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Important: This package has been superseded by ggplot2 3.3.0, which now has full native support for horizontality. The ggstance package will continue to be maintained for some time, but please consider switching to ggplot2.
Get the development version from Github with:
While coord_flip()
can only flip a plot as a whole, ggstance provides flipped versions of Geoms, Stats and Positions. This makes it easier to build horizontal layer or use vertical positioning (e.g. vertical dodging). Also, horizontal Geoms draw horizontal legend keys to keep the appearance of your plots consistent.
Horizontal Geoms:
geom_barh()
geom_colh()
geom_histogramh()
geom_linerangeh()
geom_pointrangeh()
geom_errorbarh()
geom_crossbarh()
geom_boxploth()
geom_violinh()
Horizontal Stats:
stat_binh()
stat_boxploth()
stat_counth()
stat_xdensity()
stat_summaryh()
Vertical Positions:
position_dodgev()
position_dodge2v()
position_nudgev()
position_fillv()
position_stackv()
position_jitterdodgev()
To create a horizontal layer in ggplot2 with coord_flip()
, you have to supply aesthetics as if they were to be drawn vertically:
library("ggplot2")
# Vertical
ggplot(mpg, aes(class, hwy, fill = factor(cyl))) +
geom_boxplot()
# Horizontal with coord_flip()
ggplot(mpg, aes(class, hwy, fill = factor(cyl))) +
geom_boxplot() +
coord_flip()
In ggstance, you supply aesthetics in their natural order:
library("ggstance")
# Horizontal with ggstance
ggplot(mpg, aes(hwy, class, fill = factor(cyl))) +
geom_boxploth()
Some plots are hard to produce with coord_flip()
. One case is facetting with free scales. Here is an example from @smouksassi:
library("ggplot2")
library("ggstance")
df <- data.frame(
Group = factor(rep(1:3, each = 4), labels = c("Drug A", "Drug B", "Control")),
Subject = factor(rep(1:6, each = 2), labels = c("A", "B", "C", "D", "E", "F")),
Result = rnorm(12)
)
vertical <- ggplot(df, aes(Subject, Result))+
geom_boxplot(aes(fill = Group))+
facet_grid(. ~ Group, scales = "free_x")
vertical
How do we flip this plot? With coord_flip()
, the free scales are not flipped correctly:
On the other hand a ggstance horizontal layer will work properly:
horizontal <- ggplot(df, aes(Result, Subject))+
geom_boxploth(aes(fill = Group))+
facet_grid(Group ~ ., scales = "free_y")
horizontal
In this example we use vertical dodging to align measurements within subgroups.
data <- expand.grid(
Group = c("A", "B"),
Subgroup = c("a", "b", "c"),
y = 1:10
)
data$y <- sample(1:4, replace = TRUE, size = nrow(data))
ggplot(data, aes(y, Group, colour = Subgroup)) +
stat_sum(position = position_dodgev(height = 0.5))
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.