Extract coordinates from 'sf' objects
stat_sf_coordinates()
extracts the coordinates from 'sf' objects and
summarises them to one pair of coordinates (x and y) per geometry. This is
convenient when you draw an sf object as geoms like text and labels (so
geom_sf_text()
and geom_sf_label()
relies on this).
stat_sf_coordinates( mapping = aes(), data = NULL, geom = "point", position = "identity", na.rm = FALSE, show.legend = NA, inherit.aes = TRUE, fun.geometry = NULL, ... )
mapping |
Set of aesthetic mappings created by |
data |
The data to be displayed in this layer. There are three options: If A A |
geom |
The geometric object to use display the data |
position |
Position adjustment, either as a string, or the result of a call to a position adjustment function. |
na.rm |
If |
show.legend |
logical. Should this layer be included in the legends?
|
inherit.aes |
If |
fun.geometry |
A function that takes a |
... |
Other arguments passed on to |
coordinates of an sf
object can be retrieved by sf::st_coordinates()
.
But, we cannot simply use sf::st_coordinates()
because, whereas text and
labels require exactly one coordinate per geometry, it returns multiple ones
for a polygon or a line. Thus, these two steps are needed:
Choose one point per geometry by some function like sf::st_centroid()
or sf::st_point_on_surface()
.
Retrieve coordinates from the points by sf::st_coordinates()
.
For the first step, you can use an arbitrary function via fun.geometry
.
By default, function(x) sf::st_point_on_surface(sf::st_zm(x))
is used;
sf::st_point_on_surface()
seems more appropriate than sf::st_centroid()
since lables and text usually are intended to be put within the polygon or
the line. sf::st_zm()
is needed to drop Z and M dimension beforehand,
otherwise sf::st_point_on_surface()
may fail when the geometries have M
dimension.
X dimension of the simple feature
Y dimension of the simple feature
if (requireNamespace("sf", quietly = TRUE)) { nc <- sf::st_read(system.file("shape/nc.shp", package="sf")) ggplot(nc) + stat_sf_coordinates() ggplot(nc) + geom_errorbarh( aes(geometry = geometry, xmin = after_stat(x) - 0.1, xmax = after_stat(x) + 0.1, y = after_stat(y), height = 0.04), stat = "sf_coordinates" ) }
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