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figpatch

Lifecycle: experimental CRAN status

The goal of figpatch is to create an easy way to incorporate external figures and images into figures assembled with {patchwork}.

Installation

You can install the released version of figpatch from CRAN with:

install.packages("figpatch")

Install the development version from GitHub with:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("BradyAJohnston/figpatch")

Example

library(figpatch)
library(ggplot2)
library(patchwork)

To use images inside of a patchwork object, they need to be converted to a {ggplot} object via fig(). Once converted, you can assemble the {patchwork} as you would otherwise with + / - * & or wrap_plots().

image_path <- system.file(
  "extdata", 
  "fig.png", 
  package = "figpatch", 
  mustWork = TRUE)

img <- fig(image_path)

plt <- ggplot(mtcars) + 
  aes(mpg, cyl) + 
  geom_point()

wrap_plots(img, plt, plt, img)

The aspect.ratio of the figs is set to the dimensions of the image, but the plots can still resize as you would expect. For each plot that aligns with a fig, it’s dimensions will match that of the fig (as above). If however it only aligns on one axis, then the other is free to resize to fill up the total image space (as below).

wrap_plots(plt, img, plt, img, ncol = 2)

If for some reason you want your fig to also resize (and thus distort your image) then you can specify a particular aspect.ratio or let it be free!

free_fig <- fig(image_path, aspect.ratio = "free")

wrap_plots(free_fig, plt, ncol = 1)

Elegant.

Tagging

Patchwork already provides support for easy tagging of sub-plots and sub-figures using plot_annotation().

wrap_plots(img, plt, plt, img) + 
  plot_annotation(tag_levels = "A")

For a lot of figures that include images, tags should be placed on top of the images themselves. Tagging in {patchwork} currently utilises the ggplot tag option from ggplot2::labs(tag = ...) but which currently doesn’t support tagging inside plot borders.

Lets see how it plays out.

The assembled figs

knitr::opts_chunk$set(fig.height = 2, fig.width = 7)
patchwork::wrap_plots(img, img, img, nrow = 1)

Scaling the Figs

If multiple figs have differing dimensions, but but should be scaled the same, you can use fig_scale() to scale them all to the maximum width and height of all of the included figs.

Without scaling

fl <- image_path <- system.file("extdata",
                                package = "figpatch",
                                mustWork = TRUE) %>%
  list.files(pattern = "png",
             full.names = TRUE)

fl %>% 
  lapply(fig) %>% 
  fig_wrap(ncol = 3)

With Scaling

fl %>% 
  lapply(fig) %>% 
  fig_scale() %>% 
  fig_wrap(ncol = 3)

The scaling is based on the number of pixels, so while the two chemical structures are now properly scaled, the fig has been reduced significantly.

We can scale them independently to keep the third fig bigger.

scaled_strctures <- lapply(fl[1:2], fig) %>% 
  fig_scale()

fig_wrap(c(scaled_strctures, list(fig(fl[3]))))

{patchwork} tagging the figs

patchwork::wrap_plots(img, img, img, nrow = 1) + 
  plot_annotation(tag_levels = "A")

{figpatch} tagging the figs

To add internal tags to the figs, use the fig_tag() function. Assembling with {patchwork} can continue as normal.

img1 <- fig_tag(img, "A")
img2 <- fig_tag(img, "(B)")
img3 <- fig_tag(img, "misc")

patchwork::wrap_plots(img1, img2, img3, nrow = 1)

A number of default positions can be supplied to fig_tag(pos = ...) or a custom vector which will place the text in npc coordinates (0 to 1 for both x and y) and automatically adjust for the aspect ratio of the fig.

img1 <- fig_tag(img, "A", pos = "topright")
img2 <- fig_tag(img, "(B)", pos = "bottomleft")
img3 <- fig_tag(img, "misc", pos = c(0.4, 0.9))

wrap_plots(img1, img2, img3, nrow = 1)

fig_wrap()

To quickly label and wrap multiple figures, use fig_wrap()

To add borders around individual figures, use b_* options inside of fig_wrap() or specify them individually with fig().

fig_wrap(
  list(img, img, img),
  "A",
  prefix = "(",
  suffix = ")",
  b_col = "black"
)

Assembling lots of figures.

knitr::opts_chunk$set(fig.height = 5, fig.width = 7)
figs <- lapply(1:9, function(x) img)

fig_wrap(
  figs,
  nrow = 3,
  tag = 1,
  suffix = ")",
  b_col = "gray20",
  b_size = 2
)

Adjust the padding around plots with b_margins and change the unit used with b_unit.

fig_wrap(
  figs,
  nrow = 3,
  tag = 1,
  suffix = ")",
  b_col = "gray20",
  b_size = 2, 
  b_margin = ggplot2::margin(8, 8, 8, 8)
)

Adding specific sub-plot text

You can add labels to the text using the fig_lab() function. Some customisations are available. At the end of the day, a fig() is just a ggplot object, and the labels are just the axis titles (x or y). You can add your own theme() elements to customise further.

img1 <- fig_lab(img1, "Above is a fig.")

img2 <- fig_lab(img2, "This is an italic label.", fontface = "italic")

img3 <- fig_lab(img3, "Below is a fig.", pos = "top")

design <- "AB
           CC"

wrap_plots(img1, img2, img3, design = design)

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.