On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 12:10 PM, Brian Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for the reply. For the combined plot, if I use:
>
> ggplot(comb2) + geom_freqpoly(aes(x = value,
> y = ..density.., group = X2))
>
>
> I get the same colour for both the sets of distributions.
That is bec
Hi,
Thanks for the reply. For the combined plot, if I use:
ggplot(comb2) + geom_freqpoly(aes(x = value,
y = ..density.., group = X2))
I get the same colour for both the sets of distributions. What I want is one
colour for the first set of distributions, and a different c
Hi Brian
On Thu, Sep 8, 2011 at 10:30 AM, Brian Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was trying to overlay/combine two freqpoly plots. The sample code below
> illustrates the problem. Essentially, I want to do is:
>
> 1. Have the same colour for all the lines in 'Plot 1' (and 'Plot 2').
Then don't map the c
Hi,
I was trying to overlay/combine two freqpoly plots. The sample code below
illustrates the problem. Essentially, I want to do is:
1. Have the same colour for all the lines in 'Plot 1' (and 'Plot 2').
Currently, all the lines in Plot 1 have different colours and all the lines
in Plot 2 have dif
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