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I have the following graph

test  <- data.frame(person=c("A", "B", "C", "D", "E"), 
                    value1=c(100,150,120,80,150),     
                    value2=c(25,30,45,30,30) , 
                    value3=c(100,120,150,150,200)) 

I want to plot a grouped barchart (horizontal) for each person where one bar indicates value1 and the other bar is stack of value2 and value3. Is there a way with which I can do this using ggplot2? Can I use facets to plot these individual graphs one below the other?

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    Welcome to SO. Please share what you have tried so far and how it hasn't worked. This isn't a place to go and ask us to generate code for you. Instead, try a few things and formulate a question about your code and how it is or isn't working.
    – Justin
    Sep 12, 2013 at 21:29
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    Downvote comment: Little research effort.
    – IRTFM
    Sep 12, 2013 at 22:57
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    @SeñorO - you realize I was NOT the author of the original question, don't you? I've just edited it
    – Victor K.
    Sep 13, 2013 at 17:42
  • 1
    This question and answer are far more relevant to my problem than the Q&A that this question purportedly duplicates. Moreover, I think the explanation by @VictorK is easier to understand.
    – Dan Barowy
    Aug 25, 2017 at 15:37

1 Answer 1

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Here is what I came up with, similar to a solution proposed here: stacked bars within grouped bar chart

  1. Melt data.frame and add a new column cat

    library(reshape2) # for melt
    
    melted <- melt(test, "person")
    
    melted$cat <- ''
    melted[melted$variable == 'value1',]$cat <- "first"
    melted[melted$variable != 'value1',]$cat <- "second"
    
  2. Plot a stacked chart cat vs value, faceting by person. You may need to adjust the labels to get what you want:

    ggplot(melted, aes(x = cat, y = value, fill = variable)) + 
      geom_bar(stat = 'identity', position = 'stack') + facet_grid(~ person)
    

enter image description here

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  • This is a great plot! Is there a way to alter it so that value 2, for example, can also be stacked onto the "first" bar chart as well? I have a similar plot that has "values" that are included in both "first" and "second", and I do not know how to add it to the plot without making a redundant label on the legend Aug 5, 2014 at 21:56
  • Gotta love how easy ggplot makes it to produce pretty graphs. I covered creating stacked / grouped bar charts here.
    – theduke
    Sep 9, 2016 at 11:54
  • geom_col() also makes a plot where the height of the bars represent values in the data. With geom_col there is no need to specify stat = 'identity'. To generate the plot above: ggplot(melted, aes(x = cat, y = value, fill = variable)) + geom_col() + facet_grid(~ person). Aug 27, 2018 at 14:35
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    But how to make the same but with with same labels/var for different clusters. Meaning you have (first - (var1,var2), second - (var1,var2)) for multiple clusters?
    – denis631
    Oct 21, 2018 at 20:03

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