Built-in Continuous Color Scales in R
A reference for the built-in named continuous (sequential, diverging and cyclical) color scales in Plotly.
New to Plotly?
Plotly is a free and open-source graphing library for R. We recommend you read our Getting Started guide for the latest installation or upgrade instructions, then move on to our Plotly Fundamentals tutorials or dive straight in to some Basic Charts tutorials.
Using Built-In Continuous Color Scales
Plotly R supports a large number of built-in continuous color scales. These can be viewed and used with the 'RColorBrewer' package.
When using continuous color scales, you will often want to configure various aspects of its range and colorbar.
Discrete Color Sequences
Plotly also comes with some built-in discrete color sequences.
Supported Built-In Continuous Color Scales
You can use any of the following names as string values to set colorscale
arguments.
These strings are case-sensitive.
library("RColorBrewer")
brewer.pal.info
## maxcolors category colorblind
## BrBG 11 div TRUE
## PiYG 11 div TRUE
## PRGn 11 div TRUE
## PuOr 11 div TRUE
## RdBu 11 div TRUE
## RdGy 11 div FALSE
## RdYlBu 11 div TRUE
## RdYlGn 11 div FALSE
## Spectral 11 div FALSE
## Accent 8 qual FALSE
## Dark2 8 qual TRUE
## Paired 12 qual TRUE
## Pastel1 9 qual FALSE
## Pastel2 8 qual FALSE
## Set1 9 qual FALSE
## Set2 8 qual TRUE
## Set3 12 qual FALSE
## Blues 9 seq TRUE
## BuGn 9 seq TRUE
## BuPu 9 seq TRUE
## GnBu 9 seq TRUE
## Greens 9 seq TRUE
## Greys 9 seq TRUE
## Oranges 9 seq TRUE
## OrRd 9 seq TRUE
## PuBu 9 seq TRUE
## PuBuGn 9 seq TRUE
## PuRd 9 seq TRUE
## Purples 9 seq TRUE
## RdPu 9 seq TRUE
## Reds 9 seq TRUE
## YlGn 9 seq TRUE
## YlGnBu 9 seq TRUE
## YlOrBr 9 seq TRUE
## YlOrRd 9 seq TRUE
Built-in color scales are stored as a string of CSS colors:
library("RColorBrewer")
brewer.pal(n = 8, name = "YlGn")
## [1] "#FFFFE5" "#F7FCB9" "#D9F0A3" "#ADDD8E" "#78C679" "#41AB5D" "#238443"
## [8] "#005A32"
Built-In Sequential Color scales
A collection of predefined sequential colorscales is provided in the 'RColorBrewer' package. Sequential color scales are appropriate for most continuous data, but in some cases it can be helpful to use a diverging or cyclical color scale (see below).
Here are all the built-in sequential scales in the 'RColorBrewer' package:
library("RColorBrewer")
display.brewer.all(type = 'seq')
Built-In Diverging Color scales
A collection of predefined diverging color scales is provided in the 'RColorBrewer' package. Diverging color scales are appropriate for continuous data that has a natural midpoint or an otherwise informative special value, such as 0 altitude, or the boiling point of a liquid. These scales are intended to be used when explicitly setting the midpoint of the scale.
Here are all the built-in diverging scales in the 'RColorBrewer' package:
library("RColorBrewer")
display.brewer.all(type = 'div')
What About Dash?
Dash for R is an open-source framework for building analytical applications, with no Javascript required, and it is tightly integrated with the Plotly graphing library.
Learn about how to install Dash for R at https://dashr.plot.ly/installation.
Everywhere in this page that you see fig
, you can display the same figure in a Dash for R application by passing it to the figure
argument of the Graph
component from the built-in dashCoreComponents
package like this:
library(plotly)
fig <- plot_ly()
# fig <- fig %>% add_trace( ... )
# fig <- fig %>% layout( ... )
library(dash)
library(dashCoreComponents)
library(dashHtmlComponents)
app <- Dash$new()
app$layout(
htmlDiv(
list(
dccGraph(figure=fig)
)
)
)
app$run_server(debug=TRUE, dev_tools_hot_reload=FALSE)