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

Importing new fonts with the extrafont package


This recipe teaches you how to use the ggtech package to coerce themes to resemble some tech companies (like Google, Facebook and Twitter) styles. To do this, we first need to have some fonts installed into our system and only then we can have them imported into R to later be used.

This recipe demonstrates how fonts required by ggtech can be installed and imported into your R Session. By learning it, you will also be able to import and use any font installed into your system. The main package used to this intent is extrafont.

Getting Ready

For this recipe, two packages are going to be called, downloader and extrafont; make sure that both are installed by running the following code:

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

Now that we have both packages installed, proceed to font downloading, installation, and importation processes.

How to do it...

Importing new fonts...