Hi,
this is not really a ggplot2 issue, but here goes.
If you look at the source code of the Benchmarking package (here
<https://github.com/cran/Benchmarking/blob/master/R/dea.plot.R>) you will
notice that the function is not very explicit about what to return - so the
returned thing is actually a plotting line (lines()). What you could do is
fork the repository, add your own return statement to include the `hpts`
<https://github.com/cran/Benchmarking/blob/master/R/dea.plot.R#L227> which
could be used to find the correct values in `x` (see for example here
<https://github.com/cran/Benchmarking/blob/master/R/dea.plot.R#L231> how
plotting is done).
After you have the formed repository ready (and pushed to your account),
you can install it through
devtools::install_github("yourname/Benchmarking"). Blesssed thee, open
source.
Cheers,
Roman
On Tue, Aug 2, 2016 at 11:11 AM, Lorenzo Isella <lorenzo.isella at
gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hello,
> Thanks for your suggestion, but it is does not help me much.
> Indeed, in this case where RTS="vrs", things are easy as you say.
> However, try for instance to change the technology assumption
> (e.g. replace it with RTS="drs" everywhere in my script) and
you'll
> see that things are not that simple.
> I really need a way to extract the frontier -- it is plotted, so it is
> calculated and it has to be buried somewhere in the package, just I do
> not know where.
> Cheers
>
> Lorenzo
>
> On Tue, Aug 02, 2016 at 09:05:15AM +0000, Jose Iparraguirre wrote:
>
>> Lorenzo,
>>
>> dea.plot plots the vectors x and y, which you already have:
>> data.frame(x,y)
>> x y
>> 1 20 20
>> 2 40 30
>> 3 40 50
>> 4 60 40
>> 5 70 60
>> 6 50 20
>>
>> dea.plot.frontier plots the highest values of y for each value of x.
>> Therefore, for x=20, the plot goes through y=20 but for X=40, where you
>> have Y=30 and Y=50, the plot goes through the latter.
>>
>> Others in the list may give you an easier and better answer, but
it's not
>> difficult to plot all the X and Y in a scatterplot in ggplot and then
to
>> add a line along the highest values of Y per each X.
>>
>> I'm assuming you want an input orientation as in your example, of
course.
>>
>> Hope it helps,
>>
>> Jos?
>>
>>
>> Prof. Jos? Iparraguirre
>> Chief Economist
>> Age UK
>>
>> Age UK
>> Tavis House, 1- 6 Tavistock Square
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>> T 020 303 31482
>> E Jose.Iparraguirre at ageuk.org.uk<mailto:Jose.Iparraguirre at
ageuk.org.uk>
>> Twitter @jose.iparraguirre at ageuk
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>>
>>
>> From: R-help [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-project.org] On Behalf Of
Lorenzo
>> Isella
>> Sent: 02 August 2016 09:05
>> To: r-help at r-project.org
>> Cc: ggplot2 at googlegroups.com
>> Subject: [R] DEA -- Extract the Frontier and ggplot2
>>
>> Dear All,
>> Please consider the code at the end of the email.
>> Everything is fine in this little example, just I do not know how to
>> extract the DEA frontier (solid line in the plot).
>> The reason is that I want to reproduce a more complicated DEA frontier
>> plot using ggplot2 and I need to understand how I can extract the
>> frontier data. Alternatively: can anyone reproduce the same plot with
>> ggplot2?
>> Many thanks
>>
>> Lorenzo
>>
>> ###########################################?
>>
>>
>>
>> library(Benchmarking) # load the Benchmarking library
>>
>> x <- matrix(c(20, 40, 40, 60, 70, 50),ncol=1) #define inputs
>> y <- matrix(c(20, 30, 50, 40, 60, 20),ncol=1) #define outputs
>>
>> e_vrs <- dea(x,y, RTS="vrs",
ORIENTATION="in")#solve LP problem
>> eff_dea <- eff(e_vrs) #select efficiency scores from the results in
e
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> dd <- as.data.frame(cbind(x,y))
>>
>> names(dd) <- c("Input", "Output")
>> dd$Firm <- LETTERS[1:length(x)]
>>
>> dd$Input <- as.integer(dd$Input)
>> dd$Output <- as.integer(dd$Output)
>>
>> pdf("dea-frontier-vrs.pdf")
>> par( mar = c(4.5,5, 1, 1) + 0.1)
>>
>>
dea.plot(x,y,RTS="vrs",ORIENTATION="in",txt=LETTERS[1:length(x)],lty="dashed",
>> xlab="Input", ylab="Output", fex=2,
>> cex=2,cex.lab=2,cex.axis=2)
>> dea.plot.frontier(x,y, RTS="vrs", add=T)
>> text(10,60, "VRS", cex=2)
>> dev.off()
>>
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