The loon
package is designed for interactive data
exploration. After exploring the events of interest, we need a tool to
turn the interactive plots to static ones for publication. Snapshots of
interactive loon
plots can be captured in several ways:
<CTRL-P>
(a
primitive rendering of the plot saved as a file)plot()
or loonGrob()
to translate
the plot to a grid
graphic.Of these, the last will be most convenient to incorporate plots in
RMarkdown
or to export them using some R
environments (e.g., RStudio
). This is the method discussed
here.
By translating an interactive loon
widget into a
grid
object, one can also later edit it to change or add
fine details that otherwise might not be easily produced
interactively.
See also the vignette “Saving loon plots”
Other packages within the diveR
package suite are the
loon.ggplot
package and the loon.shiny
package. These can be used to create elegant ggplot2
plots
from loon
plots (and incorporate into into
RMArkdown
documents) and to incorporate interactive
loon
plots for a curated exploratory analysis within in a
shiny
app.
grid
plotsThe grid
graphics package is one of the fundamental
graphics systems in R
. It provides a low-level, general
purpose graphics system for producing a wide variety of plots. Many
well-known graphical systems, e.g. lattice
and
ggplot2
, use grid
to draw plots.
Here loon
plots are transformed into grid
graphics plots to provide, as close to possible, a wysiwyg
snapshot of the interactive plot. Being grid
graphics
plots, these in turn can be edited using various grid
functions.
Begin with a classic data set in R – mtcars
which
contains 32 automobiles and 11 (numeric) variables.
Here, p
is a loon
widget. The aesthetics
attributes can be accessed either by function l_cget()
or a
simple [
, as in
## [1] 21.0 21.0 22.8 21.4 18.7 18.1 14.3 24.4 22.8 19.2 17.8 16.4 17.3
## [14] 15.2 10.4 10.4 14.7 32.4 30.4 33.9 21.5 15.5 15.2 13.3 19.2 27.3
## [27] 26.0 30.4 15.8 19.7 15.0 21.4
## [1] 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8
These returned values always reflect the current states of
p
. For example, suppose the size of points is modified to
6 by direct manipulations on the plot, call
p['size']
, a length 32 vector of 6 is returned.
With this handy “querying tool”, all essential elements of a loon widget
can be accessed to construct a selfsame grid
graphics, as
in
which produced and printed the plot p
(as it presently
appears) by first translating the loon
plot into a
grid
graphics object (or grob
). This can be
used at any time, including in an RMarkdown document (as it is
here).
For most users, no more need be done. This vignette could end
here.
These users might also be interested in turning loon
plots
into ggplot
s (and vice versa); if so, some information on
this is provided towards the end of this vignette in the
ggplot
s section.
For those interested in a deeper understanding of the
grid
plots, read on.
Note: The plot()
function is simply a
wrapper function around the workhorse function loonGrob()
which does the translatation from current display of the
loon
plot to a grid
object (or
grob
) capturing the features of the loon
display. The resulting grob
is drawn using
grid.draw()
from the grid
package.
loonGrob()
: loon
–> grid
objectThe grid
graphic plot is saved by assigning it to a
variable when it is created. Either drawing it at the same time (as a
side-effect)
or postponing the drawing to later as in
Either way, a grid
data structure is created and
assigned to the variable g0
.
Alternatively, loonGrob()
can be called directly, as
in
This returns a grid
graphics object or
grob
. It can be drawn at any time using
grid.draw()
from the grid
package.
As with any grob
, the output of
loonGrob()
ccan be manipulated as can grid
data
structure – perhaps arranging several of these into a compound display
using grid.arrange()
(from the gridExtra
package).
