Here's an example using the economics
dataset included in ggplot2
. You see the same thing if we highlight the line based on values above 8000:
ggplot(economics, aes(date, unemploy)) +
geom_line(aes(color=unemploy > 8000))
When a mapping is defined in your dataset, by default ggplot2
also groups your data based on this. This makes total sense if you're trying to plot a line where you have data in long form and want to draw separate lines for each different value in a column. In cases like this, you want ggplot2
to change the color of the line based on the data, but you want to tell ggplot2
not to group based on color. This is why you will need to override the group=
aesthetic.
To override the group=
aesthetic change that happens when you map your line geom, you can just say group=1
or really group=
any constant value. This effectively sets every observation mapped to the same group, and the line will connect all your points, but be colored differently:
ggplot(economics, aes(date, unemploy)) +
geom_line(aes(color=unemploy > 8000, group=1))