Rasterize only specific layers of a ggplot2 plot (for instance, large scatter plots with many points) while keeping all labels and text in vector format. This allows users to keep plots within a reasonable size limit without losing the vector properties of scale-sensitive information.
To install the stable version from CRAN, use:
To install the latest version, use:
Note that with ggrastr
version 0.2.0, any ggplot2 geom provided by the user can be rasterized with the function rasterise()
. Furthermore, when the aspect ratio is distorted, points are rendered without distortion.
For more details and examples, see the vignettes: * HTML version * Markdown version
We also provide wrappers for several geoms to guarantee compatibility with an older version of ggrastr
. However, we encourage users to use the rasterise()
function instead.
geom_point_rast
: raster scatter plotsgeom_jitter_rast
: raster jittered scatter plotsgeom_boxplot_jitter
: boxplots that allows to jitter and rasterize outlier pointsgeom_tile_rast
: raster heatmapgeom_beeswarm_rast
: raster bee swarm plotsgeom_quasirandom_rast
: raster quasirandom scatter plotIf your R session crashes when you try to render a rasterized plot, it’s probably the case that your version of Cairo was built for another version of R (see Upgrading to a new version of R). To check if you are using a proper version, run the command below and ensure that the “Built” version is the same as your R version.
pkgs <- as.data.frame(installed.packages(), stringsAsFactors = FALSE, row.names = FALSE)
pkgs[pkgs$Package == 'Cairo', c("Package", "LibPath", "Version", "Built")]
To ensure that Cairo works, try running Cairo::Cairo(type='raster'); dev.off()
and check if it crashes your R session.
If you find ggrastr
useful for your publication, please cite:
Viktor Petukhov, Teun van den Brand and Evan Biederstedt (2021).
ggrastr: Raster Layers for 'ggplot2'. R package version 1.0.1.
https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=ggrastr