Learn R Programming

ggplot2 (version 2.1.0)

stat_ecdf: Empirical Cumulative Density Function

Description

Empirical Cumulative Density Function

Usage

stat_ecdf(mapping = NULL, data = NULL, geom = "step", position = "identity", ..., n = NULL, pad = TRUE, na.rm = FALSE, show.legend = NA, inherit.aes = TRUE)

Arguments

mapping
Set of aesthetic mappings created by aes or aes_. If specified and inherit.aes = TRUE (the default), it is combined with the default mapping at the top level of the plot. You must supply mapping if there is no plot mapping.
data
The data to be displayed in this layer. There are three options:

If NULL, the default, the data is inherited from the plot data as specified in the call to ggplot.

A data.frame, or other object, will override the plot data. All objects will be fortified to produce a data frame. See fortify for which variables will be created.

A function will be called with a single argument, the plot data. The return value must be a data.frame., and will be used as the layer data.

geom
The geometric object to use display the data
position
Position adjustment, either as a string, or the result of a call to a position adjustment function.
...
other arguments passed on to layer. These are often aesthetics, used to set an aesthetic to a fixed value, like color = "red" or size = 3. They may also be parameters to the paired geom/stat.
n
if NULL, do not interpolate. If not NULL, this is the number of points to interpolate with.
pad
If TRUE, pad the ecdf with additional points (-Inf, 0) and (Inf, 1)
na.rm
If FALSE (the default), removes missing values with a warning. If TRUE silently removes missing values.
show.legend
logical. Should this layer be included in the legends? NA, the default, includes if any aesthetics are mapped. FALSE never includes, and TRUE always includes.
inherit.aes
If FALSE, overrides the default aesthetics, rather than combining with them. This is most useful for helper functions that define both data and aesthetics and shouldn't inherit behaviour from the default plot specification, e.g. borders.

Computed variables

x
x in data
y
cumulative density corresponding x

Examples

Run this code

df <- data.frame(x = rnorm(1000))
ggplot(df, aes(x)) + stat_ecdf(geom = "step")

df <- data.frame(x = c(rnorm(100, 0, 3), rnorm(100, 0, 10)),
                 g = gl(2, 100))

ggplot(df, aes(x, colour = g)) + stat_ecdf()

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab