Add a title to your chart with bb_title
or bb_labs
(bb_labs
is a shortcut to set title and axis labels at the same time, but with no options for placement) :
You can specify a new color palette with function bb_color
:
## annee prod_therm prod_hydraulique prod_bioenergies prod_eolien prod_solaire
## 1 2012 48.1 63.8 5.8 14.9 4.1
## 2 2013 43.6 75.5 7.1 15.9 4.7
## 3 2014 25.9 68.1 7.5 17.1 5.9
## 4 2015 34.4 59.1 8.0 21.1 7.4
## 5 2016 45.9 63.9 8.5 20.7 8.3
# RColorBrewer palette
library("RColorBrewer")
billboarder() %>%
bb_barchart(data = prod_par_filiere[, c(1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8)]) %>%
bb_color(palette = brewer.pal(n = 5, name = "Dark2"))
Or you can specify each color associated with data with bb_colors_manual
:
billboarder() %>%
bb_barchart(data = prod_par_filiere[, c(1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8)]) %>%
bb_colors_manual(
prod_therm = "maroon",
prod_hydraulique = "royalblue",
prod_bioenergies = "forestgreen",
prod_eolien = "plum",
prod_solaire = "goldenrod"
)
Note : be careful when using named colors, CSS don’t recognize color variant such as royalblue2
, firebrick3
, … Use HEX code instead.
For bar charts, you can highlight a value in a simple barchart with :
Add a label to an axis :
# data source : wikipedia
sw <- data.frame(
film = c("The Force Awakens", "The Phantom Menace",
"Revenge of the Sith", "A New Hope",
"Attack of the Clones", "The Empire Strikes Back",
"Return of the Jedi"),
worldwide_gross = c(2068178225, 1027044677, 848754768,
775398007, 649398328, 538375067, 475106177)
)
billboarder() %>%
bb_barchart(data = sw) %>%
bb_y_axis(label = list(text = "Worldwide grosses", position = "outer-middle"))
You can format values on an axis with JavaScript (use htmlwidgets::JS
to mark your character string as literal JavaScript) :
billboarder() %>%
bb_barchart(data = sw) %>%
bb_y_axis(tick = list(
values = c(0, 5e+08, 1e+09, 1.5e+09, 2e+09),
outer = FALSE,
format = htmlwidgets::JS("d3.formatPrefix('$,.0', 1e6)")
))
If you just want to add a suffix or prefix to the value, use the functions with the same name :
sw2 <- sw
# calculate percentage
sw2$percent <- sw2$worldwide_gross / sum(sw2$worldwide_gross) * 100
sw2$percent <- round(sw2$percent)
sw2$worldwide_gross <- NULL
billboarder() %>%
bb_barchart(data = sw2) %>%
bb_y_axis(tick = list(format = suffix("%")))
You can apply a format to x axis as well (especially useful with time), and fit = FALSE
to don’t show all ticks :
data("cdc_prod_filiere")
billboarder() %>%
bb_linechart(data = cdc_prod_filiere[, c("date_heure", "prod_solaire")]) %>%
bb_x_axis(tick = list(format = "%H:%M", fit = FALSE))
Set a minimum on an axis (and look at the difference between above x-axis and below, without fit = FALSE
) :
By default, legend is shown, you can hide it with bb_lengend
df <- data.frame(
cos = cos(seq(-pi, pi, length.out = 30))
)
# No legend
billboarder() %>%
bb_linechart(data = df) %>%
bb_legend(show = FALSE)
You can change the name appearing in the legend with bb_data
, by giving an alias to the variable in the data. Here we have a column named cos
in our data.frame
, we renamed it Cosine
.
Legend can be postionned with argument position
, three values are possible : "bottom"
(the default), "right"
and "inset"
. For the last one, you must specify in which area of the chart the legend must be placed.
You can add grids to a chart with bb_x_axis
and bb_y_axis
:
This option also allows you to add vertical and horizontal lines :
You can show the tooltip separately for each serie in the chart :
You can change the format of the tooltip with a JavaScript function, for example d3.format
. Write the function as a character vector, and use htmlwidgets::JS
to mark it as literal JavaScript code.
All options combined :
billboarder() %>%
bb_barchart(data = sw, color = "#CAD5DB") %>%
bb_bar_color_manual(values = c("A New Hope" = "#112446")) %>%
bb_legend(show = FALSE) %>%
bb_y_grid(show = TRUE) %>%
bb_y_axis(tick = list(
values = c(0, 5e+08, 1e+09, 1.5e+09, 2e+09),
outer = FALSE,
format = htmlwidgets::JS("d3.formatPrefix('$,.0', 1e6)")
)) %>%
bb_tooltip(format = list(
name = htmlwidgets::JS("function(name, ratio, id, index) {return 'Worldwide grosses';}"),
value = htmlwidgets::JS("d3.format('$,')")
)) %>%
bb_labs(
title = "Star Wars - Total Lifetime Grosses",
y = "Worldwide grosses",
caption = "Data source : wikipedia"
)