Load library tidyverse in order to access dplyr and ggplot2
library(tidyverse)
## ── Attaching core tidyverse packages ──────────────────────── tidyverse 2.0.0 ──
## ✔ dplyr 1.1.4 ✔ readr 2.1.5
## ✔ forcats 1.0.0 ✔ stringr 1.5.1
## ✔ ggplot2 3.5.1 ✔ tibble 3.2.1
## ✔ lubridate 1.9.3 ✔ tidyr 1.3.1
## ✔ purrr 1.0.2
## ── Conflicts ────────────────────────────────────────── tidyverse_conflicts() ──
## ✖ dplyr::filter() masks stats::filter()
## ✖ dplyr::lag() masks stats::lag()
## ℹ Use the conflicted package (<http://conflicted.r-lib.org/>) to force all conflicts to become errors
The source for this dataset is the New York State Department of Conservation and the National Weather Service of 1973 for five months from May to September recorded daily.
Because airquality is a pre-built dataset, we can write it to our data directory to store it for later use.
data("airquality")
In the global environment, click on the row with the airquality dataset and it will take you to a “spreadsheet” view of the data.
The function, head, will only disply the first 6 rows of the dataset. Notice in the global environment to the right, there are 153 observations (rows)
head(airquality)
## Ozone Solar.R Wind Temp Month Day
## 1 41 190 7.4 67 5 1
## 2 36 118 8.0 72 5 2
## 3 12 149 12.6 74 5 3
## 4 18 313 11.5 62 5 4
## 5 NA NA 14.3 56 5 5
## 6 28 NA 14.9 66 5 6
Notice that all the variables are classified as either integers or continuous values .
If you want to look at specific statistics, here are some variations on coding. Here are 2 different ways to calculate “mean.”
mean(airquality$Temp)
## [1] 77.88235
mean(airquality[,4])
## [1] 77.88235
For the second way to calculate the mean, the matrix [row,column] is looking for column #4, which is the Temp column and we use all rows
#median
median(airquality[,4])
## [1] 79
#std.
sd(airquality[,4])
## [1] 9.46527
# var
var(airquality[,4])
## [1] 89.59133
Sometimes we prefer the months to be numerical, but here, we need them as the month names. There are MANY ways to do this. Here is one way to convert numbers 5 - 9 to May through September
airquality$Month[airquality$Month == 5]<- "May"
airquality$Month[airquality$Month == 6]<- "June"
airquality$Month[airquality$Month == 7]<- "July"
airquality$Month[airquality$Month == 8]<- "August"
airquality$Month[airquality$Month == 9]<- "September"
This is one way to reorder the Months so they do not default to alphabetical (you will see another way to reorder DIRECTLY in the chunk that creates the plot below in Plot #1
airquality$Month<-factor(airquality$Month,
levels=c("May", "June","July", "August",
"September"))
Here is a first attempt at viewing a histogram of temperature by the months May through September. We will see that temperatures increase over these months. The median temperature appears to be about 75 degrees.
fill = Month colors the histogram by months between May - Sept.
scale_fill_discrete(name = “Month”…) provides the month names on the right side as a legend in chronological order. This is a different way to order than what was shown above.
labs allows us to add a title, axes labels, and a caption for the data source
p1 <- airquality |>
ggplot(aes(x=Temp, fill=Month)) +
geom_histogram(position="identity")+
scale_fill_discrete(name = "Month",
labels = c("May", "June","July", "August", "September")) +
labs(x = "Monthly Temperatures from May - Sept",
y = "Frequency of Temps",
title = "Histogram of Monthly Temperatures from May - Sept, 1973",
caption = "New York State Department of Conservation and the National Weather Service") #provide the data source
p1
## `stat_bin()` using `bins = 30`. Pick better value with `binwidth`.
Is this plot useful in answering questions about monthly temperature values? Explain
Outline the bars in white using the color = “white” command
Use alpha to add some transparency (values between 0 and 1)
Change the binwidth
Add some transparency and white borders around the histogram bars.
p2 <- airquality |>
ggplot(aes(x=Temp, fill=Month)) +
geom_histogram(position="identity", alpha=0.5, binwidth = 5, color = "white")+
scale_fill_discrete(name = "Month", labels = c("May", "June","July", "August", "September")) +
labs(x = "Monthly Temperatures from May - Sept",
y = "Frequency of Temps",
title = "Histogram of Monthly Temperatures from May - Sept, 1973",
caption = "New York State Department of Conservation and the National Weather Service")
p2
Here July stands out for having high frequency of 85 degree temperatures. The dark purple color indicates overlaps of months due to the transparency.
We can see that August has the highest temperatures based on the boxplot distribution.
p3 <- airquality |>
ggplot(aes(Month, Temp, fill = Month)) +
labs(x = "Months from May through September", y = "Temperatures",
title = "Side-by-Side Boxplot of Monthly Temperatures",
caption = "New York State Department of Conservation and the National Weather Service") +
geom_boxplot() +
scale_fill_discrete(name = "Month", labels = c("May", "June","July", "August", "September"))
p3
Note the points above and below the boxplots in June and July. They are outliers.
Now make one new plot on your own, that is meaningfully different from the 3 I have shown you. You can select any of the variables in this dataset. Be sure to explore the dataset to see which variables are included that we have not explored yet. You may create a scatterplot, histogram, boxplot, or something else.
Be sure to include a title, axes labels, colors, and caption for the datasource in your Plot 4.
p4<-ggplot(airquality, aes(x = Month, y = Solar.R)) +
geom_point(aes(color = Solar.R), size = 3, alpha = 0.7)+
scale_color_gradient(low = "skyblue", high = "orange") +
labs(title = "Scatterplot of Solar Radiation (Solar.R) vs Month",
x = "Month",
y = "Solar Radiation (Solar.R)") +
theme_minimal()
p4
## Warning: Removed 7 rows containing missing values or values outside the scale range
## (`geom_point()`).
The plot represents the relationship between solar radiation and the months of the year from the dataset.On the x-axis, we have the month, which is represented as a categorical variable ranging from May to September. The y-axis shows the solar radiation values, which are numeric, representing the intensity of solar radiation. Each point in the scatterplot is a specific day in the dataset, showing how solar radiation changes with the time of the year. The plot shows us that there is an increase in solar radiation during the summer in June, July, and August and a decrease as we move towards the colder and later months May and September. This tells us a seasonal variation in solar radiation, as radiation is generally higher during the warmer summer months.The code used to make this plot begins by loading the necessary tidyverse library and the airquality dataset. The ggplot() function is then used to create the plot, with the aes() function specifying Month on the x-axis and Solar.R on the y-axis. The geom_point() function is used to plot individual data points. Lastly, the labs() function adds a title and labels, while theme_minimal() is used to apply a clean, minimal style to the plot.
Then, write a brief essay here:
Describe the plot type you have created and the variables you have chosen.
Any insights that the plot shows
Describe your choices in color and any special code you might have used to make this plot.