45

I've been trying to add legend to my ggplot, but failed miserably. I tried the function scale_colour_manual(), but the legend doesn't show up.

ggplot()+
geom_line(data=Summary,aes(y=Y1,x= X),colour="darkblue",size=1 )+
geom_line(data=Summary,aes(y=Y2,x= X),colour="red",size=1  )

My dataframe 'Summary' is as follows:

  X           Y1           Y2
139 1.465477e+16 7.173075e+15
277 1.044803e+16 9.275002e+15
415 1.059258e+16 8.562518e+15
553 1.033283e+16 8.268984e+15
691 9.548019e+15 1.022248e+16
830 1.008212e+16 8.641891e+15
968 9.822061e+15 9.315856e+15
1106 9.948143e+15 9.178694e+15
1244 1.013922e+16 8.825904e+15
1382 9.815094e+15 9.283662e+15

Please advise me how to plot Y1, Y2 against X on the same graph and add a legend on the side.

3 Answers 3

76

ggplot needs aes to make a legend, moving colour inside aes(...) will build a legend automatically. then we can adjust the labels-colors pairing via scale_color_manual:

ggplot()+
  geom_line(data=Summary,aes(y=Y1,x= X,colour="Y1"),size=1 )+
  geom_line(data=Summary,aes(y=Y2,x= X,colour="Y2"),size=1) +
  scale_color_manual(name = "Y series", values = c("Y1" = "darkblue", "Y2" = "red"))

enter image description here

6
  • 4
    Nathan, Thank you for your reply. Placing colour within the aes() works. I am not hopeful I would have figured it out by myself!
    – ausworli
    Commented Nov 27, 2016 at 21:54
  • 3
    The problem is that colours provided in aes() has nothing in common with the displayed ones. You could set colour='a' and coloud='b' as well. Commented Jun 3, 2019 at 16:35
  • 1
    Nathan, thanks a lot! Searched for the tip to write it inside the aes for a while. This solved it! Commented Apr 19, 2020 at 8:06
  • 1
    This is not getting the intended effect. Y1 is supposed to be blue and Y2 is supposed to be red. Looking at the data, Y1 is greater than Y2 in all but one case, so the blue line should be mostly above the red line, but it's not. Commented May 11, 2020 at 19:47
  • 3
    This solution does not respect the colors you add in aes()
    – PerseP
    Commented Jan 30, 2021 at 12:28
35

As has been said, a color must be specified inside an aesthetic in order for there to be a legend. However, the color inside the aesthetic is actually just a label that then carries through to other layers. Setting custom colors can be done with scale_color_manual and the legend label can be fixed with labs.

ggplot(data=Summary)+
  geom_line(mapping=aes(y=Y1,x= X,color="Y1"),size=1 ) +
  geom_line(mapping=aes(y=Y2,x= X,color="Y2"),size=1) +
  scale_color_manual(values = c(
    'Y1' = 'darkblue',
    'Y2' = 'red')) +
  labs(color = 'Y series')
0
10

To provide a more compact answer which only uses a single geom call:

ggplot2 really likes long data (key-value pairs) better than wide (many columns). This requires you to transform your data prior to plotting it using a package like tidyr or reshape2. This way you can have a variable denoting color, inside your aes call, which will produce the legend.

For your data:

library(tidyr)
library(ggplot2)

plot_data <- gather(data, variable, value, -x)

ggplot(plot_data, aes(x = x, y = value, color = variable)) +
  geom_line() +
  scale_color_manual(values = c("firebrick", "dodgerblue")) 

You can then customize the legend via scale_color series of helpers.

2
  • Although you mention that you can use scale_color, this answer does not provide reprex on how to create the legend. Commented May 15, 2019 at 22:55
  • 1
    @JessicaBurnett added the scale call
    – Jake Kaupp
    Commented May 15, 2019 at 23:03

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