Want to share your content on R-bloggers? click here if you have a blog, or here if you don't.
Plotting pies on ggplot/ggmap is not an easy task, as ggplot2 doesn’t provide native pie geom. The pie we produced in ggplot2 is actually a barplot transform to polar coordination. This make it difficult if we want to produce a map like the above screenshot, which was posted by Tyler Rinker, the author of R package pacman.
The question remained unsolved until he discover that ggtree can do it. The ggtree solution is to use the subview
function, which is good for embed subplots and can embed different types of plots and even user’s own image files.
But it has its own drawback for plotting pies on map. First, it render plots as raster image make it slow to render when we plotting a lot of pies. Second we need some hack to add legend.
Thanks to the ggforce
package, which provide a native implementation of the pie geom, we can plot pies on cartesian coordination.
I created a wrapper function to make it more easy to plot a set of pies.
For example, suppose we have the following data:
set.seed(123) long <- rnorm(50, sd=100) lat <- rnorm(50, sd=50) d <- data.frame(long=long, lat=lat) d <- with(d, d[abs(long) < 150 & abs(lat) < 70,]) n <- nrow(d) d$region <- factor(1:n) d$A <- abs(rnorm(n, sd=1)) d$B <- abs(rnorm(n, sd=2)) d$C <- abs(rnorm(n, sd=3)) d$D <- abs(rnorm(n, sd=4)) d$radius <- 6 * abs(rnorm(n)) head(d) ## long lat region A B C D ## 1 -56.047565 12.665926 1 0.71040656 2.887786 1.309570 2.892264 ## 2 -23.017749 -1.427338 2 0.25688371 1.403569 1.375096 4.945092 ## 4 7.050839 68.430114 3 0.24669188 0.524395 3.189978 5.138863 ## 5 12.928774 -11.288549 4 0.34754260 3.144288 3.789556 2.295894 ## 8 -126.506123 29.230687 5 0.95161857 3.029335 1.048951 2.471943 ## 9 -68.685285 6.192712 6 0.04502772 3.203072 2.596539 4.439393 ## radius ## 1 6.4847970 ## 2 3.7845247 ## 4 0.6818394 ## 5 9.1974120 ## 8 3.1267039 ## 9 2.9392227
It is very easy to draw the pies on the map by the geom_scatterpie
layer.
library(ggplot2) library(scatterpie) world <- map_data('world') p <- ggplot(world, aes(long, lat)) + geom_map(map=world, aes(map_id=region), fill=NA, color="black") + coord_quickmap() p + geom_scatterpie(aes(x=long, y=lat, group=region, r=radius), data=d, cols=LETTERS[1:4], color=NA, alpha=.8) + geom_scatterpie_legend(d$radius, x=-160, y=-55)
This is just a simple application of the ggforce
, and I find many people like it. They even asked me to implement the pie size legend. I do implemented a geom_scatterpie_legend
layer and as the name indicated, it add a legend of the pie sizes as demonstrated in the above figure.
The source code is quite simple, and it is impossible without ggforce
. Now this package is availabel on CRAN, you can use install.packages('scatterpie')
to install it and visit the online vignette.
R-bloggers.com offers daily e-mail updates about R news and tutorials about learning R and many other topics. Click here if you're looking to post or find an R/data-science job.
Want to share your content on R-bloggers? click here if you have a blog, or here if you don't.