For example, there might be several stages of the interactive plot that ow might be captured. These might be constructed programmatically as
oldColor <- p["color"]
set.seed(3141)
selection <- sample(c(TRUE, FALSE),
size = length(oldColor),
replace = TRUE)
p["color"] <- selection
gtrans <- loonGrob(p)
p["active"] <- selection
gauto <- loonGrob(p)
p["active"] <- !selection
gmanual <- loonGrob(p)
p["active"] <- TRUE
p["color"] <- oldColor
and then drawn in a single display
The arrangement itself could have been positioned within another arrrangement.
loonGrob()
The returned data structure has
## [1] "gTree" "grob" "gDesc"
This gTree
object is a tree data structure in
grid
and contains the many grob
s needed to
draw the plot on demand. Numerous functions exist within the
grid
package for validating, drawing, and modifying
grid
graphical objects like this gTree
and
many of its elements.
The tree structure of g0
is easily seen using
grid.ls()
to list the contents:
## GRID.gTree.2
## l_plot
## bounding box
## loon plot
## guides
## guides background
## guidelines: xaxis (major), x = 15
## guidelines: xaxis (major), x = 25
## guidelines: xaxis (major), x = 35
## guidelines: xaxis (minor), x = 10
## guidelines: xaxis (minor), x = 20
## guidelines: xaxis (minor), x = 30
## guidelines: yaxis (major), y = 100
## guidelines: yaxis (major), y = 200
## guidelines: yaxis (major), y = 300
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 50
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 150
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 250
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 350
## labels
## x label
## y label
## title: textGrob arguments
## axes
## x axis
## major
## ticks
## labels
## y axis
## major
## ticks
## labels
## clipping region
## l_plot_layers
## scatterplot
## points: primitive glyphs
## boundary rectangle
The levels are indicated by indenting.
The following figure renders the tree structure more generally:
Node labels give the loonGrob
names with the tree hierarchy
following solid lines from left to right. Grey values indicate the same
for other types of loon
plots (separate with braces) and
identify potential options peculiar to each loon
plot.
For example, the root node “l_plot” contains a “bounding box” and a
“loon plot”, each loon plot has “guides”, “labels”, “axes”, “clipping
region”, “boundary rectangle” and “l_xxxx_layers” (according to the type
of loon plot), and the loon plot p
has “l_plot_layers”
consisting of a “scatterplot” and possibly other layers like lines and
so on.
grid
object: get, edit, setKnowing the labels, one can retrieve, edit, or even replace any fine
details of the static plot. For example, consider the “xlabel” and
“ylabel” of the gTree
. Each label (as it appears above in
the list of the gTree
) provides a path to the corresponding
grob
.
Changes to an existing grid
plot are made in three
steps:
getGrob()
to get a copy of the grob
to be
changededitGrob()
to produce a grob
with the
desired changes, andsetGrob()
to set the newly produced grob
into the appropriate place in the plot.Each of these are now illustrated in turn.
getGrob()
Knowing the path is “x label” in the gTree
g0
, the grob
is extracted using
getGrob()
. For example,
## text[x label]
## [1] "text" "grob" "gDesc"
which itself has structure:
## [1] "label" "x" "y" "just"
## [5] "hjust" "vjust" "rot" "check.overlap"
## [9] "name" "gp" "vp"
## [1] "mpg"
Note that xlabelGrob
is a
copy of the grob
found at the “x label”
path in g0
.
Similarly grob
s at other paths (e.g., “y label”) could
be extracted and copied.
Note also that some elements of the
gTree
appearing in the listing grid.ls(g0)
are
actually parts of a grob
and not the path itself. For
example, consider the x-axis elements:
## [1] "major" "ticks" "labels"
## [1] "at" "label" "main" "edits"
## [5] "name" "gp" "vp" "children"
## [9] "childrenOrder"
editGrob()
Having xlabelGrob
in hand, we can use it to create
another copy of it with changed features using
editGrob()
.
For example, a more meaningful x
axis “label” name can
be assigned:
The newGrob
is now a textGrob
## [1] "text" "grob" "gDesc"
with the more informative label:
## [1] "Miles per (US) gallon"
setGrob()
To complete the change to g0
, the old “x label” needs to
be replaced by newGrob
:
Now “xlabel” has been changed to “Miles/(US) gallon” within the
grid
plot g0
.
