/ggradar

radar charts with ggplot2

Primary LanguageR

ggradar

ggradar allows you to build radar charts (aka spider charts) with ggplot2. This package is based on Paul Williamson’s code, with new aesthetics and compatibility with ggplot2 2.0.

It was inspired by d3radaR, an htmlwidget built by timelyportfolio.

Install ggradar

devtools::install_github("ricardo-bion/ggradar", 
                          dependencies = TRUE)

Use ggradar

library(ggradar)
library(dplyr)
library(scales)
library(tibble)

mtcars_radar <- mtcars %>% 
  as_tibble(rownames = "group") %>% 
  mutate_at(vars(-group), rescale) %>% 
  tail(4) %>% 
  select(1:10)
group mpg cyl disp hp drat wt qsec vs am
Ford Pantera L 0.2297872 1.0 0.6981791 0.7491166 0.6728111 0.4236768 0.0000000 0 1
Ferrari Dino 0.3957447 0.5 0.1843352 0.4346290 0.3963134 0.3214012 0.1190476 0 1
Maserati Bora 0.1957447 1.0 0.5734597 1.0000000 0.3594470 0.5259524 0.0119048 0 1
Volvo 142E 0.4680851 0.0 0.1244699 0.2014134 0.6221198 0.3239581 0.4880952 1 1
ggradar(mtcars_radar)

Custom fonts

You can also use custom font family in ggradar. In the following example, you would like to use Airbnb’s font family named ‘Circular Air’ by first download it, install it in your computer, and then register it to R using extrafont package.

# configured to work on a Mac, change directory to Unix or Windows
download.file("https://github.com/ricardo-bion/ggtech/blob/master/Circular%20Air-Light%203.46.45%20PM.ttf", "~/Circular Air-Light 3.46.45 PM.ttf", method = "curl")

extrafont::font_import(pattern = 'Circular', prompt = FALSE)

Following the same procedure as in the previous example, you can then use ‘Circular Air’ font family in ggradar by adjusting font.radar argument. The following example shows that ggradar is also can be used in pipe %>%.

mtcars %>% 
  as_tibble(rownames = "group") %>% 
  mutate_at(vars(-group), rescale) %>% 
  tail(4) %>% 
  select(1:10) %>% 
  ggradar(font.radar = "Circular Air")