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tmap (version 3.3)

tm_symbols: Draw symbols

Description

Creates a tmap-element that draws symbols, including symbols and dots. The color, size, and shape of the symbols can be mapped to data variables.

Usage

tm_symbols(
  size = 1,
  col = NA,
  shape = 21,
  alpha = NA,
  border.col = NA,
  border.lwd = 1,
  border.alpha = NA,
  scale = 1,
  perceptual = FALSE,
  clustering = FALSE,
  size.max = NA,
  size.lim = NA,
  sizes.legend = NULL,
  sizes.legend.labels = NULL,
  n = 5,
  style = ifelse(is.null(breaks), "pretty", "fixed"),
  style.args = list(),
  as.count = NA,
  breaks = NULL,
  interval.closure = "left",
  palette = NULL,
  labels = NULL,
  drop.levels = FALSE,
  midpoint = NULL,
  stretch.palette = TRUE,
  contrast = NA,
  colorNA = NA,
  textNA = "Missing",
  showNA = NA,
  colorNULL = NA,
  shapes = 21:25,
  shapes.legend = NULL,
  shapes.legend.fill = NA,
  shapes.labels = NULL,
  shapes.drop.levels = FALSE,
  shapeNA = 4,
  shape.textNA = "Missing",
  shape.showNA = NA,
  shapes.n = 5,
  shapes.style = ifelse(is.null(shapes.breaks), "pretty", "fixed"),
  shapes.style.args = list(),
  shapes.as.count = NA,
  shapes.breaks = NULL,
  shapes.interval.closure = "left",
  legend.max.symbol.size = 0.8,
  just = NA,
  jitter = 0,
  xmod = 0,
  ymod = 0,
  icon.scale = 3,
  grob.dim = c(width = 48, height = 48, render.width = 256, render.height = 256),
  title.size = NA,
  title.col = NA,
  title.shape = NA,
  legend.size.show = TRUE,
  legend.col.show = TRUE,
  legend.shape.show = TRUE,
  legend.format = list(),
  legend.size.is.portrait = FALSE,
  legend.col.is.portrait = TRUE,
  legend.shape.is.portrait = TRUE,
  legend.size.reverse = FALSE,
  legend.col.reverse = FALSE,
  legend.shape.reverse = FALSE,
  legend.hist = FALSE,
  legend.hist.title = NA,
  legend.size.z = NA,
  legend.col.z = NA,
  legend.shape.z = NA,
  legend.hist.z = NA,
  id = NA,
  interactive = TRUE,
  popup.vars = NA,
  popup.format = list(),
  zindex = NA,
  group = NA,
  auto.palette.mapping = NULL,
  max.categories = NULL
)

tm_squares(size = 1, col = NA, shape = 22, scale = 4/3, ...)

tm_bubbles( size = 1, col = NA, shape = 21, scale = 4/3, legend.max.symbol.size = 1, ... )

tm_dots( col = NA, size = 0.02, shape = 19, title = NA, legend.show = TRUE, legend.is.portrait = TRUE, legend.z = NA, ... )

tm_markers( shape = marker_icon(), col = NA, border.col = NULL, clustering = TRUE, text = NULL, text.just = "top", markers.on.top.of.text = TRUE, group = NA, ... )

Arguments

size

a single value or a shp data variable that determines the symbol sizes. The reference value size=1 corresponds to the area of symbols that have the same height as one line of text. If a data variable (which should be numeric) is provided, the symbol area sizes are scaled proportionally (or perceptually, see perceptual) where by default the symbol with the largest data value will get size=1 (see also size.max). If multiple values are specified, small multiples are drawn (see details).

col

color(s) of the symbol. Either a color (vector), or categorical variable name(s). If multiple values are specified, small multiples are drawn (see details).

shape

shape(s) of the symbol. Either direct shape specification(s) or a data variable name(s) that is mapped to the symbols specified by the shapes argument. Note that the default shapes (specified by shapes) is not supported in "view" mode. See details for the shape specification.

