ggquiver

Quiver plots for ggplot2. An extension of ‘ggplot2’ to provide quiver plots to visualise vector fields. This functionality is implemented using a geom to produce a new graphical layer, which allows aesthetic options. This layer can be overlaid on a map to improve visualisation of mapped data.

Installation

The stable version can be installed from CRAN:

install.packages("ggquiver")

The development version can be installed from GitHub using:

# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("mitchelloharawild/ggquiver")

Usage

ggquiver introduces a new geom geom_quiver(), which produces a quiver plot in ggplot2.

Quiver plots for functions can easily be produced using ggplot aeshetics. When a grid is detected, the size of the vectors are automatically adjusted to fit within the grid.

library(ggplot2)
library(ggquiver)
expand.grid(x=seq(0,pi,pi/12), y=seq(0,pi,pi/12)) %>%
  ggplot(aes(x=x,y=y,u=cos(x),v=sin(y))) +
  geom_quiver()

The ggplot2 example for seal movements is easily reproduced, with appropriately scaled arrowhead sizes. Here, the vecsize is set to zero to not resize the vectors.

ggplot(seals, aes(x=long, y=lat, u=delta_long, v=delta_lat)) + 
  geom_quiver(vecsize=0) + 
  borders("state")

Quiver plot arrows can be centered about x and y coordinates, which is useful when working with maps and scaled vectors.

ggplot(seals, aes(x=long, y=lat, u=delta_long, v=delta_lat)) + 
  geom_quiver(vecsize=0, center = TRUE) + 
  borders("state")

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Install

install.packages('ggquiver')

Monthly Downloads

486

Version

0.3.3

License

GPL-3

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Last Published

November 17th, 2023

Functions in ggquiver (0.3.3)