In the same way, other features of the “x label” could have been changed
as well as the grob
s at other paths of the
gTree
returned by loonGrob()
.
A more common place reason to edit would be to add features to the
grid
plot that are available in loon
.
For example, transparency is (presently) missing from
tcltk
colours (on which loon
is based) – the
tcltk
system presently uses 12 digit hexadecimal colour to
represent three channels (one for each of the RGB colours) and no fourth
channel indicating alpha transparency. In contrast, transparency is
accommodated in grid
graphics so that one might choose to
set the alpha
values after the transformation.
The points in the plot can be made transparent using
setGrob()
, editGrob()
, and
getGrob()
, given the path to the points grob
,
namely “points: primitive glyphs”.
pathGrob <- "points: primitive glyphs"
newLoonPointsGrob <-
editGrob(
getGrob(g0, pathGrob),
gp = gpar(fill = as_hex6color(p['color']),
col = l_getOption("foreground"),
fontsize = 20, # give a larger point size,
alpha = 0.3 # turn color transparent
)
)
# update loon points grob
g0 <- setGrob(
gTree = g0,
gPath = "points: primitive glyphs",
newGrob = newLoonPointsGrob
)
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(g0)
After modification, the points are now transparent and the size has been made larger.
loon
Three loon
helper functions simplify the some editing of
the gTree
produced by loon in the special case when some
grobs
on the gTree
are incompletely
specified.
The three helper functions are
l_instantiateGrob()
which instatiates a complete
grob
using the information available on the incomplete
description of the grob
;l_setGrobPlotView()
which resets the margins of the
grid
plot to those of a loon
plot when all
labels
and scales
are shown (or to margin
sizes specified in arguments); andl_updateGrob()
which behaves much like
editGrob()
except that it can work with incomplete
grob
descriptions and is called by
l_instantiateGrob()
.See help("loonGrobInstantiation")
for more.
Common cases where these functions might be used are when pieces of the plot have been rendered invisible.
The plot p
was not given a title and no title appears
when g0
is drawn. Nevertheless, the gTree
of
g0
does appear to have some title information as indicated
by the path “title: textGrob arguments”. This is an indication that
loonGrob()
did transfer some title information from
p
to g0
but that it is incomplete in some
way.
If we access the grob at that path, we have
## [1] ""
which has an empty label string and, looking at its class:
## [1] "grob" "gDesc"
appears not to be a text
grob
. Instead, it is an incomplete description,
gDesc
, of the grob
.
g1 <- l_instantiateGrob(g0, "title: textGrob arguments",
label = "1974 Motor Trend cars data",
gp = gpar(col = "blue",
fontsize = 8))
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(g1)
Note that the fontsize was chosen to be small so that it fit in the space available.
There was too little room for a standard title because the margins of
the loon
plot p
were smaller with no title. An
alternative to making the font small is to return the loon
(or alternatively some user specified) margins to the plot using
l_setGrobPlotView()
:
g2 <- l_instantiateGrob(g0, "title: textGrob arguments",
label = "1974 Motor Trend cars data",
gp = gpar(col = "red"))
g2 <- l_setGrobPlotView(g2)
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(g2)
which displays the title in the default fontsize (from translating
p
). The extra room for the title would also admit larger
font sizes.
Oftentimes all labels (i.e., “xlabel”, “ylabel”, and “title”) of
p
will have been turned off when loonGrob()
was called:
and we would like to turn these labels on in the static plot.
The gTree
g3
now has a different path at
each label.
