Produce ggplot2 graphs from Python
# from pypi
pip install ggshow
# or from github
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/kota7/ggshow.git
pip install -U ./ggshow
- Python 3.7+ (but would work in some older versions)
Rscript
command and the R environment withggplot2
package installed
ggshow
: Draw graphs using ggplot2 on R and return the Image object that you can show on Jupyter notebook. From v0.1.10, we can also save the image to the file.ggwrite
: Draw graphs using ggplot2 on R and save it to a file (but not show on the notebook).%gg
,%%gg
: ipython magic for drawing ggplot2 graph.
from ggshow import ggshow, ggwrite
# Minimal example
# pass R code to produce ggplot graph to ggshow function
# note: ggplot2 is automatically imported
ggshow("""
x <- c(1,2,3)
y <- c(4,5,6)
ggplot(mapping=aes(x, y)) + geom_line()
""", savesize=(3, 2))
None
# Example with data frames
# pass pandas data frames as keyword arguments
# then you can use them in the R code
import numpy as np
import pandas as pd
x = np.linspace(-20, 20, 500)
y = np.sin(x)
y2 = 0.4*np.cos(x)
df1 = pd.DataFrame({"x":x, "y":y})
df2 = pd.DataFrame({"x":x, "y":y2})
ggshow("""
ggplot(a, aes(x, y)) +
geom_line(color="blue") +
geom_line(data=b, linetype="dashed", color="red") +
theme_bw()
""", dispwidth=500, savesize=(4, 2), a=df1, b=df2)
None
# Example to save the graph to a file
ggshow("""
x <- c(1,2,3)
y <- c(4,5,6)
ggplot(mapping=aes(x, y)) + geom_line()
""", outfile="foo.jpg", savesize=(3, 2))
# Example to "only" save the graph to a file, not to show
ggshow("""
x <- c(1,2,3)
y <- c(4,5,6)
ggplot(mapping=aes(x, y)) + geom_line()
""", outfile="bar.jpg", savesize=(3, 2))
# Confirm the file has been created
from IPython.display import Image
Image("bar.jpg", width=400)
# Example to specify the image file format
# But there may not be significant differences to human eyes
# Default: png
ggshow("""
x <- c(1,2,3)
y <- c(4,5,6)
ggplot(mapping=aes(x, y)) + geom_line() + ggtitle("PNG")
""", savesize=(3, 2), imageformat="png")
ggshow("""
x <- c(1,2,3)
y <- c(4,5,6)
ggplot(mapping=aes(x, y)) + geom_line() + ggtitle("JPEG")
""", savesize=(3, 2), imageformat="jpeg")
ggshow("""
x <- c(1,2,3)
y <- c(4,5,6)
ggplot(mapping=aes(x, y)) + geom_line() + ggtitle("SVG")
""", savesize=(3, 2), imageformat="svg")
None
# Example using %gg magic
%load_ext ggshow
## line magic
%gg ggplot(mapping=aes(1, 2)) + geom_point() -s 4 3 --dispwidth 300 --outfile buz.jpeg
## line magic with the code as a string variable
x = np.linspace(-20, 20, 500)
y = np.sin(x)
y2 = 0.4*np.cos(x)
df1 = pd.DataFrame({"x":x, "y":y})
df2 = pd.DataFrame({"x":x, "y":y2})
code = """
ggplot(a, aes(x, y)) +
geom_line(color="blue") +
geom_line(data=b, linetype="dashed", color="red") +
theme_bw() +
ggtitle("Sine and Cosine Waves")
"""
%gg {code} -s 4 2 --dispwidth 400 --data a=df1 b=df2
%%gg -s 4 2 --dispwidth 400 --data a=df1 b=df2
## cell magic
ggplot(a, aes(x, y)) +
geom_line(color="blue") +
geom_line(data=b, linetype="dashed", color="red") +
theme_bw() +
ggtitle("Sine and Cosine Waves")
# show the full command options
%gg --help
Help on method gg in module ggshow.ggshow:
gg(line, cell=None) method of ggshow.ggshow.GGMagic instance
::
%gg [--help] [--outfile OUTFILE] [-s SAVESIZE SAVESIZE] [--scale SCALE]
[--units UNITS] [--dpi DPI] [--message_encoding MESSAGE_ENCODING]
[--rscriptcommand RSCRIPTCOMMAND] [-w DISPWIDTH] [-h DISPHEIGHT]
[--imageformat {png,jpeg,svg}] [--libs [LIBS ...]]
[--data [DATA ...]]
[plotcode ...]
positional arguments:
plotcode R code
options:
--help
--outfile OUTFILE File path to save the graph
-s <SAVESIZE SAVESIZE>, --savesize <SAVESIZE SAVESIZE>
height, width
--scale SCALE ggsave option scale
--units UNITS ggsave option units
--dpi DPI ggsave option dpi
--message_encoding MESSAGE_ENCODING
Encoding of the subprocess outputs
--rscriptcommand RSCRIPTCOMMAND
Rscript command name
-w DISPWIDTH, --dispwidth DISPWIDTH
display width
-h DISPHEIGHT, --dispheight DISPHEIGHT
display width
--imageformat <{png,jpeg,svg}>
imagefile format
--libs <[LIBS ...]> R libraries to use
--data <[DATA ...]> data frames mapping as {name in r}={name in python}
# By default, we use 'Rscript' as the command to run R code.
# If this is not a valid command on the environment,
# we can specify the command by `rscriptcommand` option
ggshow("""
x <- c(1,2,3)
y <- c(4,5,6)
ggplot(mapping=aes(x, y)) + geom_line()
""", savesize=(3, 2), rscriptcommand="/usr/local/bin/Rscript")
# Or set the new command path as the default using set_rscript function.
from ggshow import config, set_rscript
set_rscript("/usr/local/bin/Rscript")
print(config.rscript)
# this is just the full path of the command on this environment
# so the command will work in the same way
/usr/local/bin/Rscript