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How do I make a plot in R so that the value of a variable displays along the X axis and the variable names go vertically along the Y axis? Ultimately, the plot should look vertical with the variable names on the Y axis and its values on the X axis.

The code below will ostensibly do it, but the problem is the actually plot values do not flip with the axes. Meaning, the plot still constructs as if the names are along the X axis and the values are along the Y axis.

the variables below:

value = a column vector of numbers

name = a column of names that correspond to each number

plot(value, axes=F, xlab="", ylab= "", type= "b", xlim=c(-5, 50), ylim=c(0, 8))
axis(1)
axis(2, at = 1:length(name), labels = name, las=1, pos=-3.0,cex.axis=.65 )

thanks!

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  • I confess I have absolutely no idea what you could possibly be describing. Could you provide an image of what you want your output to look like?
    – joran
    Nov 14, 2011 at 23:01
  • Sorry about my description. Here is a much more complicated example (I just want my axes to look this way): addictedtor.free.fr/graphiques/RGraphGallery.php?graph=114 Nov 14, 2011 at 23:11
  • In the link above, notice how the names are on the Y axis and the values are along the X axis. That's all I'd like to do -- plot names on Y and values on X -- and my code above that puts the names on the Y axis and the values on the X axis (in the third line of code), but the actual points in the plot are plotted as if the names are still along the X axis and the values are still on the Y axis. Does that make sense? I just want to flip the X and Y axis and have the data flip with it. Nov 14, 2011 at 23:13

3 Answers 3

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Once you use a "plot" base function, the user-coordinates are fixed. It's like writing in ink. There is not the possibility of later flipping them with a call to axis. That sort of gymnastics would require a more object oriented approach such as the lattice or ggplot systems. They allow creation of an object that can be updated or amended. If you had a ggplot object you could do something like:

 p + coord_flip()
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  • 2
    +1 -- There couldn't be a nicer example of the elegance of the ggplot graphical model. Nov 15, 2011 at 0:33
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For easy flexibility in this regard, I like the plotting functions in the lattice package:

 library(lattice)

 # First make some example data
 df <- data.frame(name=rep(c("a", "b", "c"), each=5), value=rnorm(15))

 # Then try plotting it in both 'orientations'
 # ... as a dotplot
 xyplot(value~name, data=df)
 xyplot(name~value, data=df)

 # ... or perhaps as a 'box-and-whisker' plot
 bwplot(value~name, data=df)
 bwplot(name~value, data=df)

If you need to, you can also plot this with base graphics, though you'll have to work a bit on the axis labels:

plot(x=df$value, y=df$name, yaxt="n",
     xlab="value", ylab="name")
axis(2, at=1:3, labels=levels(df$name), las=1)
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  • This is great, thanks! Do you know of a way to sort the data so that the values are decreasing or increasing? Like the code sort(value, decreasing=F) but for within the plot? the xyplot seems to sort alphabetically by default. Also, is it possible to do axes=F and add them later so that it doesn't look like a box? Thanks again! Nov 14, 2011 at 23:33
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    Sure. You'll want to make name a factor, and set its levels by hand (they default to alphabetical order). To see what I'm talking about, try factor(df$name), then reset the levels with df$name <- factor(df$name, levels=c("b", "a", "c")) and replot the figure. Then look at ?factor, and, if it seems confusing, you'll know that you've got company by having a look at this post: stackoverflow.com/questions/7128413/… Nov 14, 2011 at 23:39
  • For setting the levels by hand, does that mean the order of the setting has to match the increasing order? So in your example, b is the smallest, a is the second smallest, and c is the largest. Correct? Nov 15, 2011 at 0:11
  • Never mind. Got it working! One last question, then I'll leave you alone -- any way to get rid of the box around the graph and add the axes manually like in my original post? This way, only the Y and X axis show. Nov 15, 2011 at 0:25
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    That's right, although I'd tend to think of b as 'Level 1', a as 'Level 2', and so on. In this case, we're effectively just telling R the order in which we want to plot the levels --- not which one is 'smaller' or 'larger'. Nov 15, 2011 at 0:25
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You just got two decent suggestions about using other plotting libraries. I believe your actual problem is that you only pass one vector of values to plot that you intend to be used as x values. But when passed one vector, plot assumes you've given it y values. Just do something like:

plot(x = value, y = 1:length(name),...)

and you should get what you want.

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  • Yes, given that there are no axes that's all the change that's needed. This is the most direct answer to the question.
    – John
    Nov 14, 2011 at 23:42
  • Thanks, I appreciate it. I tried this way and it does work, thanks! Unfortunately, the layout looks a bit odd given my data, so I'm going with the lattice package xyplot. But you are correct -- this does directly answer my question and it was what I was trying to figure out on my own for hours... Nov 15, 2011 at 0:26
  • @CaptainMurphy No problem! lattice is indeed very nice!
    – joran
    Nov 15, 2011 at 0:49

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