DrewConway
DrewConway

Reputation: 5447

Getting LaTeX into R Plots

I would like to add LaTeX typesetting to elements of plots in R (e.g: the title, axis labels, annotations, etc.) using either the combination of base/lattice or with ggplot2.

Questions:

For example, in Python matplotlib compiles LaTeX via the text.usetex packages as discussed here: http://www.scipy.org/Cookbook/Matplotlib/UsingTex

Is there a similar process by which such plots can be generated in R?

Upvotes: 153

Views: 131589

Answers (10)

Leon
Leon

Reputation: 1

You can use the following, for example:

title(sub=TeX(sprintf(paste("Some latex symbols are ", r'(\lambda)', "and", r'(\alpha)'))))

Just remember to enclose LaTeX expressions in paste() using r'()' You can also add named objects in the paste() function. E.g.,

lambda_variable <- 3
title(sub=TeX(sprintf(paste(r'(\lambda=)', lambda_variable))))

Not sure if there are better ways to do this, but the above worked for me :)

Upvotes: 0

Stefano Meschiari
Stefano Meschiari

Reputation: 590

The CRAN package latex2exp contains a TeX function that translate LaTeX formulas to R's plotmath expressions. You can use it anywhere you could enter mathematical annotations, such as axis labels, legend labels, and general text.

For example:

x <- seq(0, 4, length.out=100)
alpha <- 1:5

plot(x, xlim=c(0, 4), ylim=c(0, 10), 
     xlab='x', ylab=TeX(r'($\alpha  x^\alpha$, where $\alpha \in \{1 \ldots 5\}$)'), 
     type='n', main=TeX(r'(Using $\LaTeX$ for plotting in base graphics!)', bold=TRUE))

for (a in alpha) {
  lines(x, a*x^a, col=a)
}

legend('topleft', 
       legend=TeX(sprintf(r'($\alpha = %d$)', alpha)), 
       lwd=1, 
       col=alpha)

produces this plot.

Upvotes: 57

Christopher DuBois
Christopher DuBois

Reputation: 43440

Here's an example using ggplot2:

q <- qplot(cty, hwy, data = mpg, colour = displ)
q + xlab(expression(beta +frac(miles, gallon)))

alt text

Upvotes: 53

Steve Walsh
Steve Walsh

Reputation: 157

h <- rnorm(mean = 5, sd = 1, n = 1000) hist(h, main = expression(paste("Sampled values, ", mu, "=5, ", sigma, "=1")))

Taken from a very help article here https://stats.idre.ucla.edu/r/codefragments/greek_letters/

Upvotes: 2

N8TRO
N8TRO

Reputation: 3364

Here's something from my own Lab Reports.

  • tickzDevice exports tikz images for LaTeX
  • Note, that in certain cases "\\" becomes "\" and "$" becomes "$\" as in the following R code: "$z\\frac{a}{b}$" -> "$\z\frac{a}{b}$\"

  • Also xtable exports tables to latex code

The code:

library(reshape2)
library(plyr)
library(ggplot2)
library(systemfit)
library(xtable)
require(graphics)
require(tikzDevice)

setwd("~/DataFolder/")
Lab5p9 <- read.csv (file="~/DataFolder/Lab5part9.csv", comment.char="#")

AR <- subset(Lab5p9,Region == "Forward.Active")

# make sure the data names aren't already in latex format, it interferes with the ggplot ~  # tikzDecice combo
colnames(AR) <- c("$V_{BB}[V]$", "$V_{RB}[V]$" ,  "$V_{RC}[V]$" , "$I_B[\\mu A]$" , "IC" , "$V_{BE}[V]$" , "$V_{CE}[V]$" , "beta" , "$I_E[mA]$")

# make sure the working directory is where you want your tikz file to go
setwd("~/TexImageFolder/")

# export plot as a .tex file in the tikz format
tikz('betaplot.tex', width = 6,height = 3.5,pointsize = 12) #define plot name size and font size

#define plot margin widths
par(mar=c(3,5,3,5)) # The syntax is mar=c(bottom, left, top, right).

ggplot(AR, aes(x=IC, y=beta)) +                                # define data set 
    geom_point(colour="#000000",size=1.5) +                # use points
    geom_smooth(method=loess,span=2) +                     # use smooth
    theme_bw() +                    # no grey background
    xlab("$I_C[mA]$") +                 # x axis label in latex format
    ylab ("$\\beta$") +                 # y axis label in latex format
    theme(axis.title.y=element_text(angle=0)) + # rotate y axis label
    theme(axis.title.x=element_text(vjust=-0.5)) +  # adjust x axis label down
    theme(axis.title.y=element_text(hjust=-0.5)) +  # adjust y axis lable left
    theme(panel.grid.major=element_line(colour="grey80", size=0.5)) +# major grid color
    theme(panel.grid.minor=element_line(colour="grey95", size=0.4)) +# minor grid color 
    scale_x_continuous(minor_breaks=seq(0,9.5,by=0.5)) +# adjust x minor grid spacing
    scale_y_continuous(minor_breaks=seq(170,185,by=0.5)) + # adjust y minor grid spacing
    theme(panel.border=element_rect(colour="black",size=.75))# border color and size

dev.off() # export file and exit tikzDevice function

Upvotes: 9

user1539634
user1539634

Reputation:

I just have a workaround. One may first generate an eps file, then convert it back to pgf using the tool eps2pgf. See http://www.texample.net/tikz/examples/eps2pgf/

Upvotes: 1

mwrowe
mwrowe

Reputation: 101

Here's a cool function that lets you use the plotmath functionality, but with the expressions stored as objects of the character mode. This lets you manipulate them programmatically using paste or regular expression functions. I don't use ggplot, but it should work there as well:

    express <- function(char.expressions){
       return(parse(text=paste(char.expressions,collapse=";")))
    }
    par(mar=c(6,6,1,1))
    plot(0,0,xlim=sym(),ylim=sym(),xaxt="n",yaxt="n",mgp=c(4,0.2,0),
       xlab="axis(1,(-9:9)/10,tick.labels,las=2,cex.axis=0.8)",
       ylab="axis(2,(-9:9)/10,express(tick.labels),las=1,cex.axis=0.8)")
    tick.labels <- paste("x >=",(-9:9)/10)
    # this is what you get if you just use tick.labels the regular way:
    axis(1,(-9:9)/10,tick.labels,las=2,cex.axis=0.8)
    # but if you express() them... voila!
    axis(2,(-9:9)/10,express(tick.labels),las=1,cex.axis=0.8)

Upvotes: 4

Aaron - mostly inactive
Aaron - mostly inactive

Reputation: 37754

I did this a few years ago by outputting to a .fig format instead of directly to a .pdf; you write the titles including the latex code and use fig2ps or fig2pdf to create the final graphic file. The setup I had to do this broke with R 2.5; if I had to do it again I'd look into tikz instead, but am including this here anyway as another potential option.

My notes on how I did it using Sweave are here: http://www.stat.umn.edu/~arendahl/computing

Upvotes: 2

Christopher DuBois
Christopher DuBois

Reputation: 43440

As stolen from here, the following command correctly uses LaTeX to draw the title:

plot(1, main=expression(beta[1]))

See ?plotmath for more details.

Upvotes: 40

Mica
Mica

Reputation: 19617

You can generate tikz code from R: http://r-forge.r-project.org/projects/tikzdevice/

Upvotes: 17

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