390

I am trying to make a bar graph where the largest bar would be nearest to the y axis and the shortest bar would be furthest. So this is kind of like the Table I have

    Name   Position
1   James  Goalkeeper
2   Frank  Goalkeeper
3   Jean   Defense
4   Steve  Defense
5   John   Defense
6   Tim    Striker

So I am trying to build a bar graph that would show the number of players according to position

p <- ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Position)) + geom_bar(binwidth = 1)

but the graph shows the goalkeeper bar first then the defense, and finally the striker one. I would want the graph to be ordered so that the defense bar is closest to the y axis, the goalkeeper one, and finally the striker one. Thanks

5
  • 18
    can't ggplot reorder them for you without having to mess around with the table (or dataframe)? Mar 23, 2014 at 6:42
  • 3
    @MattO'Brien I find it incredible that this is not done in a single, simple command Dec 27, 2019 at 17:57
  • @Zimano Too bad that's what you're getting from my comment. My observation was towards the creators of ggplot2, not the OP Jan 24, 2020 at 14:10
  • 3
    @Euler_Salter Thank you for clarifying, my sincere apologies for jumping on you like that. I have deleted my original remark.
    – Zimano
    Jan 24, 2020 at 14:14
  • ggplot2 currently ignores binwidth = 1 with a warning. To control the width of the bars (and have no gaps between bars), you might want to use width = 1 instead.
    – stragu
    Oct 27, 2020 at 6:11

16 Answers 16

274

@GavinSimpson: reorder is a powerful and effective solution for this:

ggplot(theTable,
       aes(x=reorder(Position,Position,
                     function(x)-length(x)))) +
       geom_bar()
3
  • 7
    Indeed +1, and especially in this case where there is a logical order that we can exploit numerically. If we consider arbitrary ordering of categories and we don't want alphabetical then it is just as easy (easier?) to specify the levels directly as shown. Jun 14, 2012 at 10:05
  • 3
    This is the neatest. Nullify the need to modify original dataframe Aug 8, 2019 at 16:44
  • 3
    Lovely, just noticed that you can do this a little more succincly, if all you want is to order by the length function and ascending order is okay, which is something I often want to do: ggplot(theTable,aes(x=reorder(Position,Position,length))+geom_bar()
    – postylem
    Apr 17, 2020 at 17:31
258

The key with ordering is to set the levels of the factor in the order you want. An ordered factor is not required; the extra information in an ordered factor isn't necessary and if these data are being used in any statistical model, the wrong parametrisation might result — polynomial contrasts aren't right for nominal data such as this.

## set the levels in order we want
theTable <- within(theTable, 
                   Position <- factor(Position, 
                                      levels=names(sort(table(Position), 
                                                        decreasing=TRUE))))
## plot
ggplot(theTable,aes(x=Position))+geom_bar(binwidth=1)

barplot figure

In the most general sense, we simply need to set the factor levels to be in the desired order. If left unspecified, the levels of a factor will be sorted alphabetically. You can also specify the level order within the call to factor as above, and other ways are possible as well.

theTable$Position <- factor(theTable$Position, levels = c(...))
9
  • 1
    @Gavin: 2 simplifications: since you already are using within, there's no need to use theTable$Position, and you could just do sort(-table(...)) for decreasing order. Mar 6, 2011 at 15:16
  • 2
    @Prasad the former was a leftover from testing so thanks for pointing that out. As far the latter, I prefer explicitly asking for the reversed sort than the - you use as it is far easier to get the intention from decreasing = TRUE than noticing the - in all the rest of the code. Mar 6, 2011 at 15:22
  • 2
    @GavinSimpson; I think the part about levels(theTable$Position) <- c(...) leads to undesired behaviour where the actual entries of the data frame gets reordered, and not just the levels of the factor. See this question. Maybe you should modify or remove those lines?
    – Anton
    Feb 18, 2019 at 11:56
  • 2
    Strongly agree with Anton. I just saw this question and went poking around on where they got the bad advice to use levels<-. I'm going to edit that part out, at least tentatively. Feb 18, 2019 at 23:03
  • 2
    @Anton Thanks for the suggestion (and to Gregor for the edit); I would never do this via levels<-() today. This is something from from 8 years back and I can't recall if things were different back then or whether I was just plain wrong, but regardless, it is wrong and should be erased! Thanks! Feb 19, 2019 at 4:09
206
Answer recommended by R Language Collective

Using scale_x_discrete (limits = ...) to specify the order of bars.

positions <- c("Goalkeeper", "Defense", "Striker")
p <- ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Position)) + scale_x_discrete(limits = positions)
5
  • 14
    Your solution is the most suitable to my situation, as I want to program to plot with x being an arbitrary column expressed by a variable in a data.frame. The other suggestions would be harder to express the arrangement of the order of x by an expression involving the variable. Thanks! If there is interest, I can share my solution using your suggestion. Just one more issue, adding scale_x_discrete(limits = ...), I found that there is blank space as wide as the bar-chart, on the right of the chart. How can I get rid of the blank space? As it does not serve any purpose.
    – Yu Shen
    Apr 28, 2015 at 1:04
  • 1
    This seems necessary for ordering histogram bars
    – geotheory
    Aug 4, 2015 at 9:50
  • 11
    QIBIN: Wow...the other answers here work, but your answer by far seems not just the most concise and elegant, but the most obvious when thinking from within ggplot's framework. Thank you.
    – dancow
    Sep 10, 2015 at 13:53
  • When I tried this solution, on my data it, didn't graph NAs. Is there a way to use this solution and have it graph NAs? May 25, 2017 at 18:13
  • This solution worked for me where the others above did not. Nov 9, 2018 at 21:02
108

I think the already provided solutions are overly verbose. A more concise way to do a frequency sorted barplot with ggplot is

ggplot(theTable, aes(x=reorder(Position, -table(Position)[Position]))) + geom_bar()

It's similar to what Alex Brown suggested, but a bit shorter and works without an anynymous function definition.

Update

I think my old solution was good at the time, but nowadays I'd rather use forcats::fct_infreq which is sorting factor levels by frequency:

require(forcats)

ggplot(theTable, aes(fct_infreq(Position))) + geom_bar()
3
42

Like reorder() in Alex Brown's answer, we could also use forcats::fct_reorder(). It will basically sort the factors specified in the 1st arg, according to the values in the 2nd arg after applying a specified function (default = median, which is what we use here as just have one value per factor level).

It is a shame that in the OP's question, the order required is also alphabetical as that is the default sort order when you create factors, so will hide what this function is actually doing. To make it more clear, I'll replace "Goalkeeper" with "Zoalkeeper".

library(tidyverse)
library(forcats)

theTable <- data.frame(
                Name = c('James', 'Frank', 'Jean', 'Steve', 'John', 'Tim'),
                Position = c('Zoalkeeper', 'Zoalkeeper', 'Defense',
                             'Defense', 'Defense', 'Striker'))

theTable %>%
    count(Position) %>%
    mutate(Position = fct_reorder(Position, n, .desc = TRUE)) %>%
    ggplot(aes(x = Position, y = n)) + geom_bar(stat = 'identity')

enter image description here

2
  • 1
    IMHO best solution as forcats is as well as dplyr a tidyverse package.
    – c0bra
    Aug 27, 2018 at 8:47
  • 2
    thumbs up for Zoalkeeper
    – otwtm
    May 20, 2020 at 11:36
33

Another alternative using reorder to order the levels of a factor. In ascending (n) or descending order (-n) based on the count. Very similar to the one using fct_reorder from the forcats package:

Descending order

df %>%
  count(Position) %>%
  ggplot(aes(x = reorder(Position, -n), y = n)) +
  geom_bar(stat = 'identity') +
  xlab("Position")

enter image description here

Ascending order

df %>%
  count(Position) %>%
  ggplot(aes(x = reorder(Position, n), y = n)) +
  geom_bar(stat = 'identity') +
  xlab("Position")

enter image description here

Data frame:

df <- structure(list(Position = structure(c(3L, 3L, 1L, 1L, 1L, 2L), .Label = c("Defense", 
"Striker", "Zoalkeeper"), class = "factor"), Name = structure(c(2L, 
1L, 3L, 5L, 4L, 6L), .Label = c("Frank", "James", "Jean", "John", 
"Steve", "Tim"), class = "factor")), class = "data.frame", row.names = c(NA, 
-6L))
1
  • 2
    adding count before hand i think is the simplest approach
    – Kenan
    Oct 27, 2021 at 1:29
29

A simple dplyr based reordering of factors can solve this problem:

library(dplyr)

#reorder the table and reset the factor to that ordering
theTable %>%
  group_by(Position) %>%                              # calculate the counts
  summarize(counts = n()) %>%
  arrange(-counts) %>%                                # sort by counts
  mutate(Position = factor(Position, Position)) %>%   # reset factor
  ggplot(aes(x=Position, y=counts)) +                 # plot 
    geom_bar(stat="identity")                         # plot histogram
0
21

In addition to forcats::fct_infreq, mentioned by @HolgerBrandl, there is forcats::fct_rev, which reverses the factor order.

theTable <- data.frame(
    Position= 
        c("Zoalkeeper", "Zoalkeeper", "Defense",
          "Defense", "Defense", "Striker"),
    Name=c("James", "Frank","Jean",
           "Steve","John", "Tim"))

p1 <- ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Position)) + geom_bar()
p2 <- ggplot(theTable, aes(x = fct_infreq(Position))) + geom_bar()
p3 <- ggplot(theTable, aes(x = fct_rev(fct_infreq(Position)))) + geom_bar()

gridExtra::grid.arrange(p1, p2, p3, nrow=3)             

enter image description here

1
  • "fct_infreq(Position)" is the little thing that does so much, thanks!!
    – Paul
    Feb 25, 2019 at 18:26
20

You just need to specify the Position column to be an ordered factor where the levels are ordered by their counts:

theTable <- transform( theTable,
       Position = ordered(Position, levels = names( sort(-table(Position)))))

(Note that the table(Position) produces a frequency-count of the Position column.)

Then your ggplot function will show the bars in decreasing order of count. I don't know if there's an option in geom_bar to do this without having to explicitly create an ordered factor.

6
  • I didn't fully parse your code up there, but I'm pretty sure reorder() from the stats library accomplishes the same task.
    – Chase
    Mar 6, 2011 at 13:44
  • @Chase how do you propose using reorder() in this case? The factor requiring reordering needs to be reordered by some function of itself and I'm struggling to see a good way to do that. Mar 6, 2011 at 14:23
  • ok, with(theTable, reorder(Position, as.character(Position), function(x) sum(duplicated(x)))) is one way, and another with(theTable, reorder(Position, as.character(Position), function(x) as.numeric(table(x)))) but these are just as convoluted... Mar 6, 2011 at 14:39
  • I simplified the answer slightly to use sort rather than order Mar 6, 2011 at 14:55
  • @Gavin - perhaps I misunderstood Prasad's original code (I don't have R on this machine to test...) but it looked as if he was reordering the categories based on frequency, which reorder is adept at doing. I agree for this question that something more involved is needed. Sorry for the confusion.
    – Chase
    Mar 6, 2011 at 15:45
14

If the chart columns come from a numeric variable as in the dataframe below, you can use a simpler solution:

ggplot(df, aes(x = reorder(Colors, -Qty, sum), y = Qty)) 
+ geom_bar(stat = "identity")  

The minus sign before the sort variable (-Qty) controls the sort direction (ascending/descending)

Here's some data for testing:

df <- data.frame(Colors = c("Green","Yellow","Blue","Red","Yellow","Blue"),  
                 Qty = c(7,4,5,1,3,6)
                )

**Sample data:**
  Colors Qty
1  Green   7
2 Yellow   4
3   Blue   5
4    Red   1
5 Yellow   3
6   Blue   6

When I found this thread, that was the answer I was looking for. Hope it's useful for others.

13

I agree with zach that counting within dplyr is the best solution. I've found this to be the shortest version:

dplyr::count(theTable, Position) %>%
          arrange(-n) %>%
          mutate(Position = factor(Position, Position)) %>%
          ggplot(aes(x=Position, y=n)) + geom_bar(stat="identity")

This will also be significantly faster than reordering the factor levels beforehand since the count is done in dplyr not in ggplot or using table.

0
12

I found it very annoying that ggplot2 doesn't offer an 'automatic' solution for this. That's why I created the bar_chart() function in ggcharts.

ggcharts::bar_chart(theTable, Position)

enter image description here

By default bar_chart() sorts the bars and displays a horizontal plot. To change that set horizontal = FALSE. In addition, bar_chart() removes the unsightly 'gap' between the bars and the axis.

3

Since we are only looking at the distribution of a single variable ("Position") as opposed to looking at the relationship between two variables, then perhaps a histogram would be the more appropriate graph. ggplot has geom_histogram() that makes it easy:

ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Position)) + geom_histogram(stat="count")

enter image description here

Using geom_histogram():

I think geom_histogram() is a little quirky as it treats continuous and discrete data differently.

For continuous data, you can just use geom_histogram() with no parameters. For example, if we add in a numeric vector "Score"...

    Name   Position   Score  
1   James  Goalkeeper 10
2   Frank  Goalkeeper 20
3   Jean   Defense    10
4   Steve  Defense    10
5   John   Defense    20
6   Tim    Striker    50

and use geom_histogram() on the "Score" variable...

ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Score)) + geom_histogram()

enter image description here

For discrete data like "Position" we have to specify a calculated statistic computed by the aesthetic to give the y value for the height of the bars using stat = "count":

 ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Position)) + geom_histogram(stat = "count")

Note: Curiously and confusingly you can also use stat = "count" for continuous data as well and I think it provides a more aesthetically pleasing graph.

ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Score)) + geom_histogram(stat = "count")

enter image description here

Edits: Extended answer in response to DebanjanB's helpful suggestions.

1
  • 1
    I'm not sure why this solution is mentioned, as your first example is exactly equivalent to ggplot(theTable, aes(x = Position)) + geom_bar() (i.e., with the current version 3.3.2 of ggplot2, the order is alphabetical for a char variable, or respects the factor order if it is an ordered factor). Or maybe there used to be a difference?
    – stragu
    Oct 27, 2020 at 6:20
2
library(ggplot2)
library(magrittr)

dd <- tibble::tribble(
    ~Name,    ~Position,
  "James", "Goalkeeper",
  "Frank", "Goalkeeper",
   "Jean",    "Defense",
   "John",    "Defense",
  "Steve",    "Defense",
    "Tim",    "Striker"
  )


dd %>% ggplot(aes(x = forcats::fct_infreq(Position))) + geom_bar()

Created on 2022-08-30 with reprex v2.0.2

0

If you don't want to use ggplot2, there is also ggpubr with a really helpful argument for the ggbarplot function. You can sort the bars by sort.val in "desc" and "asc" like this:

library(dplyr)
library(ggpubr)
# desc
df %>%
  count(Position) %>%
  ggbarplot(x = "Position", 
            y = "n",
            sort.val = "desc")

# asc
df %>%
  count(Position) %>%
  ggbarplot(x = "Position", 
            y = "n",
            sort.val = "asc")

Created on 2022-08-14 by the reprex package (v2.0.1)

As you can see, it is really simple to sort the bars. This can also be done if the bars are grouped. Check the link above for some helpful examples.

-2

you can simply use this code:

ggplot(yourdatasetname, aes(Position, fill = Name)) + 
     geom_bar(col = "black", size = 2)

enter image description here

1
  • 2
    Can you please edit your answer to contain an explanation?
    – Greg
    Aug 5, 2020 at 22:47

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