In ggplot2 how can I stop axis labels being abbreviated - e.g. 1e+00, 1e+01
along the x axis once plotted? Ideally, I want to force R to display the actual values which in this case would be 1,10
.
Any help much appreciated.
I think you are looking for this:
require(ggplot2)
df <- data.frame(x=seq(1, 1e9, length.out=100), y=sample(100))
# displays x-axis in scientific notation
p <- ggplot(data = df, aes(x=x, y=y)) + geom_line() + geom_point()
p
# displays as you require
library(scales)
p + scale_x_continuous(labels = label_comma())
scales::comma
is a shorthand for scales::label_comma
, etc.
Error: Breaks and labels are different lengths
Jul 13, 2021 at 12:24
library(scales)
Mar 20, 2022 at 18:27
Did you try something like :
options(scipen=10000)
before plotting ?
Just an update to what @Arun made, since I tried it today and it didn't work because it was actualized to
+ scale_x_continuous(labels = scales::comma)
require(scales)
? This imports the package that contains the comma
scale. As you've discovered, you can also specify the package when referring to it instead of requiring it beforehand.
Sep 17, 2019 at 0:45
As a more general solution, you can use scales::format_format
to remove the scientific notation. This also gives you lots of control around how exactly you want your labels to be displayed, as opposed to scales::comma
which only does comma separations of the orders of magnitude.
For example:
require(ggplot2)
require(scales)
df <- data.frame(x=seq(1, 1e9, length.out=100), y=sample(100))
# Here we define spaces as the big separator
point <- format_format(big.mark = " ", decimal.mark = ",", scientific = FALSE)
# Plot it
p <- ggplot(data = df, aes(x=x, y=y)) + geom_line() + geom_point()
p + scale_x_continuous(labels = point)
There is a solution that don't require scales library.
You can try:
# To deactivate scientific notation on y-axis:
p + scale_y_continuous(labels = function(x) format(x, scientific = FALSE))
# To activate scientific notation on y-axis:
p + scale_y_continuous(labels = function(x) format(x, scientific = TRUE))
# To deactivate scientific notation on x-axis:
p + scale_x_continuous(labels = function(x) format(x, scientific = FALSE))
# To activate scientific notation on x-axis:
p + scale_x_continuous(labels = function(x) format(x, scientific = TRUE))
Extending the original question to comprise fractions as well, i.e. 1, 0.1, 0.01, 0.001 etc. and avoiding trailing zeros
p + scale_x_continuous(labels = function(x) sprintf("%g", x))
If you additionally want to have commas as a thousand separator, you can use the following:
p + scale_x_continuous(labels=function(x) format(x, big.mark = ",", scientific = FALSE))
p + scale_x_continuous(labels = scales::number_format(accuracy = 1))
the accuracy = 1
is for whole numbers, you could also use accuracy = 0.1
if you wanted one decimal place, accuracy = 0.01
for two decimal places, etc.
Isn't the simplest general solution to set the penalty that R uses for scientific notation higher?
i.e set scipen()
to a number that you are comfortable with.
e.g. If your axis maximum on charts is likely to be 100 000, setting scipen(200000)
will ensure that R (and ggplot) will use standard notation for all numbers below 200000 and there will be no requirement to add any lines to the ggplot function.
library(scales)
ggplot(data, aes(salary)) +
geom_histogram() +
scale_x_continuous(labels = comma)
here scale_x_continuous(labels = comma)
can solve that issue.