Add a box for the NA values to the ggplot legend f

2019-01-15 15:39发布

问题:

I have got a map with a legend gradient and I would like to add a box for the NA values. My question is really similar to this one and this one. Also I have read this topic, but I can't find a "nice" solution somewhere or maybe there isn't any?

Here is an reproducible example:

library(ggplot2)
map <- map_data("world")
map$value <- setNames(sample(-50:50, length(unique(map$region)), TRUE), 
                      unique(map$region))[map$region]
map[map$region == "Russia", "value"] <- NA
ggplot() +
  geom_polygon(data = map,
               aes(long, lat, group = group, fill = value)) +
  scale_fill_gradient2(low = "brown3", mid = "cornsilk1", high = "turquoise4",
                       limits = c(-50, 50),
                       na.value = "black")

So I would like to add a black box for the NA value for Russia. I know, I can replace the NA's by a number, so it will appear in the gradient and I think, I can write a workaround like the following, but all this workarounds do not seem like a pretty solution for me and also I would like to avoid "senseless" warnings:

ggplot() +
  geom_polygon(data = map,
               aes(long, lat, group = group, fill = value)) +
  scale_fill_gradient2(low = "brown3", mid = "cornsilk1", high = "turquoise4",
                       limits = c(-50, 50),
                       na.value = "black") +
  geom_point(aes(x = -100, y = -50, size = "NA"), shape = NA, colour = "black") +
  guides(size = guide_legend("NA", override.aes = list(shape = 15, size = 10)))
Warning messages:
1: Using size for a discrete variable is not advised. 
2: Removed 1 rows containing missing values (geom_point). 

回答1:

One approach is to split your value variable into a discrete scale. I have done this using cut(). You can then use a discrete color scale where "NA" is one of the distinct colors labels. I have used scale_fill_brewer(), but there are other ways to do this.

map$discrete_value = cut(map$value, breaks=seq(from=-50, to=50, length.out=8))

p = ggplot() +
    geom_polygon(data=map, aes(long, lat, group=group, fill=discrete_value)) +
    scale_fill_brewer(palette="RdYlBu", na.value="black") +
    coord_quickmap()

ggsave("map.png", plot=p, width=10, height=5, dpi=150)   

Another solution

Because the original poster said they need to retain the color gradient scale and the colorbar-style legend, I am posting another possible solution. It has 3 components:

  1. We need to trick ggplot into drawing a separate color scale by using aes() to map something to color. I mapped a column of empty strings using aes(colour="").
  2. To ensure that we do not draw a colored boundary around each polygon, I specified a manual color scale with a single possible value, NA.
  3. Finally, guides() along with override.aes is used to ensure the new color legend is drawn as the correct color.

p2 = ggplot() +
     geom_polygon(data=map, aes(long, lat, group=group, fill=value, colour="")) +
     scale_fill_gradient2(low="brown3", mid="cornsilk1", high="turquoise4",
                     limits=c(-50, 50), na.value="black") +
     scale_colour_manual(values=NA) +              
     guides(colour=guide_legend("No data", override.aes=list(colour="black")))

ggsave("map2.png", plot=p2, width=10, height=5, dpi=150)   



回答2:

It's possible, but I did it years ago. You can't use guides. You have to set individually the continuous scale for the values as well as the discrete scale for the NAs. This is what the error is telling you and this is how ggplot2 works. Did you try using both scale_continuous and scale_discrete since your set up is rather awkward, instead of simply using guides which is basically used for simple plot designs?