Learn R Programming

DescTools (version 0.99.43)

PlotTreemap: Create a Treemap

Description

Creates a treemap where rectangular regions of different size, color, and groupings visualize the elements.

Usage

PlotTreemap(x, grp = NULL, labels = NULL, cex = 1, text.col = "black",
            col = rainbow(length(x)), labels.grp = NULL, cex.grp = 3,
            text.col.grp = "black", border.grp = "grey50",
            lwd.grp = 5, main = "")

Arguments

x

a vector storing the values to be used to calculate the areas of rectangles.

grp

a vector specifying the group (i.e. country, sector, etc.) to which each element belongs.

labels

a vector specifying the labels.

cex

the character extension for the area labels. Default is 1.

text.col

the text color of the area labels. Default is "black".

col

a vector storing the values to be used to calculate the color of rectangles.

labels.grp

a character vector specifying the labels for the groups.

cex.grp

the character extension for the group labels. Default is 3.

text.col.grp

the text color of the group labels. Default is "black".

border.grp

the border color for the group rectangles. Default is "grey50". Set this to NA if no special border is desired.

lwd.grp

the linewidth of the group borders. Default is 5.

main

a title for the plot.

Value

returns a list with groupwise organized midpoints in x and y for the rectangles within a group and for the groups themselves.

Details

A treemap is a two-dimensional visualization for quickly analyzing large, hierarchical data sets. Treemaps are unique among visualizations because they provide users with the ability to see both a high level overview of data as well as fine-grained details. Users can find outliers, notice trends, and perform comparisons using treemaps. Each data element contained in a treemap is represented with a rectangle, or a cell. Treemap cell arrangement, size, and color are each mapped to an attribute of that element. Treemap cells can be grouped by common attributes. Within a group, larger cells are placed towards the bottom left, and smaller cells are placed at the top right.

See Also

PlotCirc, mosaicplot, barplot

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
set.seed(1789)
N <- 20
area <- rlnorm(N)

PlotTreemap(x=sort(area, decreasing=TRUE), labels=letters[1:20], col=Pal("RedToBlack", 20))


grp <- sample(x=1:3, size=20, replace=TRUE, prob=c(0.2,0.3,0.5))

z <- Sort(data.frame(area=area, grp=grp), c("grp","area"), decreasing=c(FALSE,TRUE))
z$col <- SetAlpha(c("steelblue","green","yellow")[z$grp],
                  unlist(lapply(split(z$area, z$grp),
                  function(...) LinScale(..., newlow=0.1, newhigh=0.6))))

PlotTreemap(x=z$area, grp=z$grp, labels=letters[1:20], col=z$col)


b <- PlotTreemap(x=z$area, grp=z$grp, labels=letters[1:20], labels.grp=NA,
                 col=z$col, main="Treemap")

# the function returns the midpoints of the areas
# extract the group midpoints from b
mid <- do.call(rbind, lapply(lapply(b, "[", 1), data.frame))

# and draw some visible text
BoxedText( x=mid$grp.x, y=mid$grp.y, labels=LETTERS[1:3], cex=3, border=NA,
  col=SetAlpha("white",0.7) )
# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab