qtm(shp, fill = NA, symbols.size = NULL, symbols.col = NULL, symbols.shape = NULL, dots.col = NULL, text = NULL, text.size = 1, text.col = NA, lines.lwd = NULL, lines.col = NULL, raster = NA, borders = NA, by = NULL, scale = NA, title = NA, projection = NULL, format = NULL, style = NULL, basemaps = NA, bubble.size = NULL, bubble.col = NULL, ...)
SpatialPolygons(DataFrame)
SpatialPoints(DataFrame)
SpatialLines(DataFrame)
SpatialGrid(DataFrame)
SpatialPixels(DataFrame)
RasterLayer, RasterStack, or RasterBrick
In "view"
mode (see tmap_mode
) there are two other options. 1) If omitted, an interactive map without thematic layers is opened. 2) In addition, if a character is provided, this character is used as a search query for OpenStreetMap nominatim. This will position the interactive map accordingly. Arguments of tm_view
, such as set.view
can be passed on directly.
shp
to draw a choropleth. Only applicable when shp
is type 1 (see above). Set fill=NULL
to draw only polygon borders. See also argument borders
.shp
that specifies the sizes of the symbols. See also the size
arugment of tm_symbols
. Only applicable when shp
is type 1, 2, or 3 (see above).shp
that specifies the colors of the symbols. See also the col
arugment of tm_symbols
. Only applicable when shp
is type 1, 2, or 3 (see above).shp
that specifies the shapes of the symbols. See also the shape
arugment of tm_symbols
. Only applicable when shp
is type 1, 2, or 3 (see above).shp
for the dot map that specifies the colors of the dots. If dots.col
is specified instead symbols.col
, dots instead of bubbles are drawn (unless symbols.shape
is specified).shp
is type 1, 2, or 3 (see above).shp
is type 1, 2, or 3 (see above).shp
for the that specifies the colors of the text labels. Only applicable when shp
is type 1, 2, or 3 (see above).shp
is type 3 (see above).shp
is type 3 (see above).shp
is type 4, 5, or 6 (see above).NULL
to omit the borders.tm_facets
symbols.size
, text.size
, and lines.lwd
can be scaled seperately with respectively symbols.scale
, text.scale
, and lines.scale
. See also ...
.X.style
, where X is the layer name (see ...
).CRS
object or a character value. If it is a character, it can either be a PROJ.4
character string or a shortcut. See get_proj4
for a list of shortcut values. By default, the projection is used that is defined in the shp
object itself, which can be obtained with get_projection
.tm_layout
wrapper used for format. Currently available in tmap: "World", "Europe", "NLD", "World_wide", "Europe_wide", "NLD_wide". Own wrappers can be used as well (see details).tm_layout
wrapper used for style. Available in tmap: "bw", "classic". Own wrappers can be used as well (see details).tm_view
tm_*
functions. The prefix of these arguments should be with the layer function name without "tm_"
and a period. For instance, the palette for polygon fill color is called fill.palette
. The following prefixes are supported: shape.
, fill.
, borders.
, polygons.
, symbols.
, dots.
, lines.
, raster.
, text.
, layout.
, grid.
, facets.
, and view.
. Arguments that have a unique name, i.e. that does not exist in any other layer function, e.g. convert2density
, can also be called without prefix.tmap-element
s. The first argument is a shape object (normally specified by tm_shape
). The next arguments, from fill
to raster
, are the aesthetics from the main layers. The remaining arguments are related to the map layout. Any argument from any main layer can be specified (see ...
). It is also possible to stack tmap-element
s on a qtm
plot. See examples.For format
, any character value, say "xxx" can be used if the wrapper function "tm_format_xxx"
exists. The same applies for the argument style
.
vignette("tmap-nutshell")
data(World, rivers, metro)
# just the map
qtm(World)
# choropleth
qtm(World, fill = "economy", format="World", style="col_blind")
qtm(World, fill="HPI", fill.n=9, fill.palette="div", fill.auto.palette.mapping=FALSE,
fill.title="Happy Planet Index", fill.id="name", format="World", style="gray")
# bubble map
qtm(World, borders = NULL) +
qtm(metro, symbols.size = "pop2010",
symbols.title.size= "Metropolitan Areas",
symbols.id= "name",
format = "World")
# TIP: check out these examples in view mode, enabled with tmap_mode("view")
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