I usually use ggplot2, but in this case I am using the regular image()
function to plot a heatmap of a large data set. I can label all the labels as red, but I want to label the y-axis with text of different colors based on a vector of color definitions that I generate:
grid = structure(c(1:12),.Dim = c(4,3))
labs = c("A","B","C")
image(1:4,1:3,grid,axes=FALSE, xlab="", ylab = "")
#This works but isn't the colors I want
axis(2,at=1:length(labs),labels=labs,las=2, adj=1,cex.axis=0.6,col.axis="red")
That generates the following image:
I would like labels A and C to be black and B to be red. This is what I tried, but it gives a "wrong length" error...
axiscolors = c("black","red","black")
axis(2,at=1:length(labs),labels=labs,las=2, adj=1, cex.axis=0.6, col.axis=axiscolors)
This is the effect I am after with some "real" data...
EDIT:
As a back-up, if this is possible in ggplot2, I might be willing to re-factor my code. There are a couple other applications I would use this for as well.
I figured out a way to plot a layer of red symbols over the top of the old labels, but would prefer a native method with the color vector, if possible...
sublabs = c("B")
axis(2,at=match(sublabs,labs),labels=sublabs,las=2, adj=1, cex.axis=0.6, col.axis="red")
Another way would be to use text()
if I could put the labels outside the plot space...
text(c(1,1,1),c(1,2,3),labs,col=c("black","red","black"))
UPDATE: See below for a solution that works with ggplot2
...
graphics::axis
. I wonder if grid graphics might provide an avenue. I see that there is a lattice version oflattice::axis.default
and it looks like the 'do.labels' section would be promising. You might need to also hacklattice::panel.axis
.?mtext
instead of?text
would be the way to go.layout
to create independent axis labels and position them close to the original graph with no axis labels. But that seems like more work than plotting a layer of new symbols over the old symbols. Maybe you could position yourtext
statement outside the plot area usingouter
,inset
and/ormar
.