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How to Make Stunning Line Charts in R: A Complete Guide with ggplot2

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Line Charts with R

Are your visualizations an eyesore? The 1990s are over, pal. Terrible-looking visualizations are no longer acceptable, no matter how useful they might otherwise be. Luckily, there’s a lot you can do to quickly and easily enhance the aesthetics of your visualizations. Today you’ll learn how to make impressive line charts with R and the ggplot2 package.

Want to learn how to make stunning bar charts with R? Here’s our complete guide.

This article demonstrates how to make an aesthetically-pleasing line chart for any occasion. After reading, visualizing time series and similar data should become second nature. Today you’ll learn how to:

Make your first line chart

R has a gapminder package you can download. It contains data on life expectancy, population, and GDP between 1952 and 2007. It’s a time-series dataset, which is excellent for line-based visualizations.

Here’s how to load it (and other libraries):

library(dplyr)
library(ggplot2)
library(gapminder)

head(gapminder)

Calling the head() function outputs the first six rows of the dataset. Here’s how they look:

Image 1 – Head of Gapminder dataset

R’s widely used package for data visualization is ggplot2. It’s based on the layering principle. The first layer represents the data, and after that comes a visualization layer (or layers). These two are mandatory for any chart type, and line charts are no exception. You’ll learn how to add additional layers later.

Your first chart will show the population over time for the United States. Columns year and pop are placed on X-axis and Y-axis, respectively:

usa <- gapminder %>%
  filter(continent == "Americas", country == "United States")

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = pop)) +
  geom_line()

Here’s the corresponding visualization:

Image 2 – Population growth over time in the United States

The visualization is informative but as ugly as they come. The following sections will show you how to tweak the visuals.

Change Color, Line Type, and Add Markers

Keeping the default styling is the worst thing you can do. With the geom_line() layer, you can change the following properties:

Here’s how to make a thicker dashed blue line:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = pop)) +
  geom_line(linetype = "dashed", color = "#0099f9", size = 2)

Image 3 – Changing line style, width, and color

Better, but not quite there yet. Most line charts combine lines and points to make the result more appealing. Here’s how to add points (markers) to yours:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = pop)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5)

Image 4 – Line chart with markers

Now the charts are getting somewhere – but there’s still a lot to do.

Titles, Subtitles, and Captions

You can’t have a complete chart without at least a title. A good subtitle can come in handy for extra information, and a caption is a good place to cite your sources. The most convenient way to add these is through a labs() layer. It takes in values for title, subtitle, and caption

Here’s how to add all three, without styles:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  labs(
    title = "Average life expectancy in US",
    subtitle = "Data from 1952 to 2007",
    caption = "Source: Gapminder dataset"
  )

Image 5 – Title, subtitle, and caption with default styles

But there’s more to this story. You can customize all three in the same way – by putting styles to the theme() layer. Here’s how to center title and caption, left align and italicize the caption, and make the title blue:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  labs(
    title = "Average life expectancy in US",
    subtitle = "Data from 1952 to 2007",
    caption = "Source: Gapminder dataset"
  ) +
  theme(
    plot.title = element_text(color = "#0099f9", size = 20, face = "bold", hjust = 0.5),
    plot.subtitle = element_text(size = 13, face = "bold", hjust = 0.5),
    plot.caption = element_text(face = "italic", hjust = 0)
  )

Image 6 – Styling title, subtitle, and caption

That’s all great, but what about the axis labels? Let’s see how to tweak them next.

