EVOLUTION-MANAGER
Edit File: coord_flip.html
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"><html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>R: Cartesian coordinates with x and y flipped</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="R.css" /> </head><body> <table width="100%" summary="page for coord_flip {ggplot2}"><tr><td>coord_flip {ggplot2}</td><td style="text-align: right;">R Documentation</td></tr></table> <h2>Cartesian coordinates with x and y flipped</h2> <h3>Description</h3> <p>Flip cartesian coordinates so that horizontal becomes vertical, and vertical, horizontal. This is primarily useful for converting geoms and statistics which display y conditional on x, to x conditional on y. </p> <h3>Usage</h3> <pre> coord_flip(xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL, expand = TRUE, clip = "on") </pre> <h3>Arguments</h3> <table summary="R argblock"> <tr valign="top"><td><code>xlim</code></td> <td> <p>Limits for the x and y axes.</p> </td></tr> <tr valign="top"><td><code>ylim</code></td> <td> <p>Limits for the x and y axes.</p> </td></tr> <tr valign="top"><td><code>expand</code></td> <td> <p>If <code>TRUE</code>, the default, adds a small expansion factor to the limits to ensure that data and axes don't overlap. If <code>FALSE</code>, limits are taken exactly from the data or <code>xlim</code>/<code>ylim</code>.</p> </td></tr> <tr valign="top"><td><code>clip</code></td> <td> <p>Should drawing be clipped to the extent of the plot panel? A setting of <code>"on"</code> (the default) means yes, and a setting of <code>"off"</code> means no. In most cases, the default of <code>"on"</code> should not be changed, as setting <code>clip = "off"</code> can cause unexpected results. It allows drawing of data points anywhere on the plot, including in the plot margins. If limits are set via <code>xlim</code> and <code>ylim</code> and some data points fall outside those limits, then those data points may show up in places such as the axes, the legend, the plot title, or the plot margins.</p> </td></tr> </table> <h3>Examples</h3> <pre> # Very useful for creating boxplots, and other interval # geoms in the horizontal instead of vertical position. ggplot(diamonds, aes(cut, price)) + geom_boxplot() + coord_flip() h <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(carat)) + geom_histogram() h h + coord_flip() h + coord_flip() + scale_x_reverse() # You can also use it to flip line and area plots: df <- data.frame(x = 1:5, y = (1:5) ^ 2) ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) + geom_area() last_plot() + coord_flip() </pre> <hr /><div style="text-align: center;">[Package <em>ggplot2</em> version 3.3.2 <a href="00Index.html">Index</a>]</div> </body></html>