R/scale-brewer.r
, R/zxx.r
scale_brewer.Rd
The brewer
scales provides sequential, diverging and qualitative
colour schemes from ColorBrewer. These are particularly well suited to
display discrete values on a map. See http://colorbrewer2.org for
more information.
scale_colour_brewer( ..., type = "seq", palette = 1, direction = 1, aesthetics = "colour" ) scale_fill_brewer( ..., type = "seq", palette = 1, direction = 1, aesthetics = "fill" ) scale_colour_distiller( ..., type = "seq", palette = 1, direction = -1, values = NULL, space = "Lab", na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar", aesthetics = "colour" ) scale_fill_distiller( ..., type = "seq", palette = 1, direction = -1, values = NULL, space = "Lab", na.value = "grey50", guide = "colourbar", aesthetics = "fill" ) scale_colour_fermenter( ..., type = "seq", palette = 1, direction = -1, na.value = "grey50", guide = "coloursteps", aesthetics = "colour" ) scale_fill_fermenter( ..., type = "seq", palette = 1, direction = -1, na.value = "grey50", guide = "coloursteps", aesthetics = "fill" )
... | Other arguments passed on to |
---|---|
type | One of seq (sequential), div (diverging) or qual (qualitative) |
palette | If a string, will use that named palette. If a number, will index into
the list of palettes of appropriate |
direction | Sets the order of colours in the scale. If 1, the default,
colours are as output by |
aesthetics | Character string or vector of character strings listing the
name(s) of the aesthetic(s) that this scale works with. This can be useful, for
example, to apply colour settings to the |
values | if colours should not be evenly positioned along the gradient
this vector gives the position (between 0 and 1) for each colour in the
|
space | colour space in which to calculate gradient. Must be "Lab" - other values are deprecated. |
na.value | Colour to use for missing values |
guide | Type of legend. Use |
The brewer
scales were carefully designed and tested on discrete data.
They were not designed to be extended to continuous data, but results often
look good. Your mileage may vary.
The distiller
scales extend brewer to continuous scales by smoothly
interpolating 7 colours from any palette to a continuous scale. The fermenter
scales provide binned versions of the brewer scales.
The following palettes are available for use with these scales:
BrBG, PiYG, PRGn, PuOr, RdBu, RdGy, RdYlBu, RdYlGn, Spectral
Accent, Dark2, Paired, Pastel1, Pastel2, Set1, Set2, Set3
Blues, BuGn, BuPu, GnBu, Greens, Greys, Oranges, OrRd, PuBu, PuBuGn, PuRd, Purples, RdPu, Reds, YlGn, YlGnBu, YlOrBr, YlOrRd
Modify the palette through the palette
arguement.
Other colour scales:
scale_alpha()
,
scale_colour_gradient()
,
scale_colour_grey()
,
scale_colour_hue()
,
scale_colour_steps()
,
scale_colour_viridis_d()
dsamp <- diamonds[sample(nrow(diamonds), 1000), ] (d <- ggplot(dsamp, aes(carat, price)) + geom_point(aes(colour = clarity)))d + scale_colour_brewer()# Change scale label d + scale_colour_brewer("Diamond\nclarity")# Select brewer palette to use, see ?scales::brewer_pal for more details d + scale_colour_brewer(palette = "Greens")d + scale_colour_brewer(palette = "Set1")# \donttest{ # scale_fill_brewer works just the same as # scale_colour_brewer but for fill colours p <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(x = price, fill = cut)) + geom_histogram(position = "dodge", binwidth = 1000) p + scale_fill_brewer()# the order of colour can be reversed p + scale_fill_brewer(direction = -1)# the brewer scales look better on a darker background p + scale_fill_brewer(direction = -1) + theme_dark()# } # Use distiller variant with continous data v <- ggplot(faithfuld) + geom_tile(aes(waiting, eruptions, fill = density)) vv + scale_fill_distiller()v + scale_fill_distiller(palette = "Spectral")# or use blender variants to discretize continuous data v + scale_fill_fermenter()