Edit Axis Labels

Just take a look at the Y-axis for the previous year vs. population charts. The ticks look horrible. Scientific notation doesn’t help make things easier to read. The following snippet puts “M” next to the number – indicates “Millions”:

library(scales)

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = pop)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  scale_y_continuous(
    labels = unit_format(unit = "M", scale = 1e-6)
  )

Image 7 – Changing axis ticks

But what if you want a bit more space on top and bottom? You can specify where the axis starts and ends. Here’s how:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = pop)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  expand_limits(y = c(125000000, 325000000)) +
  scale_y_continuous(
    labels = unit_format(unit = "M", scale = 1e-6)
  )

Image 8 – Changing limits of the axis

The labs() layer takes in values for x and y – these determine the text shown on the X and Y axes, respectively. You can tweak the styles for axis labels the same way you did with the title, subtitle, and caption. The snippet below shows how:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = pop)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  scale_y_continuous(
    labels = unit_format(unit = "M", scale = 1e-6)
  ) +
  labs(
    x = "Year",
    y = "Population"
  ) +
  theme(
    axis.title.x = element_text(color = "#0099f9", size = 16, face = "bold"),
    axis.title.y = element_text(color = "#0099f9", size = 16, face = "italic")
  )

Image 9 – Changing X and Y axis labels

And that’s it for styling axes! Let’s see how to show multiple lines on the same chart next.

Draw Multiple Lines on the Same Chart

Showing multiple lines on a single chart can be useful. We’ll use it to compare average life expectancy between major North American countries – the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

To display multiple lines, you can use the group attribute in the data aesthetics layer. Here’s an example:

north_big <- gapminder %>%
  filter(continent == "Americas", country %in% c("United States", "Canada", "Mexico"))

ggplot(north_big, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp, group = country)) +
  geom_line(aes(color = country), size = 2)

Image 10 – Average life expectancy among major North American countries

In case you’re wondering how to add markers to multiple lines – the procedure is identical as it was for a single one. Take a look at the code snippet and image below:

ggplot(north_big, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp, group = country)) +
  geom_line(aes(color = country), size = 2) +
  geom_point(aes(color = country), size = 5)

Image 11 – Adding markers to multiple lines

There’s a legend right next to the plot because of multiple lines on a single chart. You wouldn’t know which line represents what without it. Still, it’s position on the right might be irritating for some use cases. Here’s how to put it on the top:

ggplot(north_big, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp, group = country)) +
  geom_line(aes(color = country), size = 2) +
  geom_point(aes(color = country), size = 5) +
  theme(legend.position = "top")

Image 12 – Changing the legend position

You’ve learned a lot until now, but there’s still one important topic to cover – labels.

Adding Labels

If there aren’t too many data points on a line chart, it can be useful to add labels showing the exact values. Be careful with them – they can make your visualization messy fast. 

Here’s how to plot average life expectancy in the United States and show text on top of the line:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  geom_text(aes(label = lifeExp))

Image 13 – Adding text

A couple of problems, though. The labels are a bit small, and they are positioned right on top of the markers. The code snippet below makes the text larger and pushes them a bit higher:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  geom_text(
    aes(label = lifeExp),
    nudge_x = 0.25,
    nudge_y = 0.25,
    check_overlap = TRUE,
    size = 5
  )

Image 14 – Styling text

Showing text might not be the cleanest solution every time. Maybe you want text wrapped inside a box to give your visualization a touch more style. You can do that by replacing geom_text() with geom_label(). That’s the only change you need to make:

ggplot(usa, aes(x = year, y = lifeExp)) +
  geom_line(color = "#0099f9", size = 2) +
  geom_point(color = "#0099f9", size = 5) +
  geom_label(
    aes(label = lifeExp),
    nudge_x = 0.25,
    nudge_y = 0.25,
    check_overlap = TRUE
  )

Image 15 – Replacing text with labels

And that’s all you really need to know about labels and line charts for today. Let’s wrap things up. 

Conclusion

Today you’ve learned how to make line charts and how to make them aesthetically pleasing. You’ve learned how to change colors, line width and type, titles, subtitles, captions, axis labels, and much more. You are now ready to include line charts in your reports and dashboards. You can expect more basic R tutorials weekly (usually on Sundays) and more advanced tutorials throughout the week. Fill out the subscribe form below so you never miss an update.

Are you completely new to R but have some programming experience? Check out our detailed R guide for programmers.

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Article How to Make Stunning Line Charts in R: A Complete Guide with ggplot2 comes from Appsilon | End­ to­ End Data Science Solutions.

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