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ggpp

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Purpose

Package ‘ggpp’ provides a set of building blocks that extend the Grammar of Graphics implemented in package ‘ggplot2’ (>= 3.0.0). The extensions enhance the support of data labels and annotations in plots. New geometries support insets in plots, data labels, marginal marks and the use of native plot coordinates (npc). Position functions implement new approaches to nudging usable with any geometry, but especially useful together with geom_text_s() and geom_label_s() from this package and geom_text_repel() and geom_label_repel() from package ‘ggrepel’ (>= 0.9.2). See: (https://ggrepel.slowkow.com) for installation instructions and news about releases.

Extended Grammar of graphics

Geometries

The distinction between observations or data mapped to x and y aesthetics and data labels is that data labels are linked to a the coordinates of the data, but own location is usually nearby but not exactly that of the data. In other words the location of a data label in x and y coordinates is flexible as long as the link to a data observation can be inferred. In the case of annotations the location on the plotting area is arbitrary, dictated by available graphic design considerations and the requirement of not occluding data observations. In the table below we list the geometries defined in package ‘ggpp’, whether they are intended to for data labels, annotations or data, the aesthetics and pseudo-aesthetic they obey and whether the can connect the original data position to the displaced position where the data label is anchored. These requires also a change in the behaviour of position functions, that we will describe in the next section.

Geometry Main use Aesthetics Segment
geom_text_s() data labels x, y, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, angle, vjust, hjust yes
geom_label_s() data labels x, y, label, size, family, font face, colour, fill, alpha, linewidth, linetype, group, vjust, hjust yes
geom_text_npc() annotations npcx, npcy, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, angle, vjust, hjust no
geom_label_npc() annotations npcx, npcy, label, size, family, font face, colour, fill, alpha, linewidth, linetype, group, vjust, hjust no
geom_point_s() data labels x, y, size, colour, fill, alpha, shape, stroke, group yes
geom_table() data labels x, y, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, angle, vjust, hjust yes
geom_table_npc() annotations npcx, npcy, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, angle, vjust, hjust no
geom_plot() , geom_grob() data labels x, y, label, group, angle, vjust, hjust yes
geom_plot_npc() , geom_grob_npc() annotations npcx, npcy, label, group, vjust, hjust no
geom_margin_arrow() data labels, scale labels, data xintercept, yintercept, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, vjust, hjust no
geom_margin_point() data labels, scale labels, data xintercept, yintercept, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, vjust, hjust no
geom_margin_grob() data labels, scale labels, data xintercept, yintercept, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, vjust, hjust no
geom_quadrant_lines() , geom_vhlines() data labels, scale labels, data xintercept, yintercept, label, size, family, font face, colour, alpha, group, vjust, hjust no

Geometries defined in package ‘ggpp’

Position functions

In contrast to position functions from ‘ggplot2’ all these position functions are able keep the original x and y coordinates under a different name in the data object when displacing them to a new position. This makes them compatible with geom_text_s(), geom_label_s(), geom_point_s(), geom_table(), geom_plot() and geom_grob() from this package. All these geoms can draw segments or arrows connecting the original positions to the displaced positions. They remain backwards compatible and can be used in all geometries that have a position formal parameter. This is similar to the approach used in package ‘ggrepel’ (<= 0.9.1) but uses a different naming convention that allows the new position functions to remain backwards compatible with ‘ggplot2’. Starting from version 0.9.2 the geometries from package ‘ggrepel’ are fully compatible with this new naming convention.

Position functions position_nudge_keep(), position_nudge_to(), position_nudge_center() and position_nudge_line() implement different flavours of nudging. The last two functions make it possible to apply nudging that varies automatically according to the relative position of data points with respect to arbitrary points or lines, or with respect to a polynomial or smoothing spline fitted on-the-fly to the the observations.

Position functions position_stacknudge(), position_fillnudge(), position_jitternudge(), position_dodgenudge() and position_dodge2nudge() each combines the roles of two position functions. They make it possible to easily nudge labels in plot layers that use stacking, dodging or jitter. Functions position_jitter_keep(), position_stack_keep(), position_fill_keep(), position_dodge_keep(), position_dosge2_keep() behave like the positions from ‘ggplot2’ but keep in the data object the original coordinates.

