Learn R Programming

ggthemes (version 3.4.0)

bank_slopes: Bank Slopes to 45 degrees

Description

Calculate the optimal aspect ratio of a line graph by banking the slopes to 45 degrees as suggested by W.S. Cleveland. This maximizes the ability to visually differentiate differences in slope. This function will calculate the optimal aspect ratio for a line plot using any of the methods described in Herr and Argwala (2006). In their review of the methods they suggest using median absolute slope banking ('ms'), which produces aspect ratios which are generally the median of the various methods provided here.

Usage

bank_slopes(x, y, cull = FALSE, weight = NULL, method = c("ms", "as",
  "ao", "gor", "lor"), ...)

Arguments

x

x values

y

y values

cull

logical. Remove all slopes of 0 or Inf.

weight

No longer used, but kept for backwards compatiblity.

method

One of 'ms' (Median Absolute Slope) or 'as' (Average Absolute Slope). Other options are no longer supported, and will use 'ms' instead with a warning.

...

No longer used, but kept for backwards compatibility.

Value

numeric The aspect ratio (x , y).

Methods

As written, all of these methods calculate the aspect ratio (x /y), but bank_slopes will return (y / x) to be compatible with link[ggplot2]{coord_fixed}.

Median Absolute Slopes Banking

Let the aspect ratio be \(\alpha = \frac{w}{h}\) then the median absolute slop banking is the \(\alpha\) such that, $$ median \left| \frac{s_i}{\alpha} \right| = 1 $$

Let \(R_z = z_{max} - z_{min}\) for \(z = x, y\), and \(M = median \| s_i \|\). Then, $$ \alpha = M \frac{R_x}{R_y} $$

Average Absolute Slope Banking

Let the aspect ratio be \(\alpha = \frac{w}{h}\). then the mean absolute slope banking is the \(\alpha\) such that, $$ mean \left| \frac{s_i}{\alpha} \right| = 1 $$

Heer and Agrawala (2006) and Cleveland discuss several other methods including average (weighted) orientation, and global and local orientation resolution. These are no longer implemented in this function. In general, either the median or average absolute slopes will produce reasonable results without requiring optimization.

References

Cleveland, W. S., M. E. McGill, and R. McGill. The Shape Parameter of a Two-Variable Graph. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 83:289-300, 1988

Heer, Jeffrey and Maneesh Agrawala, 2006. 'Multi-Scale Banking to 45' IEEE Transactions On Visualization And Computer Graphics.

Cleveland, W. S. 1993. 'A Model for Studying Display Methods of Statistical Graphs.' Journal of Computational and Statistical Graphics.

Cleveland, W. S. 1994. The Elements of Graphing Data, Revised Edition.

See Also

banking

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
library("ggplot2")
# Use the classic sunspot data from Cleveland's original paper
x <- seq_along(sunspot.year)
y <- as.numeric(sunspot.year)
# Without banking
m <- ggplot(data.frame(x = x, y = y), aes(x = x, y = y)) +
   geom_line()
m

## Using the default method, Median Absolute Slope
ratio <- bank_slopes(x, y)
m + coord_fixed(ratio = ratio)
## Using culling
## Average Absolute Slope
bank_slopes(x, y, method='as')
# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab