ggplot2
cheatsheets
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ggplot2 | cheatsheets | |
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62 | 60 | |
6,328 | 5,596 | |
1.3% | 1.5% | |
9.4 | 7.6 | |
3 days ago | 5 days ago | |
R | TeX | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 |
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ggplot2
- ggplot2
- Ask HN: How do you build diagrams for the web?
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Visualizing shapefiles in R with sf and ggplot2!
ggplot2
- Ask HN: What plotting tools should I invest in learning?
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Relative frequency of letters in five-letter English words (Wordle aid) [OC]
I got the list of five-letter words from the words package in R, created the QWERTY keyboard grid with base R and tibble, and visualized the data with geom_tile in the ggplot2 package.
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[OC] U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges: 2002 to 2023
Thanks, it's an interesting idea! I definitely could implement this with scale_fill_gradientn) in ggplot2.
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Facts about Aaron Boone's Ejections as Manager
I used the ggplot2 package in R to create these figures.
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Fueling Innovation and Collaborative Storytelling
This might not be at the top of your list, but science fiction often presents advanced data analysis and visualization technologies. Open source data analysis tools such as Python's Pandas and R's ggplot2 have revolutionized the field, making complex data manipulation and visualization accessible to all. In the science fiction novel The Martian, astronaut Mark Watney uses a variety of data analysis and visualization tools to survive on Mars. He uses Python's Pandas to clean and organize data, and he uses R's ggplot2 to create visualizations of his data. These tools allow him to make sense of the vast amounts of data and help him to make critical decisions about his survival.
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[OC] Visualizing Financial Market Returns Across Many Asset Classes via Heatmaps
Sorry about the slow reply, but the auto-moderator seems to be deleting my comments (for some unknown reason). I will try once more: the geom_tile function in ggplot2.
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[OC] Forbes List of Highest-Earning Musicians: 1987 to 2021
Visual cues are a much better idea, thanks! Unfortunately, I don't know how to do that in ggplot2, either (I created these figures in R).
cheatsheets
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Tools a Data Scientist should know:
If you're an R user, stringr + its cheatsheet gets you very close to remembering what to do without needing to look further!
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JSON to PDF Magic: Harnessing LaTeX and JSON for Effortless Customization and Dynamic PDF Generation
For more information on how to use ggplot2 and create charts consult the ggplot2 official page or the ggplot2 cheat graphic.
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Best packages to learn?
I'd suggest you have a look at cheatsheets (or download them from GitHub) if you want to get to know your way around a package or set if functions, it saves you a lot of time.
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How do I make these shapes (pictured below) in ggplot?
You could use geom_hline and geom_vline, geom_abline, or geom_segment for this. (The ggplot cheat sheet is very useful for answering these kinds of questions, BTW.)
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Why does my scatter plot look like this?
I can't say for sure because I don't know what your ultimate aim is for your visualization. Check out the cheat sheet for ggplot2 here.
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Import from Excel
Finally just do your analysis. You should also should give a try and see the cheat sheet for data importing on the tidyverse package.
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[Request] How to best visualize percentages with R?
That said, when Iām trying to come up with an interesting way to visualize data, I find the ggplot cheat sheet very helpful: https://github.com/rstudio/cheatsheets/raw/main/data-visualization-2.1.pdf
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Need help with variables
Here's a cheat sheet: https://github.com/rstudio/cheatsheets/blob/main/strings.pdf
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Data manipulation in R
The cheat sheet of the stringr package should give you good overview of string manipulation/ regex in R.
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I'm trying to recreate this plot but I keep failing
I would very highly recommend that rather than trying to get started by translating an existing graph, you check out some documentation about ggplot first. If nothing else, the ggplot cheat sheet from RStudio should help explain what the component parts of the code are, and that might help you figure out what you actually want to do.
What are some alternatives?
Altair - Declarative statistical visualization library for Python
tidytuesday - Official repo for the #tidytuesday project
tmap - R package for thematic maps
forcats - šššš: tools for working with categorical variables (factors)
vega - A visualization grammar.
mostly-adequate-guide - Mostly adequate guide to FP (in javascript)
dplyr - dplyr: A grammar of data manipulation
ggplot2-book - ggplot2: elegant graphics for data analysis
worldfootballR - A wrapper for extracting world football (soccer) data from FBref, Transfermark, Understat and fotmob
mech - š¦¾ Main repository for the Mech programming language. Start here!
glue - Glue strings to data in R. Small, fast, dependency free interpreted string literals.
reveal.js - The HTML Presentation Framework