% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/coord-cartesian-.r \name{coord_cartesian} \alias{coord_cartesian} \title{Cartesian coordinates} \usage{ coord_cartesian( xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL, expand = TRUE, default = FALSE, clip = "on" ) } \arguments{ \item{xlim, ylim}{Limits for the x and y axes.} \item{expand}{If \code{TRUE}, the default, adds a small expansion factor to the limits to ensure that data and axes don't overlap. If \code{FALSE}, limits are taken exactly from the data or \code{xlim}/\code{ylim}.} \item{default}{Is this the default coordinate system? If \code{FALSE} (the default), then replacing this coordinate system with another one creates a message alerting the user that the coordinate system is being replaced. If \code{TRUE}, that warning is suppressed.} \item{clip}{Should drawing be clipped to the extent of the plot panel? A setting of \code{"on"} (the default) means yes, and a setting of \code{"off"} means no. In most cases, the default of \code{"on"} should not be changed, as setting \code{clip = "off"} can cause unexpected results. It allows drawing of data points anywhere on the plot, including in the plot margins. If limits are set via \code{xlim} and \code{ylim} and some data points fall outside those limits, then those data points may show up in places such as the axes, the legend, the plot title, or the plot margins.} } \description{ The Cartesian coordinate system is the most familiar, and common, type of coordinate system. Setting limits on the coordinate system will zoom the plot (like you're looking at it with a magnifying glass), and will not change the underlying data like setting limits on a scale will. } \examples{ # There are two ways of zooming the plot display: with scales or # with coordinate systems. They work in two rather different ways. p <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(disp, wt)) + geom_point() + geom_smooth() p # Setting the limits on a scale converts all values outside the range to NA. p + scale_x_continuous(limits = c(325, 500)) # Setting the limits on the coordinate system performs a visual zoom. # The data is unchanged, and we just view a small portion of the original # plot. Note how smooth continues past the points visible on this plot. p + coord_cartesian(xlim = c(325, 500)) # By default, the same expansion factor is applied as when setting scale # limits. You can set the limits precisely by setting expand = FALSE p + coord_cartesian(xlim = c(325, 500), expand = FALSE) # Simiarly, we can use expand = FALSE to turn off expansion with the # default limits p + coord_cartesian(expand = FALSE) # You can see the same thing with this 2d histogram d <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(carat, price)) + stat_bin2d(bins = 25, colour = "white") d # When zooming the scale, the we get 25 new bins that are the same # size on the plot, but represent smaller regions of the data space d + scale_x_continuous(limits = c(0, 1)) # When zooming the coordinate system, we see a subset of original 50 bins, # displayed bigger d + coord_cartesian(xlim = c(0, 1)) }