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R Data Visualization Recipes

You're reading from   R Data Visualization Recipes A cookbook with 65+ data visualization recipes for smarter decision-making

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788398312
Length 366 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Vitor Bianchi Lanzetta Vitor Bianchi Lanzetta
Author Profile Icon Vitor Bianchi Lanzetta
Vitor Bianchi Lanzetta
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installation and Introduction 2. Plotting Two Continuous Variables FREE CHAPTER 3. Plotting a Discrete Predictor and a Continuous Response 4. Plotting One Variable 5. Making Other Bivariate Plots 6. Creating Maps 7. Faceting 8. Designing Three-Dimensional Plots 9. Using Theming Packages 10. Designing More Specialized Plots 11. Making Interactive Plots 12. Building Shiny Dashboards

Introduction

R is a free open language and environment for statistical computing and graphics. It particularly gained wide popularity among scientists from different fields, journalists, and private companies. There are various reasons for that, openness and gratuity may be couple of them. Also, R requires minimal programming background and has a vibrant online community.

From community, a bunch of useful graphical packages had come. This chapter covers basic aspects of three of them: ggplot2, plotly, and ggvis. The first one (ggplot2) has been there for a long time, is very mature, and is very useful to build non-interactive graphics.

Both plotly and ggvis are much younger packages, which can build interactive plots. Both are shiny compatible and can well address the matter of web applications. Beginning with installation and loading, this chapter goes all the way through explaining the basic framework of all those three packages, while demonstrating how to use ggplot2 primitives.

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