## GRID.gTree.5
## l_plot
## bounding box
## loon plot
## guides
## guides background
## guidelines: xaxis (major), x = 15
## guidelines: xaxis (major), x = 25
## guidelines: xaxis (major), x = 35
## guidelines: xaxis (minor), x = 10
## guidelines: xaxis (minor), x = 20
## guidelines: xaxis (minor), x = 30
## guidelines: yaxis (major), y = 100
## guidelines: yaxis (major), y = 200
## guidelines: yaxis (major), y = 300
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 50
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 150
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 250
## guidelines: yaxis (minor), y = 350
## labels
## x label: textGrob arguments
## y label: textGrob arguments
## title: textGrob arguments
## axes
## x axis
## major
## ticks
## labels
## y axis
## major
## ticks
## labels
## clipping region
## l_plot_layers
## scatterplot
## points: primitive glyphs
## boundary rectangle
Knowing the paths of the missing labels, the two helper functions
(together with the desiredtextGrob()
arguments) will
construct the desired plot:
g4 <-l_instantiateGrob(g3,
"title: textGrob arguments",
x = unit(8, "native"),
just = "left",
label = "Motor Trend Magazine 1974")
g4 <-l_instantiateGrob(g4,
"x label: textGrob arguments",
label = "Miles per US gallon",
x = unit(35, "native"),
y = unit(-1.5, "lines"),
just = "right",
gp = gpar(fontsize = 15,
fontface = "italic",
col = "blue"))
g4 <-l_instantiateGrob(g4,
"y label: textGrob arguments",
label = "Horse power",
rot = 45,
x = unit(7, "native"),
y = unit(275, "native"),
just = "right",
gp = gpar(fontsize = 15,
fontface = "italic",
col = "blue"))
g4 <- l_setGrobPlotView(g4)
grid.newpage()
grid.draw(g4)
Extra arguments to l_instantiateGrob()
are passed on to the
grobFun
(in this case textGrob()
).
l_updateGrob()
This function is called by l_instantiateGrob()
to
perform the same role as editGrob()
, but operating on
incomplete grob
s that are only gDesc
s.
The function l_updateGrob()
could also be used the same
as editGrob()
on a complete grob
(e.g. having
classes text
, grob
, and
gDesc
).
Unfortunately, if some points are invisible, their coordinates and
aesthetics attributes would be missing in the loonGrob
.
Technically speaking, it is possible to include these invisible points
inside the loonGrob
, however, what stops us doing so is
that the data structure would have to be changed – a
pointsGrob
would have to be replaced by a
gTree
with several children pointsGrob
s to
preserve display order and distinguish visible from invisible point.
This solution seems overly complicated and so was not implemented.
Better to simply make the changes interactively on the loon
plot and then translate it again to a new grid
data
structure.
loon
provides non-primitive glyphs, e.g. text glyphs,
image glyphs, polygon glyphs, et cetera. Once a non-primitive glyph is
drawn, the grob
label beneath scatterplot
would be points: mixed glyph.
# add text glyph
carNames <- l_glyph_add_text(p, text = rownames(mtcars))
p['glyph'] <- carNames
# loonGrob
g2 <- loonGrob(p)
getGrob(g2, "points: mixed glyphs")
It returns a gTree
object and each child is a
textGrob
.
ggplot
s from loon.ggplot
Elegant print graphics are also provided through the popular
ggplot2
package built on top of grid
graphics.
Users familiar with ggplot2
and its grammar of
graphics might be interested in the loon
companion
package loon.ggplot
which extends the grammar to a
grammar of interactive graphics.
There any loon
plot can be captured as a
ggplot
by simply calling loon.ggplot()
on it.
The same function will also create an interactive
loon
plot if called on an existing ggplot
.
Details can be found here.
This is probably the simplest solution to have a static plot which
can subsequently edited programmatically (via the grammar of
ggplot2
). Any changes to the ggplot
could also
then ve turned into an interactive loon
plot.
shiny
applications from loon.shiny
In the interest of supporting reproducible research, analysts will
sometimes want to share interactive (and linked) plots in their curated
analysis. A shiny
app is the way to shared this
interaction.
The loon
companion package loon.shiny
makes
it possible to do just that by incorporating interactive
loon
style plots into a shiny
app. Then the
viewer may interactively explore the data under analysis inside an
hyml
browser. The interaction will not be as open ended as
using loon
in R
but will be peculiar to the
data in the app and to the features selected y the author.
The loon.shiny
transformation relies on the
loon
to grid
functionality described above.
Details can be found here.