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I have the following table but after many tries have been unable to plot the data so that the x-axis tick marks line up with the year. I have found solutions to boxplots, but not for geom_line()

How can I make discrete labels for year?

the following solutions did not work

g + scale_x_discrete(limits=c("2013","2014","2015"))
g + scale_x_discrete(labels=c("2013","2014","2015"))
distance_of_moves
  distance moved year
1       2.914961 2013
2       2.437516 2014
3       2.542500 2015

ggplot(data = distance_of_moves, aes(x = year, y = `distance moved`, group = 1)) +
 geom_line(color = "red", linetype = "dashed", size = 1.5) +
 geom_point(color = "red", size = 4, shape = 21, fill = "white") + 
 ylab("Average distance of movement") + 
 xlab("year") 

enter image description here

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  • 1
    Did you intend to have 2014 listed twice in the labels?
    – drhagen
    Feb 4, 2016 at 18:52
  • 3
    use as.factor(year) in the aes()
    – mtoto
    Feb 4, 2016 at 18:57
  • no, just once, that was a mistake Feb 4, 2016 at 19:23
  • 3
    Right now you have a continuous scale because your year column is numeric. You can either (a) convert the column to a factor or (b) specify the breaks you want and continue using the continuous scale: + scale_x_continuous(breaks = 2013:2015). Feb 4, 2016 at 19:58
  • 2
    @JabroJacob in R (and in ggplot) categorical/numeric is usually the meaningful distinction. Years, even if they are discrete measures of time, are "continuous" because they are stored as numeric (and things like distance between years are well defined). There's rarely an important distinction between discrete (integer) vs continuous (real) numerics. Jul 22, 2020 at 18:45

1 Answer 1

16

Reproducible example:

data <- data.frame(dist=c(2.914, 2.437, 2.542), year=c(2013, 2014, 2015))
# this ensures that stuff will be ordered appropriately
data$year <- ordered(data$year, levels=c(2013, 2014, 2015))
ggplot(data, aes(x=factor(year), y=dist, group=1)) +
  geom_line() +
  geom_point()

enter image description here

Specifying the year as an ordered factor will ensure that the x axis is ordered appropriately, regardless of the order in which the levels appear (whereas just using "factor(year)" in the plotting aesthetic could lead to issues).

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  • 1
    what does "group=1" do? Btw, there should be some automatic accepting the answer after a certain time on this forum.
    – Helen
    Aug 1, 2019 at 7:29
  • 3
    You need a group aesthetic with lines in ggplot2; the way ggplot2 is written, the particular geom you choose is applied to all combinations of hte relevant categorical variables (ie, in this case, the factor for the x axis). This does not work for lines, as it would result in 1 line per point (which is not a thing). Hence, specifying group=1 tells ggplot that every point is to be connected with a single line grouping.
    – Eric
    Aug 2, 2019 at 21:12
  • stackoverflow.com/questions/10357768/… this post provides details
    – Eric
    Aug 2, 2019 at 21:13
  • ooooh!! Thank you so much!!😊
    – Helen
    Aug 3, 2019 at 4:46
  • 1
    5+ years later and this still works!
    – kyle-G
    Apr 10 at 16:46

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