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piratepal()
is a function that returns color palettes. The function has four main arguments:
palette
: The specific palette you want to use. For example, palette = "appletv"
will give you the appletv palette. You can also specify palette = "all"
to see all the palettes, or palette = "random"
to get a random palette.
trans
: A number between 0 and 1 indicating how transparent to make the colors. 1 is fully transparent (e.g. invisible), and 0 is not transparent at all. Personally, I like at least slightly transparent colors (e.g.; trans = .3
)
length.out
: An optional number indicating how many colors to return (if length.out
is larger than the number of colors in the palette, they will just be repeated).
plot.result
: A logical value indicating whether or not to display the palette.
To see all of the palettes, run piratepal("all")
piratepal(palette = "all")
Once you find a palette you’d like to use, you can return the colors as a vector by specifying the name of the palette in the palette
argument. Here is the Google palette
piratepal(palette = "google")
## blue red yellow green
## "#3D79F3FF" "#E6352FFF" "#F9B90AFF" "#34A74BFF"
If you want to see a palette in detail (and possibly some images that inspired the palette), include the argument plot.result = T
. Here’s where the southpark
palette comes from.
piratepal(palette = "southpark",
trans = .5,
plot.result = T)
You can look at a random palette by setting palette = "random"
:
piratepal("random", plot.result = T)
## Here's the xmen palette
Some of the palettes are darker than others. Here’s the nightmare-inducing evildead palette (I’ll up the transparency to .5 to make it a bit less scarring…)
piratepal(palette = "evildead",
trans = .5,
plot.result = T)
Here’s a scatterplot using the xmen palette with piratepal('xmen', trans = .5)
:
xmen.cols <- piratepal(palette = "xmen",
trans = .5)
x <- rnorm(100)
y <- x + rnorm(100)
plot(x = x, y = y,
col = xmen.cols,
pch = 16,
cex = 2,
main = "piratepal('xmen', trans = .5)")
Let’s use the basel palette to draw the house from Up Up Trailer
# Set up balloons
balloon.colors <- piratepal("basel", trans = .2)
balloon.x <- rnorm(500, 0)
balloon.y <- rnorm(500, 4, 1)
par(mar = rep(.1, 4))
plot(1, xlim = c(-15, 7), ylim = c(-15, 7),
xlab = "", ylab = "", type = "n",
xaxt = "n", yaxt = "n", bty = "n")
# skyline
start.x <- runif(200, -15, 7)
start.y <- sort(runif(200, -15, -12), decreasing = T)
heights <- runif(200, 2, 4)
widths <- runif(200, .25, 1.5)
rect(start.x, start.y, start.x + widths, start.y + heights,
col = "white", border = gray(.4))
# house
rect(-2, -6, 2, -2)
polygon(c(-2, 0, 2),
c(-2, 0, -2))
rect(-.5, -6, .5, -4)
points(.3, -5)
# strings
line.start.x <- rnorm(500, 0, .2)
line.start.y <- -1 + rnorm(500, 0, .1)
segments(line.start.x,
line.start.y,
balloon.x, balloon.y,
lty = 1, col = gray(.5, .1), lwd = .2)
# balloons
points(balloon.x, balloon.y, pch = 21,
bg = balloon.colors,
col = gray(.9), cex = rnorm(100, 2, .3))
If you have a favorite palette that you’d like me to add, just contact me at yarrr.book@gmail.com and I’ll see what I can do :)
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.