Position Main use Displacement Most used with
position_nudge_keep() nudge x, y (fixed distance) data labels
position_jitter_keep() jitter x, y (random) dot plots
position_stack_keep() stack vertical (absolute) column and bar plots
position_fill_keep() fill vertical (relative, fractional) column plots
position_dodge_keep() dodge sideways (absolute) column and bar plots
position_dosge2_keep() dodge2 sideways (absolute) box plots
position_nudge_to() nudge x, y (fixed position) data labels
position_nudge_center() nudge x, y (away or towards target) data labels
position_nudge_line() nudge x, y (away or towards target) data labels
position_stacknudge() stack + nudge combined, see above data labels in column plots
position_fillnudge() fill + nudge combined, see above data labels in column plots
position_jitternudge() jitter + nudge combined, see above data labels in dot plots
position_dodgenudge() dodge + nudge combined, see above data labels in column plots
position_dodge2nudge() dodge2 + nudge combined, see above data labels in box plots

Aesthetics and scales

Scales scale_npcx_continuous() and scale_npcy_continuous() and the corresponding new aesthetics npcx and npcy make it possible to add graphic elements and text as nnotations to plots using coordinates expressed in npc units for the location within the plotting area. The difference to using function annotate() is that while annotate is driven only by constant values and does not support facets, the geoms that use these pseudo-aesthetics do, opening the door to the easy addition of a whole range of new annotations within the grammar of graphics.

Statistics

Statistic stat_fmt_tb() helps with the formatting of tables to be plotted with geom_table().

Four statistics, stat_dens2d_filter(), stat_dens2d_label(), stat_dens1d_filter() and stat_dens1d_label(), implement tagging or selective labeling of observations based on the local 2D density of observations in a panel. Another two statistics, stat_dens1d_filter_g() and stat_dens1d_filter_g() compute the density by group instead of by plot panel. These six statistics are designed to work well together with geom_text_repel() and geom_label_repel() from package ‘ggrepel’ (>= 0.8.0).

The statistics stat_apply_panel() and stat_apply_group() are useful for applying arbitrary functions returning numeric vectors like cumsum(), cummax() and diff(). Statistics stat_centroid() and stat_summary_xy() allow computation of summaries on both x and y and passing them to a geom.

The statistics stat_quadrant_counts() and stat_panel_counts() make it easy to annotate plots with the number of observations.

Justification

Justifications "outward_mean", "inward_mean", "outward_median" and "inward_median" implement outward and inward justification relative to the centroid of the data instead of to the center of the $x$ or $y$ scales. Justification outward or inward from an arbitrary origin is also supported. Justification "position" implements justification at the edge nearest to the original position. This works only together with position functions that save the original location using the naming convention implemented in ‘ggpp’, otherwise default justification falls-back to "center"/"middle".

History

This package is a “spin-off” from package ‘ggpmisc’ containing extensions to the grammar originally written for use wihtin ‘ggpmisc’. As ‘ggpmisc’ had grown in size, splitting it into two packages was necessary to easy development and maintenance and to facilitate imports into other packages. For the time being, package ‘ggpmisc’ imports and re-exports all visible definitions from ‘ggpp’.

Examples

The plots below exemplify some of the things that ‘ggpp’ makes possible or makes easier to code compared to ‘ggplot’ used on its own. Additional examples including several combining ‘ggpp’ and ‘ggrepel’ are provided in the package vignette.

library(ggpp)
library(ggrepel)
library(dplyr)

Insets

A plot with an inset table.

mtcars %>%
  group_by(cyl) %>%
  summarize(wt = mean(wt), mpg = mean(mpg)) %>%
  ungroup() %>%
  mutate(wt = sprintf("%.2f", wt),
         mpg = sprintf("%.1f", mpg)) -> tb

df <- tibble(x = 5.45, y = 34, tb = list(tb))

ggplot(mtcars, aes(wt, mpg, colour = factor(cyl))) +
  geom_point() +
  geom_table(data = df, aes(x = x, y = y, label = tb))

A plot with an inset plot.

