Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
329 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

draw straight line between any two point when using coord_polar() in ggplot2 (R)

I have a plot for which I use polar coordinates. Now I would like to add some annotations to this plot, using straight arrows using geom_segment(). However, when I use coord_polar(), as expected these segments get transformed to the polar coordinate system too. That is, of course, the appropriate behaviour, but I would like to add some straight arrows (in the cartesian sense) to the plot. How can I best do that. These two questions, got me close, but not there (R: How to combine straight lines of polygon and line segments with polar coordinates? and Add line segments to histogram in ggplot2 with radar coordinates). For the solution for my plot, I cannot use coord_radar instead.

This works without coord_polar, but not with

library(tidyverse)
df <- tibble(x = rep(letters,  each = 5),
             y = rep(1:5, 26),
             d =  rnorm(26 * 5))


p1 <- ggplot() +
  geom_tile(data = df,
            aes(x = x,
                y = y,
                fill = d)) +
  ylim(c(-2, 5)) +
  geom_segment(
    aes(
      x = "o",
      y = -1,
      xend = "z",
      yend = 3
    ),
    arrow = arrow(length = unit(0.2, "cm")),
    col = "red",
    size = 2
  ) 
p1

enter image description here

p1 + coord_polar()

enter image description here

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Answer

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

This is going to be a bit more of a pain than it might first appear, I'm afraid. Essentially, you'd have to write a new panel drawing method for the segments that ignores whether a coord system is linear or not. To do so, you can do the following, based on GeomSegment$draw_panel:

library(tidyverse)

geom_segment_straight <- function(...) {
  layer <- geom_segment(...)
  new_layer <- ggproto(NULL, layer)
  old_geom <- new_layer$geom
  geom <- ggproto(
    NULL, old_geom,
    draw_panel = function(data, panel_params, coord, 
                          arrow = NULL, arrow.fill = NULL,
                          lineend = "butt", linejoin = "round",
                          na.rm = FALSE) {
      data <- ggplot2:::remove_missing(
        data, na.rm = na.rm, c("x", "y", "xend", "yend", 
                               "linetype", "size", "shape")
      )
      if (ggplot2:::empty(data)) {
        return(zeroGrob())
      }
      coords <- coord$transform(data, panel_params)
      # xend and yend need to be transformed separately, as coord doesn't understand
      ends <- transform(data, x = xend, y = yend)
      ends <- coord$transform(ends, panel_params)
      
      arrow.fill <- if (!is.null(arrow.fill)) arrow.fill else coords$colour
      return(grid::segmentsGrob(
        coords$x, coords$y, ends$x, ends$y,
        default.units = "native", gp = grid::gpar(
          col = alpha(coords$colour, coords$alpha),
          fill = alpha(arrow.fill, coords$alpha),
          lwd = coords$size * .pt,
          lty = coords$linetype,
          lineend = lineend,
          linejoin = linejoin
        ),
        arrow = arrow
      ))
      
    }
  )
  new_layer$geom <- geom
  return(new_layer)
}

Then you can use it like any other geom.

ggplot() +
  geom_tile(data = df,
            aes(x = x,
                y = y,
                fill = d)) +
  ylim(c(-2, 5)) +
  geom_segment_straight(
    aes(
      x = "o",
      y = -1,
      xend = "z",
      yend = 3
    ),
    arrow = arrow(length = unit(0.2, "cm")),
    col = "red",
    size = 2
  ) + 
  coord_polar()

enter image description here

EDIT: geom_curve()

Here is the same trick applied to geom_curve():

geom_curve_polar <- function(...) {
  layer <- geom_curve(...)
  new_layer <- ggproto(NULL, layer)
  old_geom <- new_layer$geom
  geom <- ggproto(
    NULL, old_geom,
    draw_panel = function(data, panel_params, coord, 
                          curvature = 0.5, angle = 90, ncp = 5,
                          arrow = NULL, arrow.fill = NULL,
                          lineend = "butt", linejoin = "round",
                          na.rm = FALSE) {
      data <- ggplot2:::remove_missing(
        data, na.rm = na.rm, c("x", "y", "xend", "yend", 
                               "linetype", "size", "shape")
      )
      if (ggplot2:::empty(data)) {
        return(zeroGrob())
      }
      coords <- coord$transform(data, panel_params)
      ends <- transform(data, x = xend, y = yend)
      ends <- coord$transform(ends, panel_params)
      
      arrow.fill <- if (!is.null(arrow.fill)) arrow.fill else coords$colour
      return(grid::curveGrob(
        coords$x, coords$y, ends$x, ends$y,
        default.units = "native", gp = grid::gpar(
          col = alpha(coords$colour, coords$alpha),
          fill = alpha(arrow.fill, coords$alpha),
          lwd = coords$size * .pt,
          lty = coords$linetype,
          lineend = lineend,
          linejoin = linejoin
        ),
        curvature = curvature, angle = angle, ncp = ncp,
        square = FALSE, squareShape = 1, inflect = FALSE, open = TRUE,
        arrow = arrow
      ))
      
    }
  )
  new_layer$geom <- geom
  return(new_layer)
}

The above yields the following plot after replacing geom_segment_straight() with geom_curve_polar():

enter image description here

Small note: this way of making new geoms is the quick and dirty way of doing it. If you plan to do it properly, you should write the constructors and ggproto classes separately.


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...