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Using facet_wrap in ggplot2 to create a grid, but I have an uneven number of panels so the last row is incomplete. At the bottom of the last, blank panel is the axis ticks and text. Is it possible to shift this axis up (giving the last facet in each column the appearance of having applied free_x)? If not, can I remove it altogether as is seen below?

To clarify with examples, this is what I'm getting: http://sape.inf.usi.ch/sites/default/files/ggplot2-facet-wrap.png

enter image description here

I desire something seen here (though, ideally with axis labelling on the facet in column 4): Changing facet label to math formula in ggplot2

enter image description here

Thanks for any ideas or insight!

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  • I'm afraid I don't understand what you mean. The two images look similar to me, apart from the axis labels.
    – Andrie
    Aug 23, 2012 at 17:42
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    Right. The user wants to change the positioning of the axis labels in the 4th column (or remove them).
    – IRTFM
    Aug 23, 2012 at 17:51
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    @DWin Got it - keep the axis labels in the fourth column , but move them vertically. I doubt that's going to be possible without doing it manually in grid.
    – Andrie
    Aug 23, 2012 at 18:02
  • @user1535384: Can you please provide the code for your plot?
    – naught101
    Oct 9, 2012 at 6:36

1 Answer 1

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Using facet_wrap, when I do this in 0.9.1, ggplot hides the x-axes on the columns with blanks, as shown below.

movies$decade <- round(movies$year, -1)
ggplot(movies) + geom_histogram(aes(x=rating)) + facet_wrap(~ decade, ncol=5)

enter image description here

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  • 1
    There may be some version differences happening here: the original question is a few months old. With ggplot 0.9.2.1 and a made-up example (8 facets in a 3x3 wrapped array), I don't get the extra set of axis labels, whether or not I specify the number of columns. In your example I have to use ncol=5 to force an uneven array size (otherwise I get a 3x4 array), or delete the 2000s, but if I do the latter I still get the blank axes as appropriate.
    – Ben Bolker
    Oct 11, 2012 at 21:04
  • Confirmed, manual specification doesn't matter. I'm rewording the answer.
    – Christian
    Oct 11, 2012 at 21:35

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