The grobblR package allows R users the ability to intuitively create
flexible, reproducible PDF reports comprised of aesthetically pleasing
tables, images, plots and/or text. This is done by implementing
grobs from the grid and gridExtra
packages.
Within grobblR, the objects able to be converted to a grob are:
ggplot2 objectsNA)grob_row()) and grob-columns
(grob_col()) within the overall grob-layout
(grob_layout()).2 x 2 grid
system on a 100mm x 100mm (millimeters is the default unit
in grobblR) page, we would simply write:library(grobblR)
grob_layout(
grob_row(grob_col(1), grob_col(2)),
grob_row(grob_col(3), grob_col(4)),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()grob_row()’s tell the grob_layout()
that the user wants two rows on the outermost layer, and since there are
two grob_col()’s within each of the
grob_row()’s, the result is a 2 x 2 grid.2 x 2 grid -
we could have a layout where the first row has two columns and the
second has one:grob_layout(
grob_row(grob_col(1), grob_col(2)),
grob_row(grob_col(3)),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()R6 package.grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(border = TRUE, 1),
grob_col(border = TRUE, 2)
),
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(border = TRUE, 3),
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
grob_row(border = TRUE, grob_col(border = TRUE, 4)),
grob_row(border = TRUE, grob_col(border = TRUE, 5))
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()p (standing for proportion) parameter within
both grob_row() and grob_col().p is 1, but sizes change if
p differs from that.grob_layout(
grob_row(p = 1, border = TRUE, grob_col('1')),
grob_row(p = 2, border = TRUE, grob_col('2')),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()p = 2 is given twice the height of
the grob-row with p = 1.grob_layout(
grob_row(height = 25, border = TRUE, grob_col('1')),
grob_row(height = 50, border = TRUE, grob_col('2')),
grob_row(height = 25, border = TRUE, grob_col('3')),
height = 100,
width = 100,
padding = 0
) %>%
view_grob()grob_layout(
grob_row(p = 3, border = TRUE, grob_col('1')),
grob_row(height = 50, border = TRUE, grob_col('2')),
grob_row(p = 1, border = TRUE, grob_col('3')),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()aes_list parameter and the
ga_list() function within grob_col(), the
aesthetics of individual grobs can be adjusted to how the user intends
them to appear.?grobblR::ga_list for a full list and description
for each of the possible aesthetic options.background_color as an
element within aes_list:mat = matrix(1:4, nrow = 2, byrow = TRUE)
grob_layout(
grob_row(
grob_col(
mat,
aes_list = ga_list(background_color = "gray90")
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()grob_matrix() and
alter_at().alter_at() once the
grob_matrix() object is initialized.mat %>%
grob_matrix() %>%
alter_at(
~ "red",
columns = 1,
aesthetic = "text_color"
) %>%
alter_at(
~ "blue",
columns = 2,
rows = 2,
aesthetic = "background_color"
) %>%
alter_at(
~ "white",
columns = 2,
rows = 2,
aesthetic = "text_color"
) %>%
view_grob()ggplot2 plot is stretched or squished depending on
what the dimensions of the allotted space are:data(iris)
library(ggplot2)
gg1 = ggplot(
data = iris,
mapping = aes(
x = Sepal.Length,
y = Sepal.Width,
color = Species
)
) +
geom_point() +
guides(color = FALSE)
#> Warning: The `<scale>` argument of `guides()` cannot be `FALSE`. Use "none" instead as
#> of ggplot2 3.3.4.
#> This warning is displayed once every 8 hours.
#> Call `lifecycle::last_lifecycle_warnings()` to see where this warning was
#> generated.
gg2 = ggplot(
data = iris,
mapping = aes(
x = Sepal.Length,
y = Petal.Length,
color = Species
)
) +
geom_point() +
guides(color = FALSE)
grob_layout(
grob_row(grob_col(gg1), grob_col(gg2)),
grob_row(grob_col(gg1))
) %>%
view_grob(height = 100, width = 100)maintain_aspect_ratio = FALSE must be inserted within the
aes_list list.grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
'kings_logo.png'
),
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
aes_list = ga_list(
maintain_aspect_ratio = FALSE
),
'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/calvinmfloyd/grobblR/master/vignettes/kings_logo.png'
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()grob_image() and
add_structure().grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
'kings_logo.png'
),
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/calvinmfloyd/grobblR/master/vignettes/kings_logo.png' %>%
grob_image() %>%
add_structure("maintain_aspect_ratio", FALSE)
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()text = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog."
grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
text
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()grob_text() and add_aesthetic().grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
text %>%
grob_text() %>%
add_aesthetic("text_color", "blue") %>%
add_aesthetic("font_face", 3)
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()df = data.frame(letter = letters[1:5], col1 = 1:5, col2 = 5:1)
grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(df),
grob_col(
grob_row(grob_col(df)),
grob_row(grob_col(p = 1/3, NA))
),
grob_col(
grob_row(grob_col(p = 1/3, NA)),
grob_row(grob_col(df))
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
) %>%
view_grob()height and
width parameters within grob_layout() are
280 millimeters and 216 millimeters, as these
are the values needed to properly fit the grob-layout onto a piece of
standard computer paper, portrait orientation.grob_to_pdf(), with a file title and a meta data
title:first_page_grob_layout = grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(df),
grob_col(
grob_row(grob_col(df)),
grob_row(grob_col(p = 1/3, NA))
),
grob_col(
grob_row(grob_col(p = 1/3, NA)),
grob_row(grob_col(df))
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
)
second_page_grob_layout = grob_layout(
grob_row(
border = TRUE,
grob_col(
border = TRUE,
text
)
),
height = 100,
width = 100
)
# grob_to_pdf(
# first_page_grob_layout,
# second_page_grob_layout,
# file_name = file.path(tempdir(), "test.pdf"),
# meta_data_title = 'Test PDF'
# )
# OR
grob_to_pdf(
list(first_page_grob_layout, second_page_grob_layout),
file_name = file.path(tempdir(), "test.pdf"),
meta_data_title = "Test PDF"
)The grobblR package provides R users a tool to quickly create dynamic and aesthetically pleasing PDF reports. In the future we hope to enhance and add even more features, but, even as it currently stands, we believe grobblR is a valuable utility in daily data visualization and data reporting tasks.