alpha

transparency number between 0 (totally transparent) and 1 (not transparent). By default, the alpha value of the col is used (normally 1).

border.col

color of the symbol borders.

border.lwd

line width of the symbol borders. If NA, no symbol borders are drawn.

border.alpha

transparency number, regarding the symbol borders, between 0 (totally transparent) and 1 (not transparent). By default, the alpha value of the col is used (normally 1).

scale

symbol size multiplier number.

perceptual

by default (with perceptual = FALSE), the symbol area sizes are scaled proportionally to the data variables. This is done by taking the square root of the (normalized) data variable, since the plotting system (grid package) expects size in radius rather than area. However, the perceived area of larger symbols is often underestimated. Flannery (1971) experimentally derived a method to compensate this for symbols, which is enabled by this argument; if perceptual = TRUE, not the suqare root (power exponent 0.5) is taken, but power exponent 0.5716.

clustering

value that determines whether the symbols are clustered in "view" mode. It does not work proportional bubbles (i.e. tm_bubbles). One of: TRUE, FALSE, or the output of markerClusterOptions.

size.max

value that is mapped to size=1. By default (NA), the maximum data value is chosen. Only applicable when size is the name of a numeric variable of shp

size.lim

vector of two limit values of the size variable. Only symbols are drawn whose value is greater than or equal to the first value. Symbols whose values exceed the second value are drawn at the size of the second value. Only applicable when size is the name of a numeric variable of shp

sizes.legend

vector of symbol sizes that are shown in the legend. By default, this is determined automatically.

sizes.legend.labels

vector of labels for that correspond to sizes.legend.

n

preferred number of color scale classes. Only applicable when col is a numeric variable name.

style

method to process the color scale when col is a numeric variable. Discrete gradient options are "cat", "fixed", "sd", "equal", "pretty", "quantile", "kmeans", "hclust", "bclust", "fisher", "jenks", "dpih", "headtails", and "log10_pretty". A numeric variable is processed as a categorical variable when using "cat", i.e. each unique value will correspond to a distinct category. For the other discrete gradient options (except "log10_pretty"), see the details in classIntervals (extra arguments can be passed on via style.args). Continuous gradient options are "cont", "order", and "log10". The first maps the values of col to a smooth gradient, the second maps the order of values of col to a smooth gradient, and the third uses a logarithmic transformation. The numeric variable can be either regarded as a continuous variable or a count (integer) variable. See as.count.

style.args

arguments passed on to classIntervals, the function that determine color classes (see also style).

as.count

when col is a numeric variable, should it be processed as a count variable? For instance, if style = "pretty", n = 2, and the value range of the variable is 0 to 10, then the column classes for as.count = TRUE are 0; 1 to 5; 6 to 10 (note that 0 is regarded as an own category) whereas for as.count = FALSE they are 0 to 5; 5 to 10. Only applicable if style is "pretty", "fixed", or "log10_pretty". By default, TRUE if style is one of these, and the variable is an integer.

breaks

in case style=="fixed", breaks should be specified. The breaks argument can also be used when style="cont". In that case, the breaks are mapped evenly to the sequential or diverging color palette.

interval.closure

value that determines whether where the intervals are closed: "left" or "right". Only applicable if col is a numeric variable. If as.count = TRUE, inverval.closure is always set to "left".

palette

a palette name or a vector of colors. See tmaptools::palette_explorer() for the named palettes. Use a "-" as prefix to reverse the palette. The default palette is taken from tm_layout's argument aes.palette, which typically depends on the style. The type of palette from aes.palette is automatically determined, but can be overwritten: use "seq" for sequential, "div" for diverging, and "cat" for categorical.

labels

labels of the classes

drop.levels

should unused classes be omitted? FALSE by default.

