% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/theme-current.R \name{theme_get} \alias{theme_get} \alias{theme_set} \alias{theme_update} \alias{theme_replace} \alias{\%+replace\%} \title{Get, set, and modify the active theme} \usage{ theme_get() theme_set(new) theme_update(...) theme_replace(...) e1 \%+replace\% e2 } \arguments{ \item{new}{new theme (a list of theme elements)} \item{...}{named list of theme settings} \item{e1, e2}{Theme and element to combine} } \value{ \code{theme_set()}, \code{theme_update()}, and \code{theme_replace()} invisibly return the previous theme so you can easily save it, then later restore it. } \description{ The current/active theme (see \code{\link[=theme]{theme()}}) is automatically applied to every plot you draw. Use \code{theme_get()} to get the current theme, and \code{theme_set()} to completely override it. \code{theme_update()} and \code{theme_replace()} are shorthands for changing individual elements. } \section{Adding on to a theme}{ \code{+} and \verb{\%+replace\%} can be used to modify elements in themes. \code{+} updates the elements of e1 that differ from elements specified (not NULL) in e2. Thus this operator can be used to incrementally add or modify attributes of a ggplot theme. In contrast, \verb{\%+replace\%} replaces the entire element; any element of a theme not specified in e2 will not be present in the resulting theme (i.e. NULL). Thus this operator can be used to overwrite an entire theme. \code{theme_update()} uses the \code{+} operator, so that any unspecified values in the theme element will default to the values they are set in the theme. \code{theme_replace()} uses \verb{\%+replace\%} to completely replace the element, so any unspecified values will overwrite the current value in the theme with \code{NULL}. In summary, the main differences between \code{theme_set()}, \code{theme_update()}, and \code{theme_replace()} are: \itemize{ \item \code{theme_set()} completely overrides the current theme. \item \code{theme_update()} modifies a particular element of the current theme using the \code{+} operator. \item \code{theme_replace()} modifies a particular element of the current theme using the \verb{\%+replace\%} operator. } } \examples{ p <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(mpg, wt)) + geom_point() p # Use theme_set() to completely override the current theme. # theme_update() and theme_replace() are similar except they # apply directly to the current/active theme. # theme_update() modifies a particular element of the current theme. # Here we have the old theme so we can later restore it. # Note that the theme is applied when the plot is drawn, not # when it is created. old <- theme_set(theme_bw()) p theme_set(old) theme_update(panel.grid.minor = element_line(colour = "red")) p theme_set(old) theme_replace(panel.grid.minor = element_line(colour = "red")) p theme_set(old) p # Modifying theme objects ----------------------------------------- # You can use + and \%+replace\% to modify a theme object. # They differ in how they deal with missing arguments in # the theme elements. add_el <- theme_grey() + theme(text = element_text(family = "Times")) add_el$text rep_el <- theme_grey() \%+replace\% theme(text = element_text(family = "Times")) rep_el$text } \seealso{ \code{\link[=+.gg]{+.gg()}} }