ggplot Donut chart

一世执手 提交于 2019-11-27 00:24:05

问题


Hi I really have googled this a lot without any joy. Would be happy to get a reference to a website if it exists. I'm struggling to understand the Hadley documentation on polar coordinates and I know that pie/donut charts are considered inherently evil.

That said, what I'm trying to do is

  1. Create a donut/ring chart (so a pie with an empty middle) like the tikz ring chart shown here
  2. Add a second layer circle on top (with alpha=0.5 or so) that shows a second (comparable) variable.

Why? I'm looking to show financial information. The first ring is costs (broken down) and the second is total income. The idea is then to add + facet=period for each review period to show the trend in both revenues and expenses and the growth in both.

Any thoughts would be most appreciated

Note: Completely arbitrarily if an MWE is needed if this was tried with

donut_data=iris[,2:4]
revenue_data=iris[,1]
facet=iris$Species

That would be similar to what I'm trying to do.. Thanks


回答1:


I don't have a full answer to your question, but I can offer some code that may help get you started making ring plots using ggplot2.

library(ggplot2)

# Create test data.
dat = data.frame(count=c(10, 60, 30), category=c("A", "B", "C"))

# Add addition columns, needed for drawing with geom_rect.
dat$fraction = dat$count / sum(dat$count)
dat = dat[order(dat$fraction), ]
dat$ymax = cumsum(dat$fraction)
dat$ymin = c(0, head(dat$ymax, n=-1))

p1 = ggplot(dat, aes(fill=category, ymax=ymax, ymin=ymin, xmax=4, xmin=3)) +
     geom_rect() +
     coord_polar(theta="y") +
     xlim(c(0, 4)) +
     labs(title="Basic ring plot")

p2 = ggplot(dat, aes(fill=category, ymax=ymax, ymin=ymin, xmax=4, xmin=3)) +
     geom_rect(colour="grey30") +
     coord_polar(theta="y") +
     xlim(c(0, 4)) +
     theme_bw() +
     theme(panel.grid=element_blank()) +
     theme(axis.text=element_blank()) +
     theme(axis.ticks=element_blank()) +
     labs(title="Customized ring plot")


library(gridExtra)
png("ring_plots_1.png", height=4, width=8, units="in", res=120)
grid.arrange(p1, p2, nrow=1)
dev.off()

Thoughts:

  1. You may get more useful answers if you post some well-structured sample data. You have mentioned using some columns from the iris dataset (a good start), but I am unable to see how to use that data to make a ring plot. For example, the ring plot you have linked to shows proportions of several categories, but neither iris[, 2:4] nor iris[, 1] are categorical.
  2. You want to "Add a second layer circle on top": Do you mean to superimpose the second ring directly on top of the first? Or do you want the second ring to be inside or outside of the first? You could add a second internal ring with something like geom_rect(data=dat2, xmax=3, xmin=2, aes(ymax=ymax, ymin=ymin))
  3. If your data.frame has a column named period, you can use facet_wrap(~ period) for facetting.
  4. To use ggplot2 most easily, you will want your data in 'long-form'; melt() from the reshape2 package may be useful for converting the data.
  5. Make some barplots for comparison, even if you decide not to use them. For example, try: ggplot(dat, aes(x=category, y=count, fill=category)) + geom_bar(stat="identity")



回答2:


Just trying to solve question 2 with the same approach from bdemarest's answer. Also using his code as a scaffold. I added some tests to make it more complete but feel free to remove them.

library(broom)
library(tidyverse)
# Create test data.
dat = data.frame(count=c(10,60,20,50),
                 ring=c("A", "A","B","B"),
                 category=c("C","D","C","D"))

# compute pvalue
cs.pvalue <- dat %>% spread(value = count,key=category) %>%
  ungroup() %>% select(-ring) %>% 
  chisq.test() %>% tidy()
cs.pvalue <- dat %>% spread(value = count,key=category) %>% 
  select(-ring) %>%
  fisher.test() %>% tidy() %>% full_join(cs.pvalue)

# compute fractions
#dat = dat[order(dat$count), ]
dat %<>% group_by(ring) %>% mutate(fraction = count / sum(count),
                                      ymax = cumsum(fraction),
                                      ymin = c(0,ymax[1:length(ymax)-1]))


# Add x limits
baseNum <- 4
#numCat <- length(unique(dat$ring))
dat$xmax <- as.numeric(dat$ring) + baseNum
dat$xmin = dat$xmax -1


# plot
p2 = ggplot(dat, aes(fill=category,
                     alpha = ring,
                     ymax=ymax, 
                     ymin=ymin, 
                     xmax=xmax, 
                     xmin=xmin)) +
  geom_rect(colour="grey30") +
  coord_polar(theta="y") +
  geom_text(inherit.aes = F,
            x=c(-1,1),
            y=0,
            data = cs.pvalue,aes(label = paste(method,
                                               "\n",
                                               format(p.value,
                                                      scientific = T,
                                                      digits = 2))))+
  xlim(c(0, 6)) +
  theme_bw() +
  theme(panel.grid=element_blank()) +
  theme(axis.text=element_blank()) +
  theme(axis.ticks=element_blank(),
        panel.border = element_blank()) +
  labs(title="Customized ring plot") + 
  scale_fill_brewer(palette = "Set1") +
  scale_alpha_discrete(range = c(0.5,0.9))

p2

And the result:



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13615562/ggplot-donut-chart

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