Use this set of scales when your data has already been scaled, i.e. it
already represents aesthetic values that ggplot2 can handle directly.
These scales will not produce a legend unless you also supply the breaks
,
labels
, and type of guide
you want.
Usage
scale_colour_identity(
name = waiver(),
...,
guide = "none",
aesthetics = "colour"
)
scale_fill_identity(name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none", aesthetics = "fill")
scale_shape_identity(name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none")
scale_linetype_identity(name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none")
scale_linewidth_identity(name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none")
scale_alpha_identity(name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none")
scale_size_identity(name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none")
scale_discrete_identity(aesthetics, name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none")
scale_continuous_identity(aesthetics, name = waiver(), ..., guide = "none")
Arguments
- name
The name of the scale. Used as the axis or legend title. If
waiver()
, the default, the name of the scale is taken from the first mapping used for that aesthetic. IfNULL
, the legend title will be omitted.- ...
Other arguments passed on to
discrete_scale()
orcontinuous_scale()
- guide
Guide to use for this scale. Defaults to
"none"
.- 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
colour
andfill
aesthetics at the same time, viaaesthetics = c("colour", "fill")
.
Details
The functions scale_colour_identity()
, scale_fill_identity()
, scale_size_identity()
,
etc. work on the aesthetics specified in the scale name: colour
, fill
, size
,
etc. However, the functions scale_colour_identity()
and scale_fill_identity()
also
have an optional aesthetics
argument that can be used to define both colour
and
fill
aesthetic mappings via a single function call. The functions
scale_discrete_identity()
and scale_continuous_identity()
are generic scales that
can work with any aesthetic or set of aesthetics provided via the aesthetics
argument.
See also
The identity scales section of the online ggplot2 book.
Other shape scales: scale_shape()
, scale_shape_manual()
.
Other linetype scales: scale_linetype()
, scale_linetype_manual()
.
Other alpha scales: scale_alpha()
, scale_alpha_manual()
.
Other size scales: scale_size()
, scale_size_manual()
.
Other colour scales:
scale_alpha()
,
scale_colour_brewer()
,
scale_colour_continuous()
,
scale_colour_gradient()
,
scale_colour_grey()
,
scale_colour_hue()
,
scale_colour_manual()
,
scale_colour_steps()
,
scale_colour_viridis_d()
Examples
ggplot(luv_colours, aes(u, v)) +
geom_point(aes(colour = col), size = 3) +
scale_color_identity() +
coord_fixed()
df <- data.frame(
x = 1:4,
y = 1:4,
colour = c("red", "green", "blue", "yellow")
)
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) + geom_tile(aes(fill = colour))
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_tile(aes(fill = colour)) +
scale_fill_identity()
# To get a legend guide, specify guide = "legend"
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_tile(aes(fill = colour)) +
scale_fill_identity(guide = "legend")
# But you'll typically also need to supply breaks and labels:
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_tile(aes(fill = colour)) +
scale_fill_identity("trt", labels = letters[1:4], breaks = df$colour,
guide = "legend")
# cyl scaled to appropriate size
ggplot(mtcars, aes(mpg, wt)) +
geom_point(aes(size = cyl))
# cyl used as point size
ggplot(mtcars, aes(mpg, wt)) +
geom_point(aes(size = cyl)) +
scale_size_identity()