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Alpha-transparency scales are not tremendously useful, but can be a
convenient way to visually down-weight less important observations.
scale_alpha()
is an alias for scale_alpha_continuous()
since
that is the most common use of alpha, and it saves a bit of typing.
scale_alpha(name = waiver(), ..., range = c(0.1, 1))scale_alpha_continuous(name = waiver(), ..., range = c(0.1, 1))
scale_alpha_binned(name = waiver(), ..., range = c(0.1, 1))
scale_alpha_discrete(...)
scale_alpha_ordinal(name = waiver(), ..., range = c(0.1, 1))
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. If NULL
, the legend title will be
omitted.
Other arguments passed on to continuous_scale()
, binned_scale()
,
or discrete_scale()
as appropriate, to control name, limits,
breaks, labels and so forth.
Output range of alpha values. Must lie between 0 and 1.
The documentation on colour aesthetics.
Other alpha scales: scale_alpha_manual()
, scale_alpha_identity()
.
The alpha scales section of the online ggplot2 book.
Other colour scales:
scale_colour_brewer()
,
scale_colour_continuous()
,
scale_colour_gradient()
,
scale_colour_grey()
,
scale_colour_hue()
,
scale_colour_identity()
,
scale_colour_manual()
,
scale_colour_steps()
,
scale_colour_viridis_d()
p <- ggplot(mpg, aes(displ, hwy)) +
geom_point(aes(alpha = year))
# The default range of 0.1-1.0 leaves all data visible
p
# Include 0 in the range to make data invisible
p + scale_alpha(range = c(0, 1))
# Changing the title
p + scale_alpha("cylinders")
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