28

Is there a preferred way to modify ggplot objects after creation?

For example I recommend my students to save the r object together with the pdf file for later changes...

library(ggplot2)
graph <- 
  ggplot(mtcars, aes(x=mpg, y=qsec, fill=cyl)) +
  geom_point() +
  geom_text(aes(label=rownames(mtcars))) +
  xlab('miles per galon') +
  ggtitle('my title')

ggsave('test.pdf', graph)
save(graph, file='graph.RData')

So new, in case they have to change title or labels or sometimes other things, they can easily load the object and change simple things.

load('graph.RData')
print(graph)
graph + 
  ggtitle('better title') +
  ylab('seconds per quarter mile')

What do I have to do for example to change the colour to discrete scale? In the original plot I would wrap the y in as.factor. But is there a way to do it afterwards? Or is there a better way on modifying the objects, when the data is gone. Would love to get some advice.

2
  • You could look at Rcolorbrewer package. I did it a couple of times, where I would make the plot, store it as an object and when finally when I am building a report using many objects like above, I would use color brewer and change the color scheme.
    – Dinesh.hmn
    Jan 30, 2017 at 16:01
  • 2
    If you have saved the plot object the data is not really gone (have a look at str(graph)), so you could redo the plot using ggplot(graph$data, aes(... , , or you may be able to update the mapping ie graph$mapping$fill <- quote(factor(cyl))
    – user20650
    Jan 30, 2017 at 23:33

1 Answer 1

53

You could use ggplot_build() to alter the plot without the code or data:

Example plot:

data("iris")

p <- ggplot(iris) + 
  aes(x = Sepal.Length, y = Sepal.Width, colour = Species) + 
  geom_point()

Colours are respective to Species.

Disassemble the plot using ggplot_build():

q <- ggplot_build(p)

Take a look at the object q to see what is happening here. To change the colour of the point, you can alter the respective table in q:

q$data[[1]]$colour <- "black"

Reassemble the plot using ggplot_gtable():

q <- ggplot_gtable(q)

And plot it:

plot(q)

Now, the points are black.

2
  • 3
    This is a really useful answer. However, do you know what it would take to turn q back into the same object as the original ggplot. Currently, this is incompatible with things like +ggsave() and +ggtitle(), which would be really nice to add on to q
    – jntrcs
    Sep 25, 2019 at 17:11
  • 5
    @jntrcs Currently you can do: q = ggplot_build(ggplot_plot) q$data[[1]]$size = 0.2 q = ggplot_gtable(q) ggsave(filename, plot=q) to save the edited plot. (just pointing it out since no one did in 2 years)
    – VitaminB16
    Apr 26, 2022 at 16:51

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