

6
+50

This seems to do the trick

g <- ggplotGrob(d)
g$heights[[3]] = unit(2,"in")
g$grobs[[5]]$heights <- g$grobs[[6]]$heights <-
    g$grobs[[7]]$heights <- unit(1, "native") # or "npc"
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(g)

enter image description here

It also works if you replace unit(1, "native") by a positive number, or TRUE (I am not sure why though - probably at some point this is coerced to a default type unit, likely "npc")

8
  • does the trick.. but why after assigning new units to g$heights does it only taks the value but not the units
    – user20650
    Feb 9, 2016 at 20:52
  • Plus one for the trick, but I need the height in cm: very handy in my use case.
    – shekeine
    Feb 10, 2016 at 9:37
  • @Shekeine Which height do you need in cm? You can definitely change units to "cm" in g$heights[[3]] <- unit(2,"in") - then using unit(1, "native") for the heights of the grobs will just make them occupy the whole space - does this make sense? If you want to specify them manually you can also use g$grobs[[5]]$heights <- .. <- unit(1, "cm") but then they may extend beyond the area you want
    – konvas
    Feb 10, 2016 at 11:11
  • @konvas Yes yes, I meant, I need to specify the heights of the strip text backgrounds in absolute units (whether cm or in), just not npc. The above issue persists irrespective of whether cm or in are used. Doing g$grobs[[5]]$heights <- unit(2, cm) extends the strip text background downward over the plot's panel i.e, "beyond the area I want". I didn't entirely understand your suggestion with using unit(1, "native") "for the heights of the grobs", could you post a working example?
    – shekeine
    Feb 10, 2016 at 12:29
  • @Shekeine I am not expert in the grid package but my understanding is that if you do g$heights[[3]] = unit(X, Y) (using whatever number X and unit Y) and then g$grobs[[5]]$heights <- .. <- unit(1, "native") then the strips will have height X and the whole background will be grey. (by heights of the grobs I mean g$grobs[[i]]$heights) I am not sure how this differs from what you want, perhaps I have not understood correctly what you are trying to achieve
    – konvas
    Feb 10, 2016 at 12:56

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