treemapify provides ggplot2 geoms for drawing treemaps.
Install the release version of treemapify from CRAN:
install.packages("treemapify")
If you want the development version, install it from GitHub:
devtools::install_github("wilkox/treemapify")
treemapify includes an example dataset containing statistics about the G-20 group of major world economies.
library(ggplot2)
library(treemapify)
G20
#> region country gdp_mil_usd hdi econ_classification
#> 1 Africa South Africa 384315 0.629 Developing
#> 2 North America United States 15684750 0.937 Advanced
#> 3 North America Canada 1819081 0.911 Advanced
#> 4 North America Mexico 1177116 0.775 Developing
#> 5 South America Brazil 2395968 0.730 Developing
#> 6 South America Argentina 474954 0.811 Developing
#> 7 Asia China 8227037 0.699 Developing
#> 8 Asia Japan 5963969 0.912 Advanced
#> 9 Asia South Korea 1155872 0.909 Advanced
#> 10 Asia India 1824832 0.554 Developing
#> 11 Asia Indonesia 878198 0.629 Developing
#> 12 Eurasia Russia 2021960 0.788 Developing
#> 13 Eurasia Turkey 794468 0.722 Developing
#> 14 Europe European Union 16414483 0.876 Advanced
#> 15 Europe Germany 3400579 0.920 Advanced
#> 16 Europe France 2608699 0.893 Advanced
#> 17 Europe United Kingdom 2440505 0.875 Advanced
#> 18 Europe Italy 2014079 0.881 Advanced
#> 19 Middle East Saudi Arabia 727307 0.782 Developing
#> 20 Oceania Australia 1541797 0.938 Advanced
#> hemisphere
#> 1 Southern
#> 2 Northern
#> 3 Northern
#> 4 Northern
#> 5 Southern
#> 6 Southern
#> 7 Northern
#> 8 Northern
#> 9 Northern
#> 10 Northern
#> 11 Southern
#> 12 Northern
#> 13 Northern
#> 14 Northern
#> 15 Northern
#> 16 Northern
#> 17 Northern
#> 18 Northern
#> 19 Northern
#> 20 Southern
In a treemap, each tile represents a single observation, with the area
of the tile proportional to a variable. Let’s start by drawing a treemap
with each tile representing a G-20 country. The area of the tile will be
mapped to the country’s GDP, and the tile’s fill colour mapped to its
HDI (Human Development Index). geom_treemap
is the basic geom for this
purpose.
ggplot(G20, aes(area = gdp_mil_usd, fill = hdi)) +
geom_treemap()
This plot isn’t very useful without the knowing what country is
represented by each tile. geom_treemap_text
can be used to add a text
label to each tile. It uses the
ggfittext package to resize the
text so it fits the tile. In addition to standard text formatting
aesthetics you would use in geom_text
, like fontface
or colour
, we
can pass additional options specific for ggfittext. For example, we can
place the text in the centre of the tile with place = "centre"
, and
expand it to fill as much of the tile as possible with grow = TRUE
.
ggplot(G20, aes(area = gdp_mil_usd, fill = hdi, label = country)) +
geom_treemap() +
geom_treemap_text(fontface = "italic", colour = "white", place = "centre",
grow = TRUE)
geom_treemap
supports subgrouping of tiles within a treemap by passing
a subgroup
aesthetic. Let’s subgroup the countries by region, draw a
border around each subgroup with geom_treemap_subgroup_border
, and
label each subgroup with geom_treemap_subgroup_text
.
geom_treemap_subgroup_text
takes the same arguments for text placement
and resizing as geom_treemap_text
.
ggplot(G20, aes(area = gdp_mil_usd, fill = hdi, label = country,
subgroup = region)) +
geom_treemap() +
geom_treemap_subgroup_border() +
geom_treemap_subgroup_text(place = "centre", grow = T, alpha = 0.5, colour =
"black", fontface = "italic", min.size = 0) +
geom_treemap_text(colour = "white", place = "topleft", reflow = T)
Note that Argentina is not labelled. geom_treemap_text
will hide text
labels that cannot fit a tile without being shrunk below a minimum size,
by default 4 points. This can be adjusted with the min.size
argument.
Up to three nested levels of subgrouping are supported with the
subgroup2
and subgroup3
aesthetics. Borders and text labels for
these subgroups can be drawn with geom_treemap_subgroup2_border
, etc.
Note that ggplot2 draws plot layers in the order that they are added.
This means it is possible to accidentally hide one layer of subgroup
borders with another. Usually, it’s best to add the border layers in
order from deepest to shallowest, i.e. geom_treemap_subgroup3_border
then geom_treemap_subgroup2_border
then
geom_treemap_subgroup_border
.
ggplot(G20, aes(area = 1, label = country, subgroup = hemisphere,
subgroup2 = region, subgroup3 = econ_classification)) +
geom_treemap() +
geom_treemap_subgroup3_border(colour = "blue", size = 1) +
geom_treemap_subgroup2_border(colour = "white", size = 3) +
geom_treemap_subgroup_border(colour = "red", size = 5) +
geom_treemap_subgroup_text(place = "middle", colour = "red", alpha = 0.5, grow = T) +
geom_treemap_subgroup2_text(colour = "white", alpha = 0.5, fontface = "italic") +
geom_treemap_subgroup3_text(place = "top", colour = "blue", alpha = 0.5) +
geom_treemap_text(colour = "white", place = "middle", reflow = T)
As demonstrated, there is no assurance that the resulting plot will look good.
Like any ggplot2 plot, treemapify plots can be faceted, scaled, themed, etc.
ggplot(G20, aes(area = gdp_mil_usd, fill = region, label = country, subgroup = region)) +
geom_treemap() +
geom_treemap_text(grow = T, reflow = T, colour = "black") +
facet_wrap( ~ hemisphere) +
scale_fill_brewer(palette = "Set1") +
theme(legend.position = "bottom") +
labs(
title = "The G-20 major economies by hemisphere",
caption = "The area of each tile represents the country's GDP as a
proportion of all countries in that hemisphere",
fill = "Region"
)
The default algorithm for laying out the tiles is the ‘squarified’ algorithm. This tries to minimise the tiles’ aspect ratios, making sure there are no long and flat or tall and skinny tiles. While ‘squarified’ treemaps are aesthetically pleasing, the downside is that the position of tiles within the plot area can change dramatically with even small changes to the dataset. This makes it difficult to compare treemaps side-by-side, or create animated treemaps.
By providing the layout = "fixed"
option to treemapify geoms, an
alternative layout algorithm is used that will always position the tiles
based on the order of observations in the data frame. It’s very
important that the same value for layout
is passed to all treemapify
geoms, otherwise different layers of the plot might not share the same
layout.
With the help of layout = "fixed"
, and with the
gganimate
package, it becomes
possible to create animated treemaps showing e.g. change over time.
library(gganimate)
library(gapminder)
p <- ggplot(gapminder, aes(
label = country,
area = pop,
subgroup = continent,
fill = lifeExp
)) +
geom_treemap(layout = "fixed") +
geom_treemap_text(layout = "fixed", place = "centre", grow = TRUE, colour = "white") +
geom_treemap_subgroup_text(layout = "fixed", place = "centre") +
geom_treemap_subgroup_border(layout = "fixed") +
transition_time(year) +
ease_aes('linear') +
labs(title = "Year: {frame_time}")
anim_save("man/figures/animated_treemap.gif", p, nframes = 48)