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ggautomap
provides {ggplot2}
geometries
that make use of {cartographer}
, a framework for matching
place names with map data. With ggautomap
your input
dataset doesn’t need to be spatially aware: the geometries will
automatically attach the map data (providing it’s been registered with
{cartographer}
).
See the
‘Getting started’ article, vignette("ggautomap")
, for
some recipes for different types of plots.
You can install ggautomap like so:
# CRAN release
install.packages('ggautomap')
# development version
install.packages('ggautomap', repos = c('https://cidm-ph.r-universe.dev', 'https://cloud.r-project.org'))
Let’s use the example dataset from {cartographer}
:
library(cartographer)
head(nc_type_example_2)
#> county type
#> 1 MARTIN A
#> 2 ALAMANCE B
#> 3 BERTIE A
#> 4 CHATHAM B
#> 5 CHATHAM B
#> 6 HENDERSON B
A possible workflow is to use
cartographer::add_geometry()
to convert this into a spatial
data frame and then use ggplot2::geom_sf()
to draw it.
ggautomap
instead provides geoms that do this
transparently as needed, so you don’t need to do a lot of boilerplate to
wrangle the data into the right form before handing it off to the
plotting code.
library(ggplot2)
library(ggautomap)
ggplot(nc_type_example_2, aes(location = county)) +
geom_boundaries(feature_type = "sf.nc") +
geom_geoscatter(aes(colour = type), size = 0.5) +
coord_automap(feature_type = "sf.nc")
ggplot(nc_type_example_2, aes(location = county)) +
geom_choropleth() +
geom_boundaries(feature_type = "sf.nc") +
scale_fill_steps(low = "#e6f9ff", high = "#00394d", na.value = "white") +
coord_automap(feature_type = "sf.nc")
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.