28

I am trying to shade a certain section of a time series plot (a bit like recession shading - similarly to the graph at the bottom of this article on recession shading in excel). I have put a little, possibly clumsy, sample together to illustrate. I first create a time series, plot it with ggplot2 and then want to use geom_rect to provide the shading. But I must get something wrong in the arguments.

a<-rnorm(300)
a_ts<-ts(a, start=c(1910, 1), frequency=12)
a_time<-time(a_ts)
a_series<-ts.union(big=a_ts, month=a_time)
a_series_df<-as.data.frame(a_series)
ggplot(a_series)+
  geom_line(mapping=aes_string(x="month", y="big"))+
  geom_rect(
    fill="red",alpha=0.5, 
    mapping=aes_string(x="month", y="big"), 
    xmin=as.numeric(as.Date(c("1924-01-01"))),
    xmax=as.numeric(as.Date(c("1928-12-31"))),
    ymin=0,
    ymax=2
    )

Note that I have also tried which also did not work.

geom_rect(
        fill="red",alpha=0.5, 
        mapping=aes_string(x="month", y="big"), 
        aes(
           xmin=as.numeric(as.Date(c("1924-01-01"))),
           xmax=as.numeric(as.Date(c("1928-12-31"))),
           ymin=0,
           ymax=2)
        )

enter image description here

0

4 Answers 4

24

Its a bit easier using annotate and also note that the bounds for the rectange can be specified as shown:

ggplot(a_series_df, aes(month, big)) + 
    geom_line() +
    annotate("rect", fill = "red", alpha = 0.5, 
        xmin = 1924, xmax = 1928 + 11/12,
        ymin = -Inf, ymax = Inf) +
    xlab("time")

This would also work:

library(zoo)

z <- read.zoo(a_series_df, index = 2)
autoplot(z) + 
    annotate("rect", fill = "red", alpha = 0.5, 
        xmin = 1924, xmax = 1928 + 11/12,
        ymin = -Inf, ymax = Inf) + 
    xlab("time") +
    ylab("big")

Either one gives this:

enter image description here

5
  • does annotate("rect",...) takes in border parameter? I can not find the documentation for this. I am trying to get only a red rectangle with only the border, no fill. Aug 4, 2018 at 18:30
  • 1
    @urwaCFC, Use col= instead of fill= . Aug 4, 2018 at 19:16
  • I ended up using 4 annotate("segment",...). Still thanks, Ill try it out for future usage. Aug 4, 2018 at 21:24
  • This answer has the added benefit of working with unusual geoms that don't have an explicit x and y mapping (e.g., geom_errorbar()). Jul 6, 2020 at 0:58
  • 1
    @Urvah, If the reason you used multiple annotates was to get multiple shaded rectangles then note that xmin and ymin can be vectors allowing a single annotate statement to be used. e.g. library(ggplot2) ggplot(a_series_df, aes(month, big)) + geom_line() + annotate("rect", fill = "red", alpha = 0.5, xmin = c(1915, 1924), xmax = c(1920, 1928) + 11/12, ymin = -Inf, ymax = Inf) + xlab("time") Mar 21, 2021 at 14:31
21

Code works fine, conversion to decimal date is needed for xmin and xmax, see below, requires lubridate package.

library("lubridate")
library("ggplot2")

ggplot(a_series_df)+
  geom_line(mapping = aes_string(x = "month", y = "big")) +
  geom_rect(
    fill = "red", alpha = 0.5, 
    mapping = aes_string(x = "month", y = "big"), 
    xmin = decimal_date(as.Date(c("1924-01-01"))),
    xmax = decimal_date(as.Date(c("1928-12-31"))),
    ymin = 0,
    ymax = 2
  )

Cleaner version, shading plotted first so the line colour doesn't change.

ggplot() +
  geom_rect(data = data.frame(xmin = decimal_date(as.Date(c("1924-01-01"))),
                              xmax = decimal_date(as.Date(c("1928-12-31"))),
                              ymin = -Inf,
                              ymax = Inf),
            aes(xmin = xmin, xmax = xmax, ymin = ymin, ymax = ymax),
            fill = "grey", alpha = 0.5) +
  geom_line(data = a_series_df,aes(month, big), colour = "blue") +
  theme_classic()

enter image description here

3
  • 2
    Note that this works because aes() was passed directly to each geom, and not to ggplot(). Wierdness ensues if you supply aes(x=Date,...) to ggplot() and use geom_rect() with any other geom...
    – Jthorpe
    Jan 11, 2018 at 18:45
  • @Jthorpe it is about order of plotting, I could put aes inside ggplot and plot lines then rect, but then lines will be behind the rect. Of course we could use alpha. Preferences.
    – zx8754
    Jan 11, 2018 at 18:50
  • 1
    Ok to be specific, If you supply aes() to ggplot(), you'll need to supply all the variables in that call to aes() in the data passed to geom_rect() and the classes of the fields will have to be consistent. Much easier to move the call to aes() to the individual geoms than construct the required variables with the right formats in the data frame passed to geom_rect().
    – Jthorpe
    Jan 11, 2018 at 18:57
11

To use geom_rect you need to define your rectangle coordinate through a data.frame:

shade = data.frame(x1=c(1918,1930), x2=c(1921,1932), y1=c(-3,-3), y2=c(4,4))

#    x1   x2 y1 y2
#1 1918 1921 -3  4
#2 1930 1932 -3  4

Then you give ggplot your data and the shade data.frame:

ggplot() + 
  geom_line(aes(x=month, y=big), color='red',data=a_series_df)+
  geom_rect(data=shade, 
            mapping=aes(xmin=x1, xmax=x2, ymin=y1, ymax=y2), color='grey', alpha=0.2)

enter image description here

0
library(xts)
library(zoo)
library(ggts)

Creating an xts object

data<-as.xts(x=runif(228,20,40),order.by = seq(as.Date("2000/01/01"), by = "month", length.out = 228))

Creating data frame of dates for which you want to crate shades

date<-data.frame(as.Date("2008-01-01"),as.Date("2009-01-01"))

Now create plot with shaded area

plot_data<-ggts(data)+geom_cycle(date)

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