midpoint

The value mapped to the middle color of a diverging palette. By default it is set to 0 if negative and positive values are present. In that case, the two sides of the color palette are assigned to negative respectively positive values. If all values are positive or all values are negative, then the midpoint is set to NA, which means that the value that corresponds to the middle color class (see style) is mapped to the middle color. Only applies when col is a numeric variable. If it is specified for sequential color palettes (e.g. "Blues"), then this color palette will be treated as a diverging color palette.

stretch.palette

Logical that determines whether the categorical color palette should be stretched if there are more categories than colors. If TRUE (default), interpolated colors are used (like a rainbow). If FALSE, the palette is repeated.

contrast

vector of two numbers that determine the range that is used for sequential and diverging palettes (applicable when auto.palette.mapping=TRUE). Both numbers should be between 0 and 1. The first number determines where the palette begins, and the second number where it ends. For sequential palettes, 0 means the brightest color, and 1 the darkest color. For diverging palettes, 0 means the middle color, and 1 both extremes. If only one number is provided, this number is interpreted as the endpoint (with 0 taken as the start).

colorNA

colour for missing values. Use NULL for transparency.

textNA

text used for missing values of the color variable.

showNA

logical that determines whether missing values are named in the legend. By default (NA), this depends on the presence of missing values.

colorNULL

colour for polygons that are shown on the map that are out of scope

shapes

palette of symbol shapes. Only applicable if shape is a (vector of) categorical variable(s). See details for the shape specification. By default, the filled symbols 21 to 25 are taken.

shapes.legend

symbol shapes that are used in the legend (instead of the symbols specified with shape). These shapes will be used in the legends regarding the size and col of the symbols. Especially useful when shapes consist of grobs that have to be represented by neutrally colored shapes. See also shapes.legend.fill.

shapes.legend.fill

Fill color of legend shapes. These colors will be used in the legends regarding the size and shape of the symbols. See also shapes.legend.

shapes.labels

Legend labels for the symbol shapes

shapes.drop.levels

should unused symbol classes be omitted? FALSE by default.

shapeNA

the shape (a number or grob) for missing values. By default a cross (number 4). Set to NA to hide symbols for missing values.

shape.textNA

text used for missing values of the shape variable.

shape.showNA

logical that determines whether missing values are named in the legend. By default (NA), this depends on the presence of missing values.

shapes.n

preferred number of shape classes. Only applicable when shape is a numeric variable name.

shapes.style

method to process the shape scale when shape is a numeric variable. See style argument for options.

shapes.style.args

arguments passed on to classIntervals (see also shapes.tyle).

shapes.as.count

when shape is a numeric variable, should it be processed as a count variable? See as.count argument for options.

shapes.breaks

in case shapes.style=="fixed", breaks should be specified

shapes.interval.closure

value that determines whether where the intervals are closed: "left" or "right". Only applicable if shape is a numeric variable.

legend.max.symbol.size

Maximum size of the symbols that are drawn in the legend. For circles and bubbles, a value larger than one is recommended (and used for tm_bubbles)

just

justification of the symbols relative to the point coordinates. The first value specifies horizontal and the second value vertical justification. Possible values are: "left" , "right", "center", "bottom", and "top". Numeric values of 0 specify left alignment and 1 right alignment. The default value is c("center", "center"). For icons, this value may already be speficied (see tmap_icons). The just, if specified, will overrides this.

jitter

number that determines the amount of jittering, i.e. the random noise added to the position of the symbols. 0 means no jittering is applied, any positive number means that the random noise has a standard deviation of jitter times the height of one line of text line.

xmod

horizontal position modification of the symbols, in terms of the height of one line of text. Either a single number for all polygons, or a numeric variable in the shape data specifying a number for each polygon. Together with ymod, it determines position modification of the symbols. See also jitter for random position modifications. In most coordinate systems (projections), the origin is located at the bottom left, so negative xmod move the symbols to the left, and negative ymod values to the bottom.

ymod

vertical position modification. See xmod.

