[R] squared "pie chart" - is there such a thing?

Dimitri Liakhovitski dimitri.liakhovitski at gmail.com
Thu Jul 21 18:06:09 CEST 2011


I tried the mosaic chart:

mytotal=data.frame(x=50,y=30,z=20)
require(stats)
mosaicplot(mytotal1)

It's good, but it only creates rectangles that are stacked on top of
each other, which is not exactly what I was looking for.

Is there a R package for waffle chart?
I tried help.search("waffle") and found nothing. Also nothing on Google...

Thanks!
Dimitri

On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 11:33 AM, Hadley Wickham <hadley at rice.edu> wrote:
> This is called a squarified pie chart or a waffle chart (if you want
> to keep the food metaphor going):
> http://eagereyes.org/communication/Engaging-readers-with-square-pie-waffle-charts.html
>
> Hadley
>
>
> On Thu, Jul 21, 2011 at 10:29 AM, Dimitri Liakhovitski
> <dimitri.liakhovitski at gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hello!
>> It's a shoot in the dark, but I'll try. If one has a total of 100
>> (e.g., %), and three components of the total, e.g.,
>> mytotal=data.frame(x=50,y=30,z=20), - one could build a pie chart with
>> 3 sectors representing x, y, and z according to their proportions in
>> the total.
>> I am wondering if it's possible to build something very similar, but
>> not on a circle but in a square - such that the total area of the
>> square is the sum of the components and the components (x, y, and z)
>> are represented on a square as shapes with right angles (squares,
>> rectangles, L-shapes, etc.). I realize there are many possible
>> positions and shapes - even for 3 components. But I don't really care
>> where components are located within the square - as long as they are
>> there.
>>
>> Is there a package that could do something like that?
>> Thanks a lot!
>>
>> --
>> Dimitri Liakhovitski
>> marketfusionanalytics.com
>>
>> ______________________________________________
>> R-help at r-project.org mailing list
>> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-help
>> PLEASE do read the posting guide http://www.R-project.org/posting-guide.html
>> and provide commented, minimal, self-contained, reproducible code.
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Assistant Professor / Dobelman Family Junior Chair
> Department of Statistics / Rice University
> http://had.co.nz/
>



-- 
Dimitri Liakhovitski
marketfusionanalytics.com



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