geom_isoline()
renders isolines along row or column axes.
Usage
geom_isoline(
mapping = NULL,
data = NULL,
stat = "identity",
position = "identity",
isoline_text = TRUE,
by = NULL,
num = NULL,
text_dodge = 0.03,
...,
text.size = 3,
text.angle = 0,
text.colour = NULL,
text.color = NULL,
text.alpha = NULL,
parse = FALSE,
check_overlap = FALSE,
na.rm = FALSE,
show.legend = NA,
inherit.aes = TRUE
)
Arguments
- mapping
Set of aesthetic mappings created by
aes()
. If specified andinherit.aes = TRUE
(the default), it is combined with the default mapping at the top level of the plot. You must supplymapping
if there is no plot mapping.- data
The data to be displayed in this layer. There are three options:
If
NULL
, the default, the data is inherited from the plot data as specified in the call toggplot()
.A
data.frame
, or other object, will override the plot data. All objects will be fortified to produce a data frame. Seefortify()
for which variables will be created.A
function
will be called with a single argument, the plot data. The return value must be adata.frame
, and will be used as the layer data. Afunction
can be created from aformula
(e.g.~ head(.x, 10)
).- stat
The statistical transformation to use on the data for this layer. When using a
geom_*()
function to construct a layer, thestat
argument can be used the override the default coupling between geoms and stats. Thestat
argument accepts the following:A
Stat
ggproto subclass, for exampleStatCount
.A string naming the stat. To give the stat as a string, strip the function name of the
stat_
prefix. For example, to usestat_count()
, give the stat as"count"
.For more information and other ways to specify the stat, see the layer stat documentation.
- position
A position adjustment to use on the data for this layer. This can be used in various ways, including to prevent overplotting and improving the display. The
position
argument accepts the following:The result of calling a position function, such as
position_jitter()
. This method allows for passing extra arguments to the position.A string naming the position adjustment. To give the position as a string, strip the function name of the
position_
prefix. For example, to useposition_jitter()
, give the position as"jitter"
.For more information and other ways to specify the position, see the layer position documentation.
- isoline_text
Logical; whether to include text value marks along the isolines.
- by, num
Intervals between elements or number of elements; specify only one.
- text_dodge
Numeric; the orthogonal distance of the text from the axis or isoline, as a proportion of the minimum of the plot width and height.
- ...
Additional arguments passed to
ggplot2::layer()
.- text.size, text.angle, text.colour, text.color, text.alpha
Default aesthetics for tick mark labels. Set to NULL to inherit from the data's aesthetics.
- parse
If
TRUE
, the labels will be parsed into expressions and displayed as described in?plotmath
.- check_overlap
If
TRUE
, text that overlaps previous text in the same layer will not be plotted.check_overlap
happens at draw time and in the order of the data. Therefore data should be arranged by the label column before callinggeom_text()
. Note that this argument is not supported bygeom_label()
.- na.rm
Passed to
ggplot2::layer()
.- show.legend
logical. Should this layer be included in the legends?
NA
, the default, includes if any aesthetics are mapped.FALSE
never includes, andTRUE
always includes. It can also be a named logical vector to finely select the aesthetics to display.- inherit.aes
If
FALSE
, overrides the default aesthetics, rather than combining with them. This is most useful for helper functions that define both data and aesthetics and shouldn't inherit behaviour from the default plot specification, e.g.borders()
.
Value
A ggproto layer.
Details
Isolines are topographical features that separate a plot into regions in which a gradient of interest falls within a specified range. Greenacre (2010) uses them effectively to assist with the projection of markers onto axes.
Biplot layers
ggbiplot()
uses ggplot2::fortify()
internally to produce a single data
frame with a .matrix
column distinguishing the subjects ("rows"
) and
variables ("cols"
). The stat layers stat_rows()
and stat_cols()
simply
filter the data frame to one of these two.
The geom layers geom_rows_*()
and geom_cols_*()
call the corresponding
stat in order to render plot elements for the corresponding factor matrix.
geom_dims_*()
selects a default matrix based on common practice, e.g.
points for rows and arrows for columns.
Aesthetics
geom_isoline()
understands the following aesthetics (required aesthetics
are in bold):
x
y
colour
alpha
linewidth
linetype
center
,scale
hjust
vjust
family
fontface
group
References
Greenacre MJ (2010) Biplots in Practice. Fundacion BBVA, ISBN: 978-84-923846. https://www.fbbva.es/microsite/multivariate-statistics/biplots.html
See also
Other geom layers:
geom_axis()
,
geom_bagplot()
,
geom_interpolation()
,
geom_lineranges()
,
geom_origin()
,
geom_rule()
,
geom_text_radiate()
,
geom_vector()
Examples
# stack loss gradient
stackloss |>
lm(formula = stack.loss ~ Air.Flow + Water.Temp + Acid.Conc.) |>
coef() |>
as.list() |> as.data.frame() |>
subset(select = c(Air.Flow, Water.Temp, Acid.Conc.)) ->
coef_data
# isolines along strongest predictors
scale(stackloss, scale = FALSE) |>
ggplot(aes(x = Water.Temp, y = Air.Flow)) +
coord_square() + geom_origin() +
geom_point(aes(size = stack.loss)) + scale_size_area() +
geom_isoline(data = coef_data)