icon.scale

scaling number that determines how large the icons (or grobs) are in plot mode in comparison to proportional symbols (such as bubbles). In view mode, the size is determined by the icon specification (see tmap_icons) or, if grobs are specified by grob.width and grob.heigth

grob.dim

vector of four values that determine how grob objects (see details) are shown in view mode. The first and second value are the width and height of the displayed icon. The third and fourth value are the width and height of the rendered png image that is used for the icon. Generally, the third and fourth value should be large enough to render a ggplot2 graphic successfully. Only needed for the view mode.

title.size

title of the legend element regarding the symbol sizes

title.col

title of the legend element regarding the symbol colors

title.shape

title of the legend element regarding the symbol shapes

legend.size.show

logical that determines whether the legend for the symbol sizes is shown

legend.col.show

logical that determines whether the legend for the symbol colors is shown

legend.shape.show

logical that determines whether the legend for the symbol shapes is shown

legend.format

list of formatting options for the legend numbers. Only applicable if labels is undefined. Parameters are:

fun

Function to specify the labels. It should take a numeric vector, and should return a character vector of the same size. By default it is not specified. If specified, the list items scientific, format, and digits (see below) are not used.

scientific

Should the labels be formatted scientifically? If so, square brackets are used, and the format of the numbers is "g". Otherwise, format="f", and text.separator, text.less.than, and text.or.more are used. Also, the numbers are automatically rounded to millions or billions if applicable.

format

By default, "f", i.e. the standard notation xxx.xxx, is used. If scientific=TRUE then "g", which means that numbers are formatted scientifically, i.e. n.dddE+nn if needed to save space.

digits

Number of digits after the decimal point if format="f", and the number of significant digits otherwise.

big.num.abbr

Vector that defines whether and which abbrevations are used for large numbers. It is a named numeric vector, where the name indicated the abbreviation, and the number the magnitude (in terms on numbers of zero). Numbers are only abbrevation when they are large enough. Set it to NA to disable abbrevations. The default is c("mln" = 6, "bln" = 9). For layers where style is set to log10 or log10_pretty, the default is NA.

prefix

Prefix of each number

suffix

Suffix of each number

text.separator

Character string to use to separate numbers in the legend (default: "to").

text.less.than

Character value(s) to use to translate "Less than". When a character vector of length 2 is specified, one for each word, these words are aligned when text.to.columns = TRUE

text.or.more

Character value(s) to use to translate "or more". When a character vector of length 2 is specified, one for each word, these words are aligned when text.to.columns = TRUE

text.align

Value that determines how the numbers are aligned, "left", "center" or "right". By default "left" for legends in portrait format (legend.is.protrait = TRUE), and "center" otherwise.

text.to.columns

Logical that determines whether the text is aligned to three columns (from, text.separator, to). By default FALSE.

...

Other arguments passed on to formatC

legend.size.is.portrait

logical that determines whether the legend element regarding the symbol sizes is in portrait mode (TRUE) or landscape (FALSE)

legend.col.is.portrait

logical that determines whether the legend element regarding the symbol colors is in portrait mode (TRUE) or landscape (FALSE)

legend.shape.is.portrait

logical that determines whether the legend element regarding the symbol shapes is in portrait mode (TRUE) or landscape (FALSE)

legend.size.reverse

logical that determines whether the items of the legend regarding the symbol sizes are shown in reverse order, i.e. from bottom to top when legend.size.is.portrait = TRUE and from right to left when legend.size.is.portrait = FALSE

legend.col.reverse

logical that determines whether the items of the legend regarding the symbol colors are shown in reverse order, i.e. from bottom to top when legend.col.is.portrait = TRUE and from right to left when legend.col.is.portrait = FALSE

legend.shape.reverse

logical that determines whether the items of the legend regarding the symbol shapes are shown in reverse order, i.e. from bottom to top when legend.shape.is.portrait = TRUE and from right to left when legend.shape.is.portrait = FALSE

legend.hist

logical that determines whether a histogram is shown regarding the symbol colors

legend.hist.title

title for the histogram. By default, one title is used for both the histogram and the normal legend for symbol colors.

legend.size.z

index value that determines the position of the legend element regarding the symbol sizes with respect to other legend elements. The legend elements are stacked according to their z values. The legend element with the lowest z value is placed on top.

legend.col.z

index value that determines the position of the legend element regarding the symbol colors. (See legend.size.z)

legend.shape.z

index value that determines the position of the legend element regarding the symbol shapes. (See legend.size.z)

legend.hist.z

index value that determines the position of the histogram legend element. (See legend.size.z)

id

name of the data variable that specifies the indices of the symbols. Only used for "view" mode (see tmap_mode).

interactive

logical that determines whether this layer is interactive in view mode (e.g. hover text, popup, and click event in shiny apps)

popup.vars

names of data variables that are shown in the popups in "view" mode. If NA (default), only aesthetic variables (i.e. specified by col and lwd) are shown). If they are not specified, all variables are shown. Set popup.vars to FALSE to disable popups. When a vector of variable names is provided, the names (if specified) are printed in the popups.

popup.format

list of formatting options for the popup values. See the argument legend.format for options. Only applicable for numeric data variables. If one list of formatting options is provided, it is applied to all numeric variables of popup.vars. Also, a (named) list of lists can be provided. In that case, each list of formatting options is applied to the named variable.

zindex

zindex of the pane in view mode. By default, it is set to the layer number plus 400. By default, the tmap layers will therefore be placed in the custom panes "tmap401", "tmap402", etc., except for the base tile layers, which are placed in the standard "tile". This parameter determines both the name of the pane and the z-index, which determines the pane order from bottom to top. For instance, if zindex is set to 500, the pane will be named "tmap500".

group

name of the group to which this layer belongs in view mode. Each group can be selected or deselected in the layer control item. Set group = NULL to hide the layer in the layer control item. By default, it will be set to the name of the shape (specified in tm_shape).

auto.palette.mapping

deprecated. It has been replaced by midpoint for numeric variables and stretch.palette for categorical variables.

max.categories

deprecated. It has moved to tmap_options.

...

arguments passed on to tm_symbols. For tm_markers, arguments can also be passed on to tm_text. In that case, they have to be prefixed with text., e.g. the col argument should be names text.col.

title

shortcut for title.col for tm_dots

legend.show

shortcut for legend.col.show for tm_dots

legend.is.portrait

shortcut for legend.col.is.portrait for tm_dots

legend.z

shortcut for legend.col.z shortcut for tm_dots

text

text of the markers. Shown in plot mode, and as popup text in view mode.

text.just

justification of marker text (see just argument of tm_text). Only applicable in plot mode.

markers.on.top.of.text

For tm_markers, should the markers be drawn on top of the text labels?

Value

tmap-element

Details

Small multiples can be drawn in two ways: either by specifying the by argument in tm_facets, or by defining multiple variables in the aesthetic arguments, which are size, col, and shape. In the latter case, the arguments, except for the ones starting with legend., can be specified for small multiples as follows. If the argument normally only takes a single value, such as n, then a vector of those values can be specified, one for each small multiple. If the argument normally can take a vector, such as palette, then a list of those vectors (or values) can be specified, one for each small multiple.

A shape specification is one of the following three options.

  1. A numeric value that specifies the plotting character of the symbol. See parameter pch of points and the last example to create a plot with all options. Note that this is not supported for the "view" mode.

  2. A grob object, which can be a ggplot2 plot object created with ggplotGrob. To specify multiple shapes, a list of grob objects is required. See example of a proportional symbol map with ggplot2 plots.

  3. An icon specification, which can be created with tmap_icons.

To specify multiple shapes (needed for the shapes argument), a vector or list of these shape specification is required. The shape specification options can also be mixed. For the shapes argument, it is possible to use a named vector or list, where the names correspond to the value of the variable specified by the shape argument. For small multiples, a list of these shape specification(s) should be provided.

References

Flannery J (1971). The Relative Effectiveness of Some Common Graduated Point Symbols in the Presentation of Quantitative Data. Canadian Cartographer, 8(2), 96-109.

Tennekes, M., 2018, tmap: Thematic Maps in R, Journal of Statistical Software, 84(6), 1-39, 10.18637/jss.v084.i06

See Also

vignette("tmap-getstarted")

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
data(World, metro)
metro$growth <- (metro$pop2020 - metro$pop2010) / (metro$pop2010 * 10) * 100

tm_shape(World) +
    tm_fill("grey70") +
tm_shape(metro) +
    tm_bubbles("pop2010", col = "growth", 
        border.col = "black", border.alpha = .5, 
        style="fixed", breaks=c(-Inf, seq(0, 6, by=2), Inf),
        palette="-RdYlBu", contrast=1, 
        title.size="Metro population", 
        title.col="Growth rate (%)") + 
tm_format("World")

tm_shape(metro) +
	tm_symbols(size = "pop2010", col="pop2010", shape="pop2010",
		legend.format = list(text.align="right", text.to.columns = TRUE)) +
tm_legend(outside = TRUE, outside.position = "bottom", stack = "horizontal")


if (require(ggplot2) && require(dplyr) && require(tidyr) && require(tmaptools) && require(sf)) {
data(NLD_prov)

origin_data <- NLD_prov %>% 
	st_set_geometry(NULL) %>% 
mutate(FID= factor(1:n())) %>% 
select(FID, origin_native, origin_west, origin_non_west) %>% 
gather(key=origin, value=perc, origin_native, origin_west, origin_non_west, factor_key=TRUE)

origin_cols <- get_brewer_pal("Dark2", 3)

grobs <- lapply(split(origin_data, origin_data$FID), function(x) {
ggplotGrob(ggplot(x, aes(x="", y=-perc, fill=origin)) +
	geom_bar(width=1, stat="identity") +
	scale_y_continuous(expand=c(0,0)) +
	scale_fill_manual(values=origin_cols) +
	theme_ps(plot.axes = FALSE))
})

names(grobs) <- NLD_prov$name

tm_shape(NLD_prov) +
tm_polygons(group = "Provinces") +
tm_symbols(size="population", shape="name", 
	shapes=grobs, 
	sizes.legend=c(.5, 1,3)*1e6, 
	scale=1, 
	legend.shape.show = FALSE, 
	legend.size.is.portrait = TRUE, 
	shapes.legend = 22, 
	title.size = "Population",
	group = "Charts",
	id = "name",
	popup.vars = c("population", "origin_native",
				   "origin_west", "origin_non_west")) +
tm_add_legend(type="fill", 
	group = "Charts",
	col=origin_cols, 
	labels=c("Native", "Western", "Non-western"), 
	title="Origin") +
tm_format("NLD")
}



# TIP: check out these examples in view mode, enabled with tmap_mode("view")

# }
# NOT RUN {
if (require(rnaturalearth)) {

airports <- ne_download(scale=10, type="airports", returnclass = "sf")
airplane <- tmap_icons(system.file("img/airplane.png", package = "tmap"))

current.mode <- tmap_mode("view")
tm_shape(airports) +
	tm_symbols(shape=airplane, size="natlscale",
        legend.size.show = FALSE, scale=1, border.col = NULL, id="name", popup.vars = TRUE) +
tm_view(set.view = c(lon = 15, lat = 48, zoom = 4))
tmap_mode(current.mode)
}
# }
# NOT RUN {
#####################################################################################

# }
# NOT RUN {
# plot all available symbol shapes:
if (require(ggplot2)) {
	ggplot(data.frame(p=c(0:25,32:127))) +
	geom_point(aes(x=p%%16, y=-(p%/%16), shape=p), size=5, fill="red") +
	geom_text(mapping=aes(x=p%%16, y=-(p%/%16+0.25), label=p), size=3) +
	scale_shape_identity() +
	theme(axis.title=element_blank(),
		  axis.text=element_blank(),
		  axis.ticks=element_blank(),
		  panel.background=element_blank())
}
# }

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