I have the following problem: I would like to visualize a discrete and a continuous variable on a boxplot in which the latter has a few extreme high values. This makes the boxplot meaningless (the points and even the "body" of the chart is too small), that is why I would like to show this on a log10 scale. I am aware that I could leave out the extreme values from the visualization, but I am not intended to.
Let's see a simple example with diamonds data:
m <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(y = price, x = color))
The problem is not serious here, but I hope you could imagine why I would like to see the values at a log10 scale. Let's try it:
m + geom_boxplot() + coord_trans(y = "log10")
As you can see the y axis is log10 scaled and looks fine but there is a problem with the x axis, which makes the plot very strange.
The problem do not occur with scale_log
, but this is not an option for me, as I cannot use a custom formatter this way. E.g.:
m + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_log10()
My question: does anyone know a solution to plot the boxplot with log10 scale on y axis which labels could be freely formatted with a formatter
function like in this thread?
Editing the question to help answerers based on answers and comments:
What I am really after: one log10 transformed axis (y) with not scientific labels. I would like to label it like dollar (formatter=dollar)
or any custom format.
If I try @hadley's suggestion I get the following warnings:
> m + geom_boxplot() + scale_y_log10(formatter=dollar)
Warning messages:
1: In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
2: In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
3: In max(x) : no non-missing arguments to max; returning -Inf
With an unchanged y axis labels:
See Question&Answers more detail:
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