Showing 4 of total 4 results (show query)
tidyverse
ggplot2:Create Elegant Data Visualisations Using the Grammar of Graphics
A system for 'declaratively' creating graphics, based on "The Grammar of Graphics". You provide the data, tell 'ggplot2' how to map variables to aesthetics, what graphical primitives to use, and it takes care of the details.
Maintained by Thomas Lin Pedersen. Last updated 8 days ago.
data-visualisationvisualisation
6.6k stars 25.10 score 645k scripts 7.6k dependentsdewittpe
qwraps2:Quick Wraps 2
A collection of (wrapper) functions the creator found useful for quickly placing data summaries and formatted regression results into '.Rnw' or '.Rmd' files. Functions for generating commonly used graphics, such as receiver operating curves or Bland-Altman plots, are also provided by 'qwraps2'. 'qwraps2' is a updated version of a package 'qwraps'. The original version 'qwraps' was never submitted to CRAN but can be found at <https://github.com/dewittpe/qwraps/>. The implementation and limited scope of the functions within 'qwraps2' <https://github.com/dewittpe/qwraps2/> is fundamentally different from 'qwraps'.
Maintained by Peter DeWitt. Last updated 6 months ago.
37 stars 9.80 score 448 scriptsanimint
animint2:Animated Interactive Grammar of Graphics
Functions are provided for defining animated, interactive data visualizations in R code, and rendering on a web page. The 2018 Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics paper, <doi:10.1080/10618600.2018.1513367> describes the concepts implemented.
Maintained by Toby Hocking. Last updated 1 months ago.
64 stars 8.84 score 173 scriptsdipterix
dipsaus:A Dipping Sauce for Data Analysis and Visualizations
Works as an "add-on" to packages like 'shiny', 'future', as well as 'rlang', and provides utility functions. Just like dipping sauce adding flavors to potato chips or pita bread, 'dipsaus' for data analysis and visualizations adds handy functions and enhancements to popular packages. The goal is to provide simple solutions that are frequently asked for online, such as how to synchronize 'shiny' inputs without freezing the app, or how to get memory size on 'Linux' or 'MacOS' system. The enhancements roughly fall into these four categories: 1. 'shiny' input widgets; 2. high-performance computing using the 'future' package; 3. modify R calls and convert among numbers, strings, and other objects. 4. utility functions to get system information such like CPU chip-set, memory limit, etc.
Maintained by Zhengjia Wang. Last updated 1 days ago.
14 stars 8.11 score 85 scripts 3 dependents