qplot() is a shortcut designed to be familiar if you're used to base plot(). It's a convenient wrapper for creating a number of different types of plots using a consistent calling scheme. It's great for allowing you to produce plots quickly, but I highly recommend learning ggplot() as it makes it easier to create complex graphics.

qplot(
  x,
  y,
  ...,
  data,
  facets = NULL,
  margins = FALSE,
  geom = "auto",
  xlim = c(NA, NA),
  ylim = c(NA, NA),
  log = "",
  main = NULL,
  xlab = NULL,
  ylab = NULL,
  asp = NA,
  stat = NULL,
  position = NULL
)

quickplot(
  x,
  y,
  ...,
  data,
  facets = NULL,
  margins = FALSE,
  geom = "auto",
  xlim = c(NA, NA),
  ylim = c(NA, NA),
  log = "",
  main = NULL,
  xlab = NULL,
  ylab = NULL,
  asp = NA,
  stat = NULL,
  position = NULL
)

Arguments

x, y, ...

Aesthetics passed into each layer

data

Data frame to use (optional). If not specified, will create one, extracting vectors from the current environment.

facets

faceting formula to use. Picks facet_wrap() or facet_grid() depending on whether the formula is one- or two-sided

margins

See facet_grid(): display marginal facets?

geom

Character vector specifying geom(s) to draw. Defaults to "point" if x and y are specified, and "histogram" if only x is specified.

xlim, ylim

X and y axis limits

log

Which variables to log transform ("x", "y", or "xy")

main, xlab, ylab

Character vector (or expression) giving plot title, x axis label, and y axis label respectively.

asp

The y/x aspect ratio

stat, position

DEPRECATED.

Examples

# Use data from data.frame qplot(mpg, wt, data = mtcars)
qplot(mpg, wt, data = mtcars, colour = cyl)
qplot(mpg, wt, data = mtcars, size = cyl)
qplot(mpg, wt, data = mtcars, facets = vs ~ am)
# \donttest{ qplot(1:10, rnorm(10), colour = runif(10))
qplot(1:10, letters[1:10])
mod <- lm(mpg ~ wt, data = mtcars) qplot(resid(mod), fitted(mod))
f <- function() { a <- 1:10 b <- a ^ 2 qplot(a, b) } f()
# To set aesthetics, wrap in I() qplot(mpg, wt, data = mtcars, colour = I("red"))
# qplot will attempt to guess what geom you want depending on the input # both x and y supplied = scatterplot qplot(mpg, wt, data = mtcars)
# just x supplied = histogram qplot(mpg, data = mtcars)
#> `stat_bin()` using `bins = 30`. Pick better value with `binwidth`.
# just y supplied = scatterplot, with x = seq_along(y) qplot(y = mpg, data = mtcars)
# Use different geoms qplot(mpg, wt, data = mtcars, geom = "path")
qplot(factor(cyl), wt, data = mtcars, geom = c("boxplot", "jitter"))
qplot(mpg, data = mtcars, geom = "dotplot")
#> Bin width defaults to 1/30 of the range of the data. Pick better value with `binwidth`.
# }