Vega-Lite is an implementation of the grammar-of-graphics, rendered in the browser with interactivity.
The goal of vegawidget is to render Vega-Lite and Vega specifications as htmlwidgets, and to help you communicate with a Vega chart using JavaScript or Shiny. Its ambition is to be a low-level interface to the Vega(-Lite) API, so that other packages can build upon it.
Accordingly, this package may be useful to:
vegawidget now supports the last two Vega-Lite major-versions, currently versions 5 and 4.
However, for a given R session (e.g. rendering of an RMarkdown file), the vegawidget()
function can use only one major-version; this version is determined using the $schema
element of the first vegaspec
evaluated using vegawidget()
.
This restriction does not apply to the image functions, e.g. vw_to_svg()
, or to the compilation function, vw_to_vega()
.
use vega_version_all()
to see the available versions:
library("vegawidget")
vega_version_all()
#> widget vega_lite vega vega_embed
#> 1 vl5 5.16.3 5.24.0 6.22.2
#> 2 vl4 4.17.0 5.17.0 6.12.2
You can install vegawidget from CRAN with:
The development version of vegawidget is available from GitHub with:
Note: There are documentation websites for both the CRAN version and the development version of this package.
Vega(-Lite) specifications are just text, formatted as JSON. However, in R, we can use lists to build specifications:
library("vegawidget")
spec_mtcars <-
list(
`$schema` = vega_schema(), # specifies Vega-Lite
description = "An mtcars example.",
data = list(values = mtcars),
mark = "point",
encoding = list(
x = list(field = "wt", type = "quantitative"),
y = list(field = "mpg", type = "quantitative"),
color = list(field = "cyl", type = "nominal")
)
) %>%
as_vegaspec()
The as_vegaspec()
function is used to turn the list into a vegaspec; many of this package’s functions are built to support, and render, vegaspecs:
The rendering of the chart above depends on where you are reading it:
On this package’s pkgdown site, it is rendered as part of an HTML environment, showing its full capabilities.
At its GitHub code site, the chart is further rendered to a static SVG file, then incorporated into the Markdown rendering.
A learnr tutorial is available: learnr::run_tutorial("overview", package = "vegawidget")
.
For more, please see our Getting Started article. Additionally, the Vega-Lite website has a comprehensive introduction.
Other articles for this package:
Contributions are welcome, please see this guide. Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.