ggpath is a ‘ggplot2’ extension that enables robust image grobs in panels and theme elements. This means it helps plotting images (from local paths, from urls or from raw image data) in nearly every part of a ggplot.
The easiest way to get ggpath is to install it from CRAN with:
install.packages("ggpath")
To get a bug fix or to use a feature from the development version, you can install the development version of ggpath from GitHub, for example with:
if (!require("pak")) install.packages("pak")
::pkg_install("mrcaseb/ggpath") pak
The two main features to provide images in a ggplot are a geom
(geom_from_path()
) and theme elements
(element_path()
& element_raster()
). All
of them replace image urls, local image paths, or raw image data with
the actual image. And to improve performance, the images are cached
locally.
The below examples use local image files that are shipped with the package. Let’s locate the images first.
<- system.file("r_logo.png", package = "ggpath")
local_r_logo <- system.file("example_bg.jpg", package = "ggpath") local_background_image
Now, we can make a simple plot, where we use the logo image like a point by replacing the local path with the actual image.
library(ggplot2)
library(ggpath)
<- data.frame(x = c(-1, 1), y = 1, path = local_r_logo)
plot_data ggplot(plot_data, aes(x = x, y = y)) +
geom_from_path(aes(path = path), width = 0.2) +
coord_cartesian(xlim = c(-2, 2)) +
theme_minimal()
We can build on top of that by adding new axis labels, axis titles,
plot title and subtitle, or a caption and using a ggpath theme element.
Note the usage of transparency with the alpha
argument, the
justification with the hjust
/vjust
arguments,
or the rotation with the angle
argument.
ggplot(plot_data, aes(x = x, y = local_r_logo)) +
geom_from_path(aes(path = path), width = 0.2, alpha = 0.2) +
coord_cartesian(xlim = c(-2, 2)) +
theme_minimal() +
labs(
title = local_r_logo,
subtitle = local_r_logo,
x = local_r_logo,
y = local_r_logo,
caption = local_r_logo
+
) theme(
plot.caption = element_path(hjust = 1, size = 0.6),
axis.text.y = element_path(size = 1),
axis.title.x = element_path(),
axis.title.y = element_path(vjust = 0.9),
plot.title = element_path(hjust = 0, size = 2, alpha = 0.5),
plot.subtitle = element_path(hjust = 0.9, angle = 45),
)
A popular way to personalize a plot is to include a logo in the title area. As shown above, we can replace the title or subtitle with an image but not combine it with text. So if we want a title, a subtitle and still a logo in the title area, we can use the ggplot2 tag, which is actually used to implement figure numbering.
ggplot(plot_data, aes(x = x, y = 1)) +
geom_from_path(aes(path = path), width = 0.2, alpha = 0.2) +
coord_cartesian(xlim = c(-2, 2)) +
theme_minimal() +
labs(
title = "This is a very catchy title",
subtitle = "And an informative subtitle",
x = "x axis label",
y = "y axis label",
caption = "useful caption",
tag = local_r_logo
+
) theme(
plot.tag = element_path(size = 2, vjust = 1, alpha = 0.7),
plot.tag.position = c(0.3,1),
)
Please note how to place the image in the whole plot area via
plot.tag.position
. So in combination with alpha you can
place a logo also behind title and subtitle.
The second theme element, element_raster()
, allows
rendering of images in the plot background. It is a replacement for
ggplot2::element_rect()
. In the following example, we plot
the two logos again and now set a sample background. The sample
background is a photo by Dan
Cristian Pădureț on Unsplash.
ggplot(plot_data, aes(x = x, y = y)) +
geom_from_path(aes(path = path), width = 0.2) +
coord_cartesian(xlim = c(-2, 2)) +
theme_dark() +
theme(
plot.background = element_raster(local_background_image),
panel.background = element_rect(fill = "transparent")
)
Some notes on the plot and the general behaviour
fill
parameter to “transparent”.element_raster()
defaults to plot the image to 100% of
the plot width and height (grid::unit(1, "npc")
). This
means that it might change the aspect ratio of the image if it doesn’t
equal the aspect ratio of the actual plot.element_raster()
defaults to plot the image exactly in
the middle of the plot (grid::unit(0.5, "npc")
combined
with just = "centre"
). This means you can move around the
image if you set it’s size bigger than the plot, e.g. with
height = grid::unit(2, "npc")
. See
help("unit", "grid")
for further information.The option "ggpath.cache"
can be used to configure the
package cache. It can be set with
options(ggpath.cache = "memory")
# or
options(ggpath.cache = "filesystem")
# or
options(ggpath.cache = "off")
The default - "memory"
- caches in the current session,
while "filesystem"
caches on disk which means that the
cache is available after starting a fresh session. All cache options
time out after 24 hours.
There are various ggplot2 extensions that provide similar functionality in terms of plotting images. These include but not limited to
ggpath combines the strengths of all of the above by providing
geom_from_path
)
and all other plot areas (with element_path
& element_raster
),There are some downsides compared to the above mentioned packages, e.g.
element_markdown
,