Awesome
<!-- README.md is generated from README.Rmd. Please edit that file -->emoGG(plot)
Use emoji in your ggplot2
plots.
This is silly.
Installation
devtools::install_github("dill/emoGG")
ggplot2
versions
Note that this branch works with ggplot2
version 2 or higher, now
available on CRAN. If you have an older version of ggplot2
please look
at the ggplot2-pre2
branch.
Usage
library(ggplot2)
library(emoGG)
First need to find an emoji, using the emoji_search
function. First
look for a tulip:
emoji_search("tulip")
#> emoji code keyword
#> 626 tulip 1f337 flowers
#> 627 tulip 1f337 plant
#> 628 tulip 1f337 nature
#> 629 tulip 1f337 summer
#> 630 tulip 1f337 spring
#> 3051 copyright a9 ip
The iris
example with real irises (well, tulips...)
ggplot(iris, aes(Sepal.Length, Sepal.Width, color = Species)) +
geom_emoji(emoji="1f337")
What about plotting mtcars
with real cars?
ggplot(mtcars, aes(wt, mpg))+ geom_emoji(emoji="1f697")
Some random cats?
posx <- runif(50, 0, 10)
posy <- runif(50, 0, 10)
ggplot(data.frame(x = posx, y = posy), aes(x, y)) + geom_emoji(emoji="1f63b")
We can also just put a big emoji in the background:
qplot(x=Sepal.Length, y=Sepal.Width, data=iris, geom="point") + add_emoji(emoji="1f337")
Acknowledgements
Emoji lookup is from @muan's
emojilib
.
Emoji are loaded from a CDN using Twitter's
twemoji
, which is CC-BY
4.0 licensed. You can get
attribution details on the project
page.
With apologies, DLM.