% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/aes-colour-fill-alpha.r \name{aes_colour_fill_alpha} \alias{aes_colour_fill_alpha} \alias{colour} \alias{color} \alias{fill} \title{Colour related aesthetics: colour, fill, and alpha} \description{ These aesthetics parameters change the colour (\code{colour} and \code{fill}) and the opacity (\code{alpha}) of geom elements on a plot. Almost every geom has either colour or fill (or both), as well as can have their alpha modified. Modifying colour on a plot is a useful way to enhance the presentation of data, often especially when a plot graphs more than two variables. } \section{Colour and fill}{ Colours and fills can be specified in the following ways: \itemize{ \item A name, e.g., \code{"red"}. R has 657 built-in named colours, which can be listed with \code{\link[grDevices:colors]{grDevices::colors()}}. \item An rgb specification, with a string of the form \code{"#RRGGBB"} where each of the pairs \code{RR}, \code{GG}, \code{BB} consists of two hexadecimal digits giving a value in the range \code{00} to \code{FF}. You can optionally make the colour transparent by using the form \code{"#RRGGBBAA"}. \item An \code{NA}, for a completely transparent colour. } } \section{Alpha}{ Alpha refers to the opacity of a geom. Values of \code{alpha} range from 0 to 1, with lower values corresponding to more transparent colors. Alpha can additionally be modified through the \code{colour} or \code{fill} aesthetic if either aesthetic provides color values using an rgb specification (\code{"#RRGGBBAA"}), where \code{AA} refers to transparency values. } \examples{ \donttest{ # Bar chart example p <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(factor(cyl))) # Default plotting p + geom_bar() # To change the interior colouring use fill aesthetic p + geom_bar(fill = "red") # Compare with the colour aesthetic which changes just the bar outline p + geom_bar(colour = "red") # Combining both, you can see the changes more clearly p + geom_bar(fill = "white", colour = "red") # Both colour and fill can take an rgb specification. p + geom_bar(fill = "#00abff") # Use NA for a completely transparent colour. p + geom_bar(fill = NA, colour = "#00abff") # Colouring scales differ depending on whether a discrete or # continuous variable is being mapped. For example, when mapping # fill to a factor variable, a discrete colour scale is used. ggplot(mtcars, aes(factor(cyl), fill = factor(vs))) + geom_bar() # When mapping fill to continuous variable a continuous colour # scale is used. ggplot(faithfuld, aes(waiting, eruptions)) + geom_raster(aes(fill = density)) # Some geoms only use the colour aesthetic but not the fill # aesthetic (e.g. geom_point() or geom_line()). p <- ggplot(economics, aes(x = date, y = unemploy)) p + geom_line() p + geom_line(colour = "green") p + geom_point() p + geom_point(colour = "red") # For large datasets with overplotting the alpha # aesthetic will make the points more transparent. df <- data.frame(x = rnorm(5000), y = rnorm(5000)) p <- ggplot(df, aes(x,y)) p + geom_point() p + geom_point(alpha = 0.5) p + geom_point(alpha = 1/10) # Alpha can also be used to add shading. p <- ggplot(economics, aes(x = date, y = unemploy)) + geom_line() p yrng <- range(economics$unemploy) p <- p + geom_rect( aes(NULL, NULL, xmin = start, xmax = end, fill = party), ymin = yrng[1], ymax = yrng[2], data = presidential ) p p + scale_fill_manual(values = alpha(c("blue", "red"), .3)) } } \seealso{ \itemize{ \item Other options for modifying colour: \code{\link[=scale_colour_brewer]{scale_colour_brewer()}}, \code{\link[=scale_colour_gradient]{scale_colour_gradient()}}, \code{\link[=scale_colour_grey]{scale_colour_grey()}}, \code{\link[=scale_colour_hue]{scale_colour_hue()}}, \code{\link[=scale_colour_identity]{scale_colour_identity()}}, \code{\link[=scale_colour_manual]{scale_colour_manual()}}, \code{\link[=scale_colour_viridis_d]{scale_colour_viridis_d()}} \item Other options for modifying fill: \code{\link[=scale_fill_brewer]{scale_fill_brewer()}}, \code{\link[=scale_fill_gradient]{scale_fill_gradient()}}, \code{\link[=scale_fill_grey]{scale_fill_grey()}}, \code{\link[=scale_fill_hue]{scale_fill_hue()}}, \code{\link[=scale_fill_identity]{scale_fill_identity()}}, \code{\link[=scale_fill_manual]{scale_fill_manual()}}, \code{\link[=scale_fill_viridis_d]{scale_fill_viridis_d()}} \item Other options for modifying alpha: \code{\link[=scale_alpha]{scale_alpha()}} \item Run \code{vignette("ggplot2-specs")} to see an overview of other aesthestics that can be modified. } }