[R] ggplot2: mapping categorical variable to color aesthetic with faceting

baptiste auguie baptiste.auguie at googlemail.com
Tue Oct 6 19:08:16 CEST 2009


Further to my previous reply, it occurred to me that ggplot2 would
only ever use data and colors in your calls to compareCats(): res =
res, fac1 = fac1, fac2 = fac2 have no effect whatsoever.

If you want the user to be able to specify the variables used in the
ggplot2 call, you probably want to look at ?aes_string, as shown
below,

compareCats <- function(data, fac1="fac1", fac2="fac2", res="res",
colors=c("red", "blue")) {

  require(ggplot2)
  p <- ggplot(data, aes_string(x=fac1, y=res, color=fac1)) +
facet_grid(paste(". ~ ", fac2))
  jit <- position_jitter(width = 0.1)
  p <- p + layer(geom = "jitter", position = jit) +
    scale_colour_manual(values=colors)
  print(p)
  }

test <- data.frame(res = rnorm(100), fac1 = as.factor(rep(c("A", "B"), 50)),
  fac2 = as.factor(rep(c("lrg", "lrg", "sm", "sm"), 25)))

compareCats(data = test)

rem <- sample(10, 1:ncol(test)) # randomly remove a few points here and there
last_plot() %+% test[-rem, ] # replot with new dataset

HTH,

baptiste




2009/10/6 baptiste auguie <baptiste.auguie at googlemail.com>:
> Hi,
>
> I may be missing an important design decision, but could you not have
> only a single data.frame as an argument of your function? From your
> example, it seems that the colour can be mapped to the fac1 variable
> of "data",
>
> compareCats <- function(data) {
>
>   require(ggplot2)
>   p <- ggplot(data, aes(fac1, res, color=fac1)) + facet_grid(. ~ fac2)
>   jit <- position_jitter(width = 0.1)
>   p <- p + layer(geom = "jitter", position = jit) +
>     scale_colour_manual(values=c("red", "blue"))
>   print(p)
>   }
>
>
> test <- data.frame(res = rnorm(100), fac1 = as.factor(rep(c("A", "B"), 50)),
>   fac2 = as.factor(rep(c("lrg", "lrg", "sm", "sm"), 25)))
>
> compareCats(data = test)
>
> rem <- runif(5, 1, 100) # randomly remove a few points here and there
> last_plot() %+% test[-rem,] # replot with new dataset
>
>
> HTH,
>
> baptiste
>
>
>
> 2009/10/6 Bryan Hanson <hanson at depauw.edu>:
>> Hello Again...  I¹m making a faceted plot of a response on two categorical
>> variables using ggplot2 and having troubles with the coloring. Here is a
>> sample that produces the desired plot:
>>
>> compareCats <- function(data, res, fac1, fac2, colors) {
>>
>>    require(ggplot2)
>>    p <- ggplot(data, aes(fac1, res)) + facet_grid(. ~ fac2)
>>    jit <- position_jitter(width = 0.1)
>>    p <- p + layer(geom = "jitter", position = jit, color = colors)
>>    print(p)
>>    }
>>
>> test <- data.frame(res = rnorm(100), fac1 = as.factor(rep(c("A", "B"), 50)),
>>    fac2 = as.factor(rep(c("lrg", "lrg", "sm", "sm"), 25)))
>>
>> compareCats(data = test, res = res, fac1 = fac1, fac2 = fac2, colors =
>> c("red", "blue"))
>>
>> Now, if I get away from idealized data where there are the same number of
>> data points per group (25 in this case), I run into problems.  So, if you
>> do:
>>
>> rem <- runif(5, 1, 100) # randomly remove a few points here and there
>> test <- test[-rem,]
>> compareCats(data = test, res = res, fac1 = fac1, fac2 = fac2, colors =
>> c("red", "blue"))
>>
>> R throws an error due to mismatch between the recycling of colors and the
>> actual number of data points:
>>
>> Error in `[<-.data.frame`(`*tmp*`, gp, value = list(colour = c("red",  :
>>  replacement element 1 has 2 rows, need 47
>>
>> I'm new to ggplot2, but have been through the book and the web site enough
>> to know that my problem is "mapping the varible to the aesthetic"; I also
>> know I can either "map" or "set" the colors.
>>
>> The question, finally:  is there an simple/elegant way to map a list of two
>> colors corresponding to A and B onto any random sample size of A and B with
>> faceting?  If not, and I must "set" the colors:  Do I compute the length of
>> all possible combos of A, B with lrg, sm, and then create one long vector of
>> colors for the entire plot?  I tried something like this, and was not
>> successful, but perhaps could be with more work.
>>
>> All advice appreciated, Bryan (session info below)
>>
>> *************
>> Bryan Hanson
>> Professor of Chemistry & Biochemistry
>> DePauw University, Greencastle IN USA
>>
>>> sessionInfo()
>> R version 2.9.2 (2009-08-24)
>> i386-apple-darwin8.11.1
>>
>> locale:
>> en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/C/C/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8
>>
>> attached base packages:
>> [1] grid      datasets  tools     utils     stats     graphics  grDevices
>> methods
>> [9] base
>>
>> other attached packages:
>>  [1] ggplot2_0.8.3      reshape_0.8.3      proto_0.3-8        mvbutils_2.2.0
>>  [5] ChemoSpec_1.1      lattice_0.17-25    mvoutlier_1.4      plyr_0.1.8
>>  [9] RColorBrewer_1.0-2 chemometrics_0.4   som_0.3-4
>> robustbase_0.4-5
>> [13] rpart_3.1-45       pls_2.1-0          pcaPP_1.7          mvtnorm_0.9-7
>> [17] nnet_7.2-48        mclust_3.2         MASS_7.2-48        lars_0.9-7
>> [21] e1071_1.5-19       class_7.2-48
>>
>> ______________________________________________
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>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>>
>




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