Reputation: 10587
I would like two separate plots. I am using them in different frames of a beamer presentation and I will add one line to the other (eventually, not in example below). Thus I do not want the presentation to "skip" ("jump" ?) from one slide to the next slide. I would like it to look like the line is being added naturally. The below code I believe shows the problem. It is subtle, but not how the plot area of the second plot is slightly larger than of the first plot. This happens because of the y axis label.
library(ggplot2)
dfr1 <- data.frame(
time = 1:10,
value = runif(10)
)
dfr2 <- data.frame(
time = 1:10,
value = runif(10, 1000, 1001)
)
p1 <- ggplot(dfr1, aes(time, value)) + geom_line() + scale_y_continuous(breaks = NULL) + scale_x_continuous(breaks = NULL) + ylab(expression(hat(z)==hat(gamma)[1]*time+hat(gamma)[4]*time^2))
print(p1)
dev.new()
p2 <- ggplot(dfr2, aes(time, value)) + geom_line() + scale_y_continuous(breaks = NULL) + scale_x_continuous(breaks = NULL) + ylab(".")
print(p2)
I would prefer to not have a hackish solution such as setting the size of the axis label manually or adding spaces on the x-axis (see one reference below), because I will use this technique in several settings and the labels can change at any time (I like reproducibility so want a flexible solution).
I'm searched a lot and have found the following:
Specifying ggplot2 panel width
How can I make consistent-width plots in ggplot (with legends)?
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/ggplot2/2MNoYtX8EEY
How can I add variable size y-axis labels in R with ggplot2 without changing the plot width?
They do not work for me, mainly because I need separate plots, so it is not a matter of aligning them virtically on one combined plot as in some of the above solutions.
Upvotes: 13
Views: 3912
Reputation: 77096
haven't tried, but this might work,
gl <- lapply(list(p1,p2), ggplotGrob)
library(grid)
widths <- do.call(unit.pmax, lapply(gl, "[[", "widths"))
heights <- do.call(unit.pmax, lapply(gl, "[[", "heights"))
lg <- lapply(gl, function(g) {g$widths <- widths; g$heights <- heights; g})
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(lg[[1]])
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(lg[[2]])
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 59345
How about using this for p2:
p2 <- ggplot(dfr2, aes(time, value)) + geom_line() +
scale_y_continuous(breaks = NULL) +
scale_x_continuous(breaks = NULL) +
ylab(expression(hat(z)==hat(gamma)[1]*time+hat(gamma)[4]*time^2)) +
theme(axis.title.y=element_text(color=NA))
This has the same label as p1, but the color is NA so it doesn't display. You could also use color="white"
.
Upvotes: 2