Inset plot positioned using native plot coordinates (npc) and using keywords insted of numerical values in the range 0..1 which are also accepted.

p <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(factor(cyl), mpg, colour = factor(cyl))) +
  stat_boxplot() +
  labs(y = NULL, x = "Engine cylinders (number)") +
  theme_bw(9) + theme(legend.position = "none")

ggplot(mtcars, aes(wt, mpg, colour = factor(cyl))) +
  geom_point(show.legend = FALSE) +
  annotate("plot_npc", npcx = "left", npcy = "bottom", label = p) +
  expand_limits(y = 0, x = 0)

Centroids

Means computed on-the-fly and shown as asterisks.

ggplot(mtcars, aes(wt, mpg, colour = factor(cyl))) +
  geom_point() +
  stat_centroid(shape = "asterisk", size = 6)

Medians computed on-the-fly displayed marginal arrows.

ggplot(mtcars, aes(wt, mpg, colour = factor(cyl))) +
  geom_point() +
  stat_centroid(geom = "y_margin_arrow", .fun = median,
                aes(yintercept = after_stat(y)), arrow.length = 0.05)

Nudging and stacking combined

df <- data.frame(x1 = c(1, 2, 1, 3, -1),
                 x2 = c("a", "a", "b", "b", "b"),
                 grp = c("some long name", "other name", "some name",
                         "another name", "a name"))

# Add labels to a horizontal column plot (stacked by default)
ggplot(data = df, aes(x2, x1, group = grp)) +
  geom_col(aes(fill = grp), width=0.5) +
  geom_hline(yintercept = 0) +
  geom_text(
    aes(label = grp),
    position = position_stacknudge(vjust = 1, y = -0.2)) +
  theme(legend.position = "none")

Installation

Installation of the most recent stable version from CRAN:

install.packages("ggpp")

Installation of the current unstable version from GitHub:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("aphalo/ggpp")

Documentation

HTML documentation for the package, including help pages and the User Guide, is available at (https://docs.r4photobiology.info/ggpp/).

News about updates are regularly posted at (https://www.r4photobiology.info/).

Chapter 7 in Aphalo (2020) explains both basic concepts of the grammar of graphics as implemented in ‘ggplot2’ as well as extensions to this grammar including several of those made available by packages ‘ggpp’ and ‘ggpmisc’.

Contributing

Please report bugs and request new features at (https://github.com/aphalo/ggpp/issues). Pull requests are welcome at (https://github.com/aphalo/ggpp).

Citation

If you use this package to produce scientific or commercial publications, please cite according to:

citation("ggpp")

Acknowledgements

Being an extension to package ‘ggplot2’, some of the code in package ‘ggpp’ has been created by using as a template that from layer functions and scales in ‘ggplot2’. The user interface of ‘ggpp’ aims at being as consistent as possible with ‘ggplot2’ and the layered grammar of graphics (Wickham 2010). New features added in ‘ggplot2’ are added when relevant to ‘ggpp’, such as support for orientation for flipping of layers. This package does consequently indirectly include significant contributions from several of the authors and maintainers of ‘ggplot2’, listed at (https://ggplot2.tidyverse.org/).

Coordination of development through a friendly exchange of ideas and reciprocal contributions by Kamil Slowikowski to ‘ggpp’ and by myself to ‘ggrepel’ has made the two packages fully inter-compatible.

References

Aphalo, Pedro J. (2020) Learn R: As a Language. The R Series. Boca Raton and London: Chapman and Hall/CRC Press. ISBN: 978-0-367-18253-3. 350 pp.

Wickham, Hadley. 2010. “A Layered Grammar of Graphics.” Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics 19 (1): 3–28. https://doi.org/10.1198/jcgs.2009.07098.

License

© 2016-2023 Pedro J. Aphalo ([email protected]). Released under the GPL, version 2 or greater. This software carries no warranty of any kind.