CCurtis
CCurtis

Reputation: 1932

Specify position of geom_text by keywords like "top", "bottom", "left", "right", "center"

I wish to position text in a ggplot without specifying x and y positions, but instead using keywords, like e.g. in graphics::legend ("The location may also be specified by setting x to a single keyword from the list "bottomright", "bottom", "bottomleft", "left", "topleft", "top", "topright", "right" and "center").

Lets say I'm making a graph like this.

sp <- ggplot(mpg, aes(hwy, cty, label = "sometext")) +
       geom_point()

I want to add the label to be printed in the same way in every graph. Calling the following simply prints text at every x, y value supplied to aes.

sp + geom_text()

I could manipulate the x and y data supplied to geom_text() to ensure that the text remained in the same relative position between graphs, but is there not a simply way to call position by default positions like "top", "bottom" etc? I.e. sp + geom_text(position = "top").

Upvotes: 24

Views: 47616

Answers (5)

Henrik
Henrik

Reputation: 67778

In ggpp::geom_text_npc the x and y positions are given in npc units (0-1). However, the positions can also be specified as "words":

d = data.frame(x = rep(c("left", "center", "right"), each = 3),
               y = rep(c("bottom", "middle", "top"), 3))
d$lab = with(d, paste0(x, "-", y))
d
#        x      y           lab
# 1   left bottom   left-bottom
# 2   left middle   left-middle
# 3   left    top      left-top
# 4 center bottom center-bottom
# 5 center middle center-middle
# 6 center    top    center-top
# 7  right bottom  right-bottom
# 8  right middle  right-middle
# 9  right    top     right-top

ggplot(d) +
  geom_text_npc(aes(npcx = x, npcy = y, label = lab))

enter image description here

Upvotes: 19

baptiste
baptiste

Reputation: 77106

It's certainly possible to write a wrapper but the way units and justification are defined makes it rather verbose,

library(ggplot2)

qplot(1,1) + 
  annotation_compass('testN') + 
  annotation_compass('testE','E') + 
  annotation_compass('testSW','SW') + 
  annotation_compass('testW','W')

enter image description here

annotation_compass <- function(label,
                               position = c('N','NE','E','SE','S','SW','W','NW'),
                               padding = grid::unit(c(0.5,0.5),"line"), ...){
  position <- match.arg(position)
  x <- switch (position,
    N = 0.5,
    NE = 1,
    E = 1,
    SE = 1,
    S = 0.5, 
    SW = 0,
    W = 0, 
    NW = 0
  )
  y <- switch (position,
               N = 1,
               NE = 1,
               E = 0.5,
               SE = 0,
               S = 0, 
               SW = 0,
               W = 0.5, 
               NW = 1
  )
  hjust <- switch (position,
               N = 0.5,
               NE = 1,
               E = 1,
               SE = 1,
               S = 0.5, 
               SW = 0,
               W = 0, 
               NW = 0
  )
  vjust <- switch (position,
               N = 1,
               NE = 1,
               E = 0.5,
               SE = 0,
               S = 0, 
               SW = 0,
               W = 0.5, 
               NW = 1
  )
  f1 <- switch (position,
                   N = 0,
                   NE = -1,
                   E = -1,
                   SE = -1,
                   S = 0, 
                   SW = 1,
                   W = 1, 
                   NW = 1
  )
  f2 <- switch (position,
                   N = -1,
                   NE = -1,
                   E = 0,
                   SE = 1,
                   S = 1, 
                   SW = 1,
                   W = 0, 
                   NW = -1
  )
  annotation_custom(grid::textGrob(label, 
                                   x=grid::unit(x,"npc") + f1*padding[1] , 
                                   y=grid::unit(y,"npc") + f2*padding[2],
                                   hjust=hjust,vjust=vjust, ...))
}

Upvotes: 8

Jan Boyer
Jan Boyer

Reputation: 1580

The solution using infinity is good and is definitely the easiest option.

However, if you want more control over the position of your labels (for example, if you want them centered, or if you want more space between the axis line and annotation), you can use some math with min() and max() of your plot titles to create centered titles at top, bottom, right, or left. The code below is a bit lengthy, but will still place labels correctly if the values in your plot change. Also, to copy to other plots, you won't need to manually calculate values, just change the names of the x and y variables.

sp <- ggplot(mpg, aes(hwy, cty)) +
  geom_point() +
  theme_classic() +
  annotate("text", label = "top", 
           x = 0.5*(min(mpg$hwy) + max(mpg$hwy)), y = max(mpg$cty), vjust = 1) +
  annotate("text", label = "bottom", 
           x = 0.5*(min(mpg$hwy) + max(mpg$hwy)), y = min(mpg$cty), vjust = 0) +
  annotate("text", label = "right", 
           x =  max(mpg$hwy), y = 0.5*(min(mpg$cty) + max(mpg$cty)), hjust = 1) +
  annotate("text", label = "left", 
            x =  min(mpg$hwy), y = 0.5*(min(mpg$cty) + max(mpg$cty)), hjust = 0)

sp   

enter image description here

Upvotes: 8

hrbrmstr
hrbrmstr

Reputation: 78822

I avoid annotate like the plague and just use an empty data frame data argument for geom_text:

ggplot(mpg, aes(hwy, cty, label = "sometext"))+
  geom_point() +
  geom_text(data=data.frame(), aes(label = 'sometext', x = -Inf, y = Inf),
            hjust = 0, vjust = 1)

Upvotes: 19

jdobres
jdobres

Reputation: 11957

geom_text wants to plot labels based on your data set. It sounds like you're looking to add a single piece of text to your plot, in which case, annotate is the better option. To force the label to appear in the same position regardless of the units in the plot, you can take advantage of Inf values:

sp <- ggplot(mpg, aes(hwy, cty, label = "sometext"))+
  geom_point() +
  annotate(geom = 'text', label = 'sometext', x = -Inf, y = Inf, hjust = 0, vjust = 1)
print(sp)

enter image description here

Upvotes: 23

Related Questions