问题
(See bottom of post for updates)
Initial post, 2014-07-29 11:43:38Z
I saw this graphics on the Economist's website and wondered if it's possible to produce a geom_bar()
with this kinda illustrative icons imbedded? (dummy data below)

Dummy data,
require(ggplot2)
# Generate data
df3 <- data.frame(units = c(1.3, 1.8, 2.7, 4.2, 4.7, 6.7, 20),
what = c('Wikipedia', 'London Olympic Park', 'Aircraft carrier',
'The Great Pyramid', 'Stonehenge', 'Burj Khalifas',
'Empire State Building'))
# make gs an ordered factor
df3$what <- factor(df3$what, levels = df3$what, ordered = TRUE)
#plots
ggplot(df3, aes(what, units)) + geom_bar(fill="white", colour="darkgreen",
alpha=0.5, stat="identity") + coord_flip() + scale_x_discrete() +
scale_y_continuous(breaks=seq(0, 20, 2)) + theme_bw() +
theme(axis.title.x = element_blank(), axis.title.y = element_blank())

Update #1, 2014-07-29 15:07:51Z
Apparently Robert Grant has started to build an R function to produce bar-charts with pictograms, it can be found at Github. Thanks to Andrie for that information. I'm currently working to see if Robert's function can do what I am looking for.
Please chime in if you have any advice on how to answer my question using Robert's function.
Update #2, 2014-08-02 12:35:19Z
Here is a simple illustration of how Grant's R-pictogram-function work
# in case you don't alredy have RCurl
# install.packages("RCurl", dependencies = TRUE)
source_github <- function(u) {
# load package
require(RCurl)
# read script lines from website and evaluate
script <- getURL(u, ssl.verifypeer = FALSE)
eval(parse(text = script),envir=.GlobalEnv)
}
Got this script form this SO answer
source_github("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/robertgrant/pictogram/master/pictogram.R")
# install.packages("png", dependencies = TRUE)
require(png)
img <- readPNG(system.file("img", "Rlogo.png", package="png"))
pictogram(icon = img, n = c( 12, 35, 7),
grouplabels=c("12 R logos","35 R logos","7 R logos"))
This gives you this kinda plot

回答1:
Here's what I have come up with based on this idea. R logo taken from Wikipedia.
library(png)
fill_images <- function()
{
l <- list()
for (i in 1:nrow(df3))
{
for (j in 1:floor(df3$units[i]))
{
#seems redundant, but does not work if moved outside of the loop (why?)
img <- readPNG("~/../Rlogo.png")
g <- rasterGrob(img, interpolate=TRUE)
l <- c(l, annotation_custom(g, xmin = i-1/2, xmax = i+1/2, ymin = j-1, ymax = j))
}
}
l
}
p <- ggplot(df3, aes(what, units)) +
geom_bar(fill="white", colour="darkgreen", alpha=0.5, stat="identity") +
coord_flip() +
scale_y_continuous(breaks=seq(0, 20, 2)) +
scale_x_discrete() +
theme_bw() +
theme(axis.title.x = element_blank(), axis.title.y = element_blank()) +
fill_images()
p

I'm not quite sure what's the best way to draw partial images though.
Update:
Actually, that was easier than I had expected. I clip the image by drawing a white rectangle over a part of it. Note that geom_bar
should be on top so that the clipping rectangle won't affect it. There was a minor issue with grid lines (they were partly hidden by these white rectangles), so I had to hardcode the position of these and restore them manually. Not an ideal solution, of course, but I don't know how to programmatically retrieve the grid position. Anyway, the final plot does the job and it also looks fancy!
library(png)
fill_images <- function()
{
l <- list()
for (i in 1:nrow(df3))
{
for (j in 1:ceiling(df3$units[i]))
{
img <- readPNG("~/../Rlogo.png")
g <- rasterGrob(img, interpolate=TRUE)
l <- c(l, annotation_custom(g, xmin = i-1/2, xmax = i+1/2, ymin = j-1, ymax = j))
}
}
l
}
clip_images <- function(restore_grid = TRUE)
{
l <- list()
for (i in 1:nrow(df3))
{
l <- c(l, geom_rect(xmin = i-1/2, xmax = i+1/2,
ymin = df3$units[i], ymax = ceiling(df3$units[i]),
colour = "white", fill = "white"))
if (restore_grid && ceiling(df3$units[i]) %in% major_grid)
l <- c(l, geom_segment(x = i-1, xend = i+1,
y = ceiling(df3$units[i]),
yend = ceiling(df3$units[i]),
colour = grid_col, size = grid_size))
}
l
}
grid_col <- "grey50"
grid_size <- 0.6
major_grid <- 0:10 * 2
p <- ggplot(df3, aes(what, units)) +
fill_images() +
clip_images() +
geom_bar(fill=NA, colour="darkgreen", size=1.2, alpha=0.5, stat="identity") +
coord_flip() +
scale_y_continuous(breaks=seq(0, 20, 2)) +
scale_x_discrete() +
theme_bw() +
theme(axis.title.x = element_blank(), axis.title.y = element_blank(),
panel.grid.major.x = element_line(colour = grid_col, size = grid_size),
panel.grid.major.y = element_line(colour = NA))
p

In order to save the .svg file, use e.g.
ggsave(file="test.svg", plot=p, width=10, height=8)
If you want to have a filling image as an .svg file, take a look at grImport
package. It seems you'll have to convert .svg to .ps manually (e.g. with imagemagick), and then follow the guide.
回答2:
gridSVG offers support for svg features unavailable to the R engine, such as fill patterns and arbitrary clipping. This example can easily be adapted for ggplot2,

library(grid)
library(gridSVG)
require(ggplot2)
p <- ggplot(df3, aes(what, units)) +
geom_bar(colour="black", stat="identity") +
coord_flip()
pattern <- pattern(circleGrob(r=.4, gp=gpar(fill="grey")),
width=.05, height=.05)
registerPatternFill("circles", pattern)
gridsvg("pattern.svg")
print(p)
grid.force()
grid.patternFill("geom_rect.rect", grep=TRUE, group=FALSE,
label=rep("circles", length(levels(df3$what))))
dev.off()
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25014492/geom-bar-pictograms-how-to