My troubles started when I had a variable with more than 6 values because that is the current maximum value for the scale_shape function in ggplot2.
Due to that problem I tried a work-around with another variable that I just wrapped around the length of the original variable.
Here is my example code:
dataf <- structure(list(Municipality = structure(c(2L, 4L, 10L, 11L, 6L, 8L, 3L, 1L, 5L, 9L, 7L), .Label = c("Boyuibe", "Cabezas", "Camiri", "Charagua", "Cuevo", "Gutierrez", "Huacaya", "Lagunillas", "Machareti", "Vallegrande", "Villa Vaca Guzman"), class = "factor"), Growth = c(3.05, 2.85, 0.14, 1.21, 1.59, 2.35, -0.41, 0.81, 0.9, 2.89, 1.8), Density = c(3.0390920594, 0.260984024187, 5.20069847261, 2.50828556783, 3.43964629267, 3.69768961375, 32.4496626479, 2.06145019368, 4.2139578988, 0.740736713557, 1.67034079825)), .Names = c("Municipality", "Growth", "Density"), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, -11L))
dataf <- dataf[with(dataf, order(Municipality)), ]
# create a new column with values 1 to 6 and same length as Municipality
modulus <- function(x) (x - 1) %% 6 + 1
indeces <- 1:length(dataf$Municipality)
dim(indeces) <- length(dataf$Municipality)
dataf$Shape <- apply(indeces, 1, modulus)
dataf$Shape <- factor(dataf$Shape, levels=unique(dataf$Shape))
plot1 <- ggplot(dataf, aes(x=Density, y=Growth, colour=Municipality,
shape=Shape))
plot1 <- plot1 + geom_point(size=3)
plot1 <- plot1 + scale_x_continuous(expression(paste(
"Population Density [people per km"^2, "]", sep="")))
plot1 <- plot1 + scale_y_continuous("Growth Rate [ratio population 2001 /
population 1992]")
plot1 <- plot1 + scale_colour("Municipality")
plot1
that produces the following output:

I would like the legend to be just like the points in the plot. Is that possible, or is there a smart solution to my first problem with the list of municipalities being too long?
Thanks in advance.

dput()the contents of filename so someone can run your code. Also, see the posting guide on CRAN for other tips of getting good help. – Chase Mar 25 '11 at 17:28