% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/coord-flip.r \name{coord_flip} \alias{coord_flip} \title{Cartesian coordinates with x and y flipped} \usage{ coord_flip(xlim = NULL, ylim = NULL, expand = TRUE, clip = "on") } \arguments{ \item{xlim}{Limits for the x and y axes.} \item{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{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{ Flip cartesian coordinates so that horizontal becomes vertical, and vertical, horizontal. This is primarily useful for converting geoms and statistics which display y conditional on x, to x conditional on y. } \examples{ # Very useful for creating boxplots, and other interval # geoms in the horizontal instead of vertical position. ggplot(diamonds, aes(cut, price)) + geom_boxplot() + coord_flip() h <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(carat)) + geom_histogram() h h + coord_flip() h + coord_flip() + scale_x_reverse() # You can also use it to flip line and area plots: df <- data.frame(x = 1:5, y = (1:5) ^ 2) ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) + geom_area() last_plot() + coord_flip() }