lc_image: Add static plot or custom image to the page

View source: R/lc.R

lc_imageR Documentation

Add static plot or custom image to the page

Description

lc_image adds a graphical object to the page. It can be any graphical R object (for example, objects of class ggplot) or image that is stored locally. Note: currently works only on Linux and iOS.

Usage

lc_image(data = list(), place = NULL, ..., chartId = NULL, with = NULL)

Arguments

data

Name-value pairs of properties passed through the dat function. These properties will be re-evaluated on each updateCharts call.

place

An ID of the container, where to place new chart. It will be ignored if the chart already exists. If not defined, the chart will be appended to the web page's body.

...

Name-value pairs of properties that will be evaluated only once and then will remain constant. These properties can still be changed later using the setProperties function.

chartId

An ID for the chart. All charts must have unique IDs. If a chart with the same ID already exists, it will be replaced. If ID is not defined, it will be the same as the value of the place argument. And if both are not defined, the ID will be set to ChartN, where N - 1 is the number of existing charts.

with

A dataset or a list from which other properties should be taken. If the dataset doesn't have a column with the requested name, the variable will be searched for outside of the dataset. Must be a data.frame or a list.

Available properties

You can read more about different properties here.

One of img and src properties is required.

  • img - static plot to display. Anything that can be saved as png can be used here. .png image fill be saved to a temporary directory (see tempdir).

  • src - path to an already saved image. Can be an absolute path or a path relative to the current working directory. If img is defined, this property will be ignored.

Global chart settings

  • title - title of the input block.

  • width - width of the chart in pixels. By default, width will be set to fit the content. If width is defined and it's smaller than content's width, scrolling will be possible.

  • heigth - height of the chart in pixels. By default, height will be set to fit the content. If height is defined and it's smaller than content's height, scrolling will be possible.

  • paddings - padding sizes in pixels. Must be a list with all the following fields: "top", "bottom", "left", "right".

Examples

## Not run: 
library(ggplot2)
pl <- ggplot() + geom_point(aes(1:10, 1:10))

lc_image(dat(img = pl, 
   title = "Some plot", 
   paddings = list(top = 100, bottom = 100, left = 10, right = 10)))

## End(Not run)


rlc documentation built on May 29, 2024, 6:04 a.m.