ggplot2: facet_wrap strip color based on variable

2020-01-25 04:30发布

Is there a way to fill the strips of facets created with facet_wrap based on a variable supplied with the data frame?

Example data:

MYdata <- data.frame(fruit = rep(c("apple", "orange", "plum", "banana", "pear", "grape")), farm = rep(c(0,1,3,6,9,12), each=6), weight = rnorm(36, 10000, 2500), size=rep(c("small", "large")))

Example plot:

p1 = ggplot(data = MYdata, aes(x = farm, y = weight)) + geom_jitter(position = position_jitter(width = 0.3), aes(color = factor(farm)), size = 2.5, alpha = 1) + facet_wrap(~fruit)

I know how to change the background color of the strips (e.g. to orange):

p1 + theme(strip.background = element_rect(fill="orange"))

facet_wrap and orange strip color

Is there a way to pass on the values in the variable size in MYdata to the parameter fill in element_rect?

Basically, instead of 1 color for all strips I would like the strip background color of small fruits (apple, plum, pear) to be green and the background color of large fruits (orange, banana, grape) to be red.

2条回答
成全新的幸福
2楼-- · 2020-01-25 05:03

With a little bit of work, you can combine your plot with a dummy gtable that has the right grobs,

enter image description here

d <- data.frame(fruit = rep(c("apple", "orange", "plum", "banana", "pear", "grape")), 
                farm = rep(c(0,1,3,6,9,12), each=6), 
                weight = rnorm(36, 10000, 2500), 
                size=rep(c("small", "large")))

p1 = ggplot(data = d, aes(x = farm, y = weight)) + 
  geom_jitter(position = position_jitter(width = 0.3), 
              aes(color = factor(farm)), size = 2.5, alpha = 1) + 
  facet_wrap(~fruit)

dummy <- ggplot(data = d, aes(x = farm, y = weight))+ facet_wrap(~fruit) + 
  geom_rect(aes(fill=size), xmin=-Inf, xmax=Inf, ymin=-Inf, ymax=Inf) +
  theme_minimal()

library(gtable)

g1 <- ggplotGrob(p1)
g2 <- ggplotGrob(dummy)

gtable_select <- function (x, ...) 
{
  matches <- c(...)
  x$layout <- x$layout[matches, , drop = FALSE]
  x$grobs <- x$grobs[matches]
  x
}

panels <- grepl(pattern="panel", g2$layout$name)
strips <- grepl(pattern="strip_t", g2$layout$name)
g2$layout$t[panels] <- g2$layout$t[panels] - 1
g2$layout$b[panels] <- g2$layout$b[panels] - 1

new_strips <- gtable_select(g2, panels | strips)
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(new_strips)

gtable_stack <- function(g1, g2){
  g1$grobs <- c(g1$grobs, g2$grobs)
  g1$layout <- transform(g1$layout, z= z-max(z), name="g2")
  g1$layout <- rbind(g1$layout, g2$layout)
  g1
}
## ideally you'd remove the old strips, for now they're just covered
new_plot <- gtable_stack(g1, new_strips)
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(new_plot)
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ゆ 、 Hurt°
3楼-- · 2020-01-25 05:18

I would love to know how to do that, it is a great idea. One idea is to generate each chart independently with a different color as you do and then use something like multiplot or viewports to show then side by side - it will require a bit more work.

if you want to extract the legend, which you will need for this approach - here is some code from Hadley that I found a while back

g_legend<-function(a.gplot){
  tmp <- ggplot_gtable(ggplot_build(a.gplot))
  leg <- which(sapply(tmp$grobs, function(x) x$name) == "guide-box")
  legend <- tmp$grobs[[leg]]
  return(legend)}

see how it is extracted it from chart p, and then I took it out of the plot legend <- g_legend(p) lwidth <- sum(legend$width) #if you want to define the viewport based on this p <- p + theme(legend.position="none")

then you eventually draw it

grid.newpage()
vp <- viewport(width = 1, height = 1)
#print(p, vp = vp)

submain <- viewport(width = 0.9, height = 0.9, x = 0.5, y = 1,just=c("center","top"))
print(p, vp = submain)
sublegend <- viewport(width = 0.5, height = 0.2, x = 0.5, y = 0.0,just=c("center","bottom"))
print(arrangeGrob(legend), vp = sublegend)

Good luck

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