Context
I want to plot two ggplot2 on the same page with the same legend. http://code.google.com/p/gridextra/wiki/arrangeGrob discribes, how to do this. This already looks good. But… In my example I have two plots with the same x-axis and different y-axis. When the range of the the y-axis is at least 10 times higher than of the other plot (e.g. 10000 instead of 1000), ggplot2 (or grid?) does not align the plots correct (see Output below).
Question
How do I also align the left side of the plot, using two different y-axis?
Example Code
x = c(1, 2)
y = c(10, 1000)
data1 = data.frame(x,y)
p1 <- ggplot(data1) + aes(x=x, y=y, colour=x) + geom_line()
y = c(10, 10000)
data2 = data.frame(x,y)
p2 <- ggplot(data2) + aes(x=x, y=y, colour=x) + geom_line()
# Source: http://code.google.com/p/gridextra/wiki/arrangeGrob
leg <- ggplotGrob(p1 + opts(keep="legend_box"))
legend=gTree(children=gList(leg), cl="legendGrob")
widthDetails.legendGrob <- function(x) unit(3, "cm")
grid.arrange(
p1 + opts(legend.position="none"),
p2 + opts(legend.position="none"),
legend=legend, main ="", left = "")
Output

If you don’t mind a shameless kludge, just add an extra character to the longest label in
p1, like this:I have two underlying questions, which I hope you’ll forgive if you have your reasons:
1) Why not use the same y axis on both? I feel like that’s a more straight-forward approach, and easily achieved in your above example by adding
scale_y_continuous(limits = c(0, 10000))top1.2) Is the functionality provided by
facet_wrapnot adequate here? It’s hard to know what your data structure is actually like, but here’s a toy example of how I’d do this: