Book Image

R Data Visualization Recipes

By : Vitor Bianchi Lanzetta
Book Image

R Data Visualization Recipes

By: Vitor Bianchi Lanzetta

Overview of this book

R is an open source language for data analysis and graphics that allows users to load various packages for effective and better data interpretation. Its popularity has soared in recent years because of its powerful capabilities when it comes to turning different kinds of data into intuitive visualization solutions. This book is an update to our earlier R data visualization cookbook with 100 percent fresh content and covering all the cutting edge R data visualization tools. This book is packed with practical recipes, designed to provide you with all the guidance needed to get to grips with data visualization using R. It starts off with the basics of ggplot2, ggvis, and plotly visualization packages, along with an introduction to creating maps and customizing them, before progressively taking you through various ggplot2 extensions, such as ggforce, ggrepel, and gganimate. Using real-world datasets, you will analyze and visualize your data as histograms, bar graphs, and scatterplots, and customize your plots with various themes and coloring options. The book also covers advanced visualization aspects such as creating interactive dashboards using Shiny By the end of the book, you will be equipped with key techniques to create impressive data visualizations with professional efficiency and precision.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Popular themes with ggthemes


What if you could set themes similar to the ones coming from FiveThirtyEight, The Economist, or the Wall Street Journal? Using the ggthemes package, this is easy to achieve. There are a bunch of other themes available such as Stata, Excel, and Pander. This recipe's goal is to demonstrate how to generally assign some themes from this package.

Getting Ready

There are two requirements. In the first place, we need a ggplot object to draw on; this recipe uses the bubble object created in the previous recipe. You can either make sure it's available on your environment by running that recipe or adapt this recipe by replacing bubble with a ggplot of your own. You also need to make sure that ggthemes is properly installed:

> if(!require(ggthemes)){ install.packages('ggthemes')}

To the playground!

How to do it...

The following steps delineate how to proceed with the recipe:

  1. Load ggthemes and stack theme_fivethirtyeight() to reach for the FiveThirtyEight theme:
> library...