continuous_scale {ggplot2} | R Documentation |
Continuous scale constructor.
continuous_scale(aesthetics, scale_name, palette, name = waiver(), breaks = waiver(), minor_breaks = waiver(), labels = waiver(), limits = NULL, rescaler = rescale, oob = censor, expand = waiver(), na.value = NA_real_, trans = "identity", guide = "legend", position = "left", super = ScaleContinuous)
aesthetics |
The names of the aesthetics that this scale works with |
scale_name |
The name of the scale |
palette |
A palette function that when called with a single integer argument (the number of levels in the scale) returns the values that they should take |
name |
The name of the scale. Used as axis or legend title. If
|
breaks |
One of:
|
minor_breaks |
One of:
|
labels |
One of:
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limits |
A numeric vector of length two providing limits of the scale.
Use |
rescaler |
Used by diverging and n colour gradients
(i.e. |
oob |
Function that handles limits outside of the scale limits (out of bounds). The default replaces out of bounds values with NA. |
expand |
Vector of range expansion constants used to add some
padding around the data, to ensure that they are placed some distance
away from the axes. Use the convenience function |
na.value |
Missing values will be replaced with this value. |
trans |
Either the name of a transformation object, or the object itself. Built-in transformations include "asn", "atanh", "boxcox", "exp", "identity", "log", "log10", "log1p", "log2", "logit", "probability", "probit", "reciprocal", "reverse" and "sqrt". A transformation object bundles together a transform, it's inverse,
and methods for generating breaks and labels. Transformation objects
are defined in the scales package, and are called |
guide |
A function used to create a guide or its name. See
|
position |
The position of the axis. "left" or "right" for vertical scales, "top" or "bottom" for horizontal scales |
super |
The super class to use for the constructed scale |