diff --git a/communication.qmd b/communication.qmd index ed02c80..5720e3b 100644 --- a/communication.qmd +++ b/communication.qmd @@ -219,7 +219,10 @@ ggplot(mpg, aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) + geom_point() + geom_text_repel(data = potential_outliers, aes(label = model)) + geom_point(data = potential_outliers, color = "red") + - geom_point(data = potential_outliers, color = "red", size = 3, shape = "circle open") + geom_point( + data = potential_outliers, + color = "red", size = 3, shape = "circle open" + ) ``` Remember, in addition to `geom_text()` and `geom_label()`, you have many other geoms in ggplot2 available to help annotate your plot. @@ -683,6 +686,13 @@ Subsetting the data has affected the x and y scales as well as the smooth curve. #| layout-ncol: 2 #| fig-width: 4 #| message: false +#| fig-alt: | +#| On the left, scatterplot of highway mileage vs. displacement, with +#| displacement. The smooth curve overlaid shows a decreasing, and then +#| increasing trend, like a hockey stick. On the right, same variables +#| are plotted with displacement ranging only from 5 to 6 and highway +#| mileage ranging only from 10 to 25. The smooth curve overlaid shows a +#| trend that's slightly increasing first and then decreasing. # Left ggplot(mpg, aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) + @@ -706,6 +716,13 @@ Therefore, to zoom in on a region of the plot, it's generally best to use `coord #| fig-width: 4 #| message: false #| warning: false +#| fig-alt: | +#| On the left, scatterplot of highway mileage vs. displacement, with +#| displacement ranging from 5 to 6 and highway mileage ranging from +#| 10 to 25. The smooth curve overlaid shows a trend that's slightly +#| increasing first and then decreasing. On the right, same variables +#| are plotted with the same limits, however the smooth curve overlaid +#| shows a relatively flat trend with a slight increase at the end. # Left ggplot(mpg, aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) +