Draw to a PNG file, modifying transparency on the fly
The graphic engine in R only supports 8bit colours. This is for the most part fine, as 8bit gives all the fidelity needed for most graphing needs. However, this may become a limitation if you need to plot thousands of very translucent shapes on top of each other. 8bit only afford a minimum of 1/255 alpha, which may end up accumulating to fully opaque at some point. This device allows you to create a 16bit device that modifies the alpha level of all incomming colours by a fixed multiplier, thus allowing for much more translucent colours. The device will only modify transparent colour, so if you pass in an opaque colour it will be left unchanged.
agg_supertransparent( filename = "Rplot%03d.png", width = 480, height = 480, units = "px", pointsize = 12, background = "white", res = 72, scaling = 1, alpha_mod = 1, bg )
filename |
The name of the file. Follows the same semantics as the file naming in [grDevices::png()], meaning that you can provide a [sprintf()] compliant string format to name multiple plots (such as the default value) |
width |
The dimensions of the device |
height |
The dimensions of the device |
units |
The unit 'width' and 'height' is measured in, in either pixels (''px'‘), inches ('’in'‘), millimeters ('’mm'‘), or centimeter ('’cm''). |
pointsize |
The default pointsize of the device in pt. This will in general not have any effect on grid graphics (including ggplot2) as text size is always set explicitly there. |
background |
The background colour of the device |
res |
The resolution of the device. This setting will govern how device dimensions given in inches, centimeters, or millimeters will be converted to pixels. Further, it will be used to scale text sizes and linewidths |
scaling |
A scaling factor to apply to the rendered line width and text size. Useful for getting the right dimensions at the resolution that you need. If e.g. you need to render a plot at 4000x3000 pixels for it to fit into a layout, but you find that the result appears to small, you can increase the 'scaling' argument to make everything appear bigger at the same resolution. |
alpha_mod |
A numeric between 0 and 1 that will be multiplied to the alpha channel of all transparent colours |
bg |
Same as 'background' for compatibility with old graphic device APIs |
Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.