Awesome
<!-- README.md is generated from README.Rmd. Please edit that file -->datasauRus <img src="man/figures/logo.png" align="right" />
<!-- badges: start --> <!-- badges: end -->This package wraps the awesome Datasaurus Dozen datasets. The Datasaurus
Dozen show us why visualisation is important – summary statistics can be
the same but distributions can be very different. In short, this package
gives a fun alternative to Anscombe’s
Quartet, available
in R as anscombe
.
The original Datasaurus was created by Alberto Cairo. The other Dozen were generated using simulated annealing and the process is described in the paper “Same Stats, Different Graphs: Generating Datasets with Varied Appearance and Identical Statistics through Simulated Annealing” by Justin Matejka and George Fitzmaurice (open access materials including manuscript and code, official paper).
In the paper, Justin and George simulate a variety of datasets that the same summary statistics to the Datasaurus but have very different distributions.
<img src="https://damassets.autodesk.net/content/dam/autodesk/research/publications-assets/gifs/same-stats-different-graphs/DinoSequentialSmaller.gif" title="Sequential dinosaur gif" alt="Sequential dinosaur gif" width="600px" />Install
The latest stable version is available on CRAN
install.packages("datasauRus")
You can get the latest development version from GitHub, so use {devtools} to install the package
devtools::install_github("jumpingrivers/datasauRus")
Usage
You can use the package to produce Anscombe plots and more.
library("ggplot2")
library("datasauRus")
ggplot(datasaurus_dozen, aes(x = x, y = y, colour = dataset))+
geom_point() +
theme_void() +
theme(legend.position = "none")+
facet_wrap(~dataset, ncol = 3)
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Code of Conduct
Please note that the datasauRus project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms