An R package that draws curly braces in ggplot2.
Version 0.1.1 (Feb 2024) of ggbrace removed the original geom_brace
function, which plots braces within the confines of the x-y-values. The same functionality can now be achieved with stat_brace( outside = FALSE )
. Additionally, the text functionality is now its own function stat_bracetext
which allows for more customization of the text using the same arguments that would be used in geom_text
or geom_label
. By default stat_brace
uses geom="text"
which can be changed e.g. by stat_brace(geom="label")
.
Install the package from the git repository:
The new version of ggbrace uses only stat_brace
to automatically enclose data points. stat_bracetext
is used to generate fitting text.
In our example we use the iris data to create a dotplot. Then we look at how each of the three different modes draws braces to that plot.
library(ggplot2)
library(ggbrace)
data(iris)
plt <- ggplot(iris, aes(x=Sepal.Length, y=Sepal.Width, color=Species, label=Species)) +
geom_point() +
theme_classic() +
theme(legend.position="none")
plt + stat_brace()
We can add labels to the braces. For that the stat_bracetext
is used.
We can modify the text in the same way we would modify other text in ggplot. We can also switch between different text geoms (e.g. geom=label
).
We can rotate the braces by 90, 180 or 270 degrees via the rotate
argument. Note that any changes in stat_brace
also have to be made in stat_bracetext
so that the text appears at the right position
By default, the location of the brace is beside the data points by default. We can change that by setting the paramter outside
to FALSE
.
By default, braces have a position and shape that is calculated based on their data points.The position can be changed with the parameters distance
(to the data points) and outerstart
(in the coordinate system). The width of the braces can be set with the width
argument (absolute coordinate system units), while the bending of the brace can be set with bending
(number from 0 to 1).
plt + stat_brace(distance = 2) # the braces are put at a defined distance to the last data point of their group
plt + stat_brace(outerstart = 5) # all braces are put at the same position
plt + stat_brace(outerstart = 5, width = 1) # all braces get the same width
plt + stat_brace(outerstart = 5, width = 1, bending = 0.1) # all braces get the same curvature
To vizualize the brace outside of the plotting area, we can simply use two ggplot2 functions. - coord_cartesian
needs to be mentioned with x and/or y range of the plotting area and the parameter clip="off"
to allow plotting of objects outside of that area. - within the theme
function, plot.margin
needs to be set to expand the outside area. This happens with 4 numbers (above, right, below, left). This can best be achieved with the "npc"
unit, as it reflects the plot units and is therefore maintained independent of the pixels, cm, etc. Other units can be seen with ?unit (under grid).
plt + stat_brace(outerstart = 4.5) +
coord_cartesian(y=range(iris$Sepal.Width), clip = "off") + #for the range just use the data for the respective axis
theme(plot.margin = unit(c(0.25, 0.11, 0.11, 0.11), units="npc"))
Unfortunately, as of now, ggbrace isn’t behaving well with discrete x/y axes, which is why they will have to be wrapped into the seq_along
function within the aes()
.
df <- data.frame(x = c("a","b","c","d","e"), y = 1:5)
ggplot(df, aes(x, y)) +
geom_point() +
stat_brace(aes(x=seq_along(x)))
This wrapping into the seq_along
function is also used in the coord_cartesian
function when trying to plot outside the plotting area.