Thanks, Eric! It works well.
2017-10-12 9:13 GMT-07:00 Eric Berger :
> Hi John,
> You can try the following:
>
> override.linetype=c("twodash","solid")
> p <- ggplot(obs, aes(x = Timestamp))
> p <- p + geom_line(aes(y = air_temp, colour = "Temperature", linetype
> ="Temperature"))
> p <- p + geom
Hi John,
You can try the following:
override.linetype=c("twodash","solid")
p <- ggplot(obs, aes(x = Timestamp))
p <- p + geom_line(aes(y = air_temp, colour = "Temperature", linetype
="Temperature"))
p <- p + geom_line(aes(y = rel_hum/5, colour = "Humidity",
linetype="Humidity"))
p <- p +
guides(co
Sorry let me clarify.
If I modify the line
p <- p + geom_line(aes(y = air_temp, colour = "Temperature"))
by
p <- p + geom_line(aes(y = air_temp, colour = "Temperature", linetype
="Temperature"))
and
p <- p + geom_line(aes(y = rel_hum/5, colour = "Humidity"))
by
p <- p + geom_line(aes(y = rel_hum/5
Hi,
To my knowledge, an excellent of ggplot with a second y-axis is
https://rpubs.com/MarkusLoew/226759
In this example, the author uses two colors for the two lines, but the
line shapes are the same -- both are solid. Could each line have its own
color as well as its own shape? For exampl
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