% Generated by roxygen2: do not edit by hand % Please edit documentation in R/geom_horizon.r \docType{data} \name{geom_horizon} \alias{geom_horizon} \alias{GeomHorizon} \alias{stat_horizon} \alias{StatHorizon} \title{Plot a time series as a horizon plot} \format{An object of class \code{GeomHorizon} (inherits from \code{GeomArea}, \code{GeomRibbon}, \code{Geom}, \code{ggproto}, \code{gg}) of length 4.} \usage{ geom_horizon(mapping = NULL, data = NULL, show.legend = TRUE, inherit.aes = TRUE, na.rm = TRUE, bandwidth = NULL, ...) GeomHorizon stat_horizon(mapping = NULL, data = NULL, geom = "horizon", show.legend = TRUE, inherit.aes = TRUE, na.rm = TRUE, bandwidth = NULL, ...) StatHorizon } \description{ A horizon plot breaks the Y dimension down using colours. This is useful when visualising y values spanning a vast range and / or trying to highlight outliers without losing context of the rest of the data.\cr \cr Horizon plots are best viewed in an apsect ratio of very low vertical length. } \section{Aesthetics}{ \code{x}, \code{y}, \code{fill}. \code{fill} defaults to \code{..band..} which is the band number the current data fill area belongs in. } \section{Other parameters}{ \code{bandwidth}, to dictate the span of a band. } \keyword{internal}