I have the following problem: I would like to visualize a discrete and a continuous variable on a boxplot in which the latter has a few extreme high values. This makes the boxplot meaningless (the points and even the "body" of the chart is too small), that is why I would like to show this on a log10 scale. I am aware that I could leave out the extreme values from the visualization, but I am not intended to.

Let's see a simple example with diamonds data:

m <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(y = price, x = color))

alt text

The problem is not serious here, but I hope you could imagine why I would like to see the values at a log10 scale. Let's try it:

m + geom_boxplot() + coord_trans(y = "log10")

alt text

As you can see the y axis is log10 scaled and looks fine but there is a problem with the x axis, which makes the plot very strange.

The problem do not occur with scale_log, but this is not an option for me, as I cannot use a custom formatter this way. E.g.:

m + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_log10() 

alt text

My question: does anyone know a solution to plot the boxplot with log10 scale on y axis which labels could be freely formatted with a formatter function like in this thread?


Editing the question to help answerers based on answers and comments:

What I am really after: one log10 transformed axis (y) with not scientific labels. I would like to label it like dollar (formatter=dollar) or any custom format.

If I try @hadley's suggestion I get the following warnings:

> m + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_log10(formatter=dollar)
Warning messages:
1: In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
2: In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
3: In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf

With an unchanged y axis labels:

alt text

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That's a bug in coord_trans - but you can specify custom labels to scale_y_log10... – hadley Jan 15 '11 at 14:34
Thank you @hadley, I should miss something but eg. + scale_y_continous(formatter=dollar) just do not work. I cannot see the result of any formatter given and I also get three In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf warnings messages. – daroczig Jan 15 '11 at 16:33
@daroxzig: The examples I have seen for the formatter argument have all involved quoted names, so perhaps formatter="dollar"? – DWin Jan 15 '11 at 16:56
@DWin: I tried with quotes also, but the result is exactly the same. – daroczig Jan 15 '11 at 17:00
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Formatter doesn't work (yet) but you can still set the labels manually... – hadley Jan 15 '11 at 17:42
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3 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

The simplest is to just give the formatter argument the name of the log function:

m + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_continuous(formatter='log10')

EDIT: Or if you don't like that then either of these appears to give the same result:

m <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(y = price, x = color), log="y"); m + geom_boxplot() 
m <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(y = price, x = color), log10="y"); m + geom_boxplot()

EDIT2 & 3: Further experiments (after discarding the one that attempted successfully to put "$" signs in front of logged values):

fmtExpLg10 <- function(x) paste(round_any(10^x/1000, 0.01) , "K $", sep="")
ggplot(diamonds, aes(color, log10(price))) + 
 geom_boxplot() + 
 scale_y_continuous("Price, log10-scaling", formatter = fmtExpLg10)

alt text

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Thank you @DWin, but this is not the one I was looking for. This way the y axis' labels will be converted to log10, but the axis will not be transformed. What I would like to get: one transformed axis (y) with not scientific labels. – daroczig Jan 15 '11 at 16:37
@daroczig: See if this is more satisfactory. I would have sworn that the first time I ran my first solution that I got even powers of ten but I cannot reproduce. Maybe I was so focused on seeing the x-positions that I overlooked the obvious problems – DWin Jan 15 '11 at 16:52
Thank you @DWin, I just tested your proposals, but as I can see both commands give back the same: the first image I attached to my question. What I would like to get: the last plots in my question (no. 3 and 4, as they are the same) with customizable label formatting. – daroczig Jan 15 '11 at 16:59
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@daroczig: The "successful experiment" with "dollarizing" used fmtLg10dlr <- function(x) dollar(log10(x)); m + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_continuous(formatter='fmtLg10dlr') , but it just looks "wrong" to me. – DWin Jan 15 '11 at 17:38
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I suspect you're trying to do something like ggplot(diamonds, aes(color, log10(price))) + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_continuous(formatter = function(x) format(10 ^ x)) - you need to transform the data and back-transform the labels. – hadley Jan 15 '11 at 17:44
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I had a similar problem and this scale worked for me like a charm:

breaks = 10**(1:10)
scale_y_log10(breaks = breaks, labels = comma(breaks))

as you want the intermediate levels, too (10^3.5), you need to tweak the formatting:

breaks = 10**(1:10 * 0.5)
m <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(y = price, x = color)) + geom_boxplot()
m + scale_y_log10(breaks = breaks, labels = comma(breaks, digits = 1))

After executing::

enter image description here

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I just noticed this very similar problem has the same solution. – Susanne Oberhauser Feb 9 '11 at 10:47
thank you for pointing my attention to this alternate solution which would be complete with specifying the simple dollar formatter or by writing a custom one: + scale_y_log10(breaks = breaks, labels = dollar(breaks)) – daroczig Feb 9 '11 at 12:56
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I think I got it at last by doing some manual transformations with the data before visualization:

d <- diamonds
# computing logarithm of prices
d$price <- log10(d$price)

And work out a formatter to later compute 'back' the logarithmic data:

formatBack <- function(x) 10^x 
# or with special formatter (here: "dollar")
formatBack <- function(x) paste(round(10^x, 2), "$", sep=' ') 

And draw the plot with given formatter:

m <- ggplot(d, aes(y = price, x = color))
m + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_continuous(formatter='formatBack')

alt text

Sorry to the community to bother you with a question I could have solved before! The funny part is: I was working hard to make this plot work a month ago but did not succeed. After asking here, I got it.

Anyway, thanks to @DWin for motivation!

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