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ggsankey

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The goal of ggsankey is to make beautiful sankey, alluvial and sankey bump plots in ggplot2

Installation

You can install the development version of ggsankey from github with:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("davidsjoberg/ggsankey")

How does it work

Google defines a sankey as:

A sankey diagram is a visualization used to depict a flow from one set of values to another. The things being connected are called nodes and the connections are called links. Sankeys are best used when you want to show a many-to-many mapping between two domains or multiple paths through a set of stages.

To plot a sankey diagram with ggsankey each observation has a stage (called a discrete x-value in ggplot) and be part of a node. Furthermore, each observation needs to have instructions of which node it will belong to in the next stage. See the image below for some clarification.

<img src="man/figures/README-unnamed-chunk-2-1.png" width="100%" />

Hence, to use geom_sankey the aesthetics x, next_x, node and next_node are required. The last stage should point to NA. The aesthetics fill and color will affect both nodes and flows.

To plot a sankey diagram with ggsankey each observation has a stage (called a discrete x-value in ggplot) and be part of a node. Furthermore, each observation needs to have instructions of which node it will belong to in the next stage. See the image below for some clarification.

<img src="man/figures/README-unnamed-chunk-3-1.png" width="100%" />

To control geometries (not changed by data) like fill, color, size, alpha etc for nodes and flows you can either choose to set a global value that affect both, or you can specify which one you want to alter. For example node.color = 'black' will only draw a black line around the nodes, but not the flows (links).

<img src="man/figures/README-unnamed-chunk-4-1.png" width="100%" />

Basic usage

geom_sankey

A basic sankey plot that shows how dimensions are linked.

df <- mtcars %>%
  make_long(cyl, vs, am, gear, carb)

ggplot(df, aes(x = x, 
               next_x = next_x, 
               node = node, 
               next_node = next_node,
               fill = factor(node))) +
  geom_sankey() +
  scale_fill_discrete(drop=FALSE)
<img src="man/figures/README-example-1.png" width="100%" />

And by adding a little pimp.

ggplot(df, aes(x = x, next_x = next_x, node = node, next_node = next_node, fill = factor(node), label = node)) +
  geom_sankey(flow.alpha = .6,
              node.color = "gray30") +
  geom_sankey_label(size = 3, color = "white", fill = "gray40") +
  scale_fill_viridis_d(drop = FALSE) +
  theme_sankey(base_size = 18) +
  labs(x = NULL) +
  theme(legend.position = "none",
        plot.title = element_text(hjust = .5)) +
  ggtitle("Car features")
<img src="man/figures/README-sankey-1.png" width="100%" />

geom_alluvial

Alluvial plots are very similiar to sankey plots but have no spaces between nodes and start at y = 0 instead being centered around the x-axis.

ggplot(df, aes(x = x, next_x = next_x, node = node, next_node = next_node, fill = factor(node), label = node)) +
  geom_alluvial(flow.alpha = .6) +
  geom_alluvial_text(size = 3, color = "white") +
  scale_fill_viridis_d(drop = FALSE) +
  theme_alluvial(base_size = 18) +
  labs(x = NULL) +
  theme(legend.position = "none",
        plot.title = element_text(hjust = .5)) +
  ggtitle("Car features")
<img src="man/figures/README-alluvial-1.png" width="100%" />

geom_sankey_bump

Sankey bump plots is mix between bump plots and sankey and mostly useful for time series. When a group becomes larger than another it bumps above it.

df <- gapminder %>%
  group_by(continent, year) %>%
  summarise(gdp = (sum(pop * gdpPercap)/1e9) %>% round(0), .groups = "keep") %>%
  ungroup()

ggplot(df, aes(x = year,
               node = continent,
               fill = continent,
               value = gdp)) +
  geom_sankey_bump(space = 0, type = "alluvial", color = "transparent", smooth = 6) +
  scale_fill_viridis_d(option = "A", alpha = .8) +
  theme_sankey_bump(base_size = 16) +
  labs(x = NULL,
       y = "GDP ($ bn)",
       fill = NULL,
       color = NULL) +
  theme(legend.position = "bottom") +
  labs(title = "GDP development per continent")
<img src="man/figures/README-sankey_bump-1.png" width="100%" />