Google Scatter Chart with R scatterchart gvisScatterChart
Source:R/gvisCoreCharts.R
gvisScatterChart.Rd
The gvisScatterChart function reads a data.frame and creates text output referring to the Google Visualisation API, which can be included into a web page, or as a stand-alone page. The actual chart is rendered by the web browser using SVG or VML.
Usage
gvisScatterChart(data, options = list(), chartid)
Arguments
- data
a
data.frame
to be displayed as a scatter chart. Two or more columns are required, all must be numeric. The values in the first column are used for the X-axis. The values in following columns are used for the Y-axis. Each column is displayed with a separate color.- options
list of configuration options, see:
https://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery/scatterchart#Configuration_Options
The parameters can be set via a named list. The parameters have to map those of the Google documentation.
Boolean arguments are set to either
TRUE
orFALSE
, using the R syntax.Google API parameters with a single value and with names that don't include a "." are set like one would do in R, that is
options=list(width=200, height=300)
. Exceptions to this rule are the width and height options forgvisAnnotatedTimeLine
andgvisAnnotationChart
. For those two functions, width and height must be character strings of the format"Xpx"
, whereX
is a number, or"automatic"
. For example,options=list(width="200px", height="300px")
.Google API parameters with names that don't include a ".", but require multivalues are set as a character, wrapped in "[ ]" and separated by commas, e.g.
options=list(colors="['#cbb69d', '#603913', '#c69c6e']")
Google API parameters with names that do include a "." present parameters with several sub-options and have to be set as a character wrapped in "{ }". The values of those sub-options are set via parameter:value. Boolean values have to be stated as
'true'
or'false'
. For example the Google documentaion states the formating options for the vertical axis and states the parameter asvAxis.format
. Then this paramter can be set in R as:options=list(vAxis="\{format:'#,###%'\}")
.If several sub-options have to be set, e.g.
titleTextStyle.color
,titleTextStyle.fontName
andtitleTextStyle.fontSize
, then those can be combined in one list item such as:options=list(titleTextStyle="\{color:'red', fontName:'Courier', fontSize:16\}")
paramters that can have more than one value per sub-options are wrapped in "[ ]". For example to set the labels for left and right axes use:
options=list(vAxes="[\{title:'val1'\}, \{title:'val2'\}]")
gvis.editor
a character label for an on-page button that opens an in-page dialog box enabling users to edit, change and customise the chart. By default no value is given and therefore no button is displayed.
- chartid
character. If missing (default) a random chart id will be generated based on chart type and
tempfile
Value
gvisScatterChart
returns list
of class
"gvis
" and "list
".
An object of class "gvis
" is a list containing at least the
following components:
type
Google visualisation type
chartid
character id of the chart object. Unique chart ids are required to place several charts on the same page.
html
a list with the building blocks for a page
header
a character string of a html page header:
<html>...<body>
,chart
a named character vector of the chart's building blocks:
jsHeader
Opening
<script>
tag and reference to Google's JavaScript library.jsData
JavaScript function defining the input
data
as a JSON object.jsDrawChart
JavaScript function combing the data with the visualisation API and user options.
jsDisplayChart
JavaScript function calling the handler to display the chart.
jsFooter
End tag
</script>
.jsChart
Call of the
jsDisplayChart
function.divChart
<div>
container to embed the chart into the page.
caption
character string of a standard caption, including data name and chart id.
footer
character string of a html page footer:
</body>...</html>
, including the used R and googleVis version and link to Google's Terms of Use.
References
Google Chart Tools API: https://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery/scatterchart
See also
See also print.gvis
, plot.gvis
for
printing and plotting methods
Examples
## Please note that by default the googleVis plot command
## will open a browser window and requires an internet
## connection to display the visualisation.
## Scatter chart
Scatter1 <- gvisScatterChart(women)
plot(Scatter1)
## Using optional arguments
Scatter2 <- gvisScatterChart(women, options=list(legend="none",
lineWidth=2, pointSize=2,
title="Women", vAxis="{title:'weight (lbs)'}",
crosshair="{ trigger: 'both' }",
hAxis="{title:'height (in)'}", width=500, height=400))
plot(Scatter2)
df=data.frame(x=sin(1:100/3),
Circle=cos(1:100/3),
Ellipse=cos(1:100/3)*0.5)
## Plot several variables as smooth curves
Scatter3 <- gvisScatterChart(df,
options=list(curveType='function',
pointSize=0,
lineWidth=2))
plot(Scatter3)
## Two series in the same plot with different
## x-values
df <- data.frame(x=c(2,2,1,3,4),
y1=c(0,3,NA,NA,NA),
y2=c(NA,NA,0,3,2))
Scatter4 <- gvisScatterChart(df,
options=list(lineWidth=2,
pointSize=2))
plot(Scatter4)
## Customize points
M <- matrix(nrow=6,ncol=6)
M[col(M)==row(M)] <- 1:6
dat <- data.frame(X=1:6, M)
SC <- gvisScatterChart(dat,
options=list(
title="Customizing points",
legend="right",
pointSize=30,
series="{
0: { pointShape: 'circle' },
1: { pointShape: 'triangle' },
2: { pointShape: 'square' },
3: { pointShape: 'diamond' },
4: { pointShape: 'star' },
5: { pointShape: 'polygon' }
}"))
plot(SC)