The councildown
package implements style guide compliant defaults for
R Markdown documents, ggplot2
plots, and leaflet
maps.
You can install the released version of councildown
from GitHub
remotes::install_github("newyorkcitycouncil/councildown")
Note that the order of loading the libraries is important. Make sure to
load councildown
last.
library(tidyverse)
# load last
library(councildown)
For a demo of the functions available, see vignettes/councilverse.Rmd
in the councilverse
package.
First load the councildown
package as above.
On load, common ggplot2
scale_* functions are overwritten with
scale_fill_nycc()
and scale_color_nycc()
.
There are 6 color palettes available for scale_fill_nycc()
and
scale_color_nycc()
. Check the documentation for full default
parameters. For brand guidelines, see:
https://newyorkcitycouncil.github.io/nycc-brand-guidelines/.
palette = "main"
for use of primary Council colors. Default for
scale_color_nycc()
.
palette = "mixed"
for secondary Council colors. Default for
scale_fill_nycc()
.
palette = "bw"
for grey scale.
palette = "warm"
for a warm palette.
palette = "cool"
for a cool palette.
palette = "diverging"
for a diverging palette.
If palette = "single"
then the color will be the first color of
"main"
.
If palette = "double"
, then the color will be the first and second
color of "main"
.
data.frame(x = rnorm(20), y = rnorm(20), z = c("a", "b")) %>%
ggplot(aes(x, y, color = z)) +
geom_point() +
labs(title = "Test",
subtitle = "Test",
caption = "Test",
color = "Legend",
x = "Test a",
y = "Test b") +
scale_color_nycc() +
theme_nycc()
Additionally, theme_nycc()
has an argument facet
for changing the
theme to better fit faceted plots.
data.frame(x = rnorm(20), y = rnorm(20), z = c("a", "b")) %>%
ggplot(aes(x, y, color = z)) +
geom_point() +
labs(title = "Test",
subtitle = "Test",
caption = "Test",
color = "Legend",
x = "Test a",
y = "Test b") +
facet_wrap(~z) +
scale_color_nycc() +
theme_nycc(facet=TRUE)
If you are only using one variable/color, you can add the "single"
palette using pal_nycc
. Use the "double"
palette for two
variables/colors.
data.frame(x = rnorm(20), y = rnorm(20)) %>%
ggplot(aes(x, y)) +
geom_point(color = pal_nycc("single")) +
labs(title = "Test",
subtitle = "Test",
caption = "Test",
color = "Legend",
x = "Test a",
y = "Test b") +
theme_nycc()
The function addCouncilStyle()
sets the default view, zoom, and
background. There is an additional option for add_dists
to add map
tiles and City Council district outlines and labels to leaflet
maps.
The dist_year
option allows for "2023"
or "2013"
Council District
lines.
library(leaflet)
leaflet() %>%
addCouncilStyle(add_dists = T, dist_year = "2023")
Additionally, use mapshot
to save leaflet maps as a static png image.
mapshot()
overwrites mapview::mapshot()
to force map saves with
standardized width, height, and zoom. Use mapview::mapshot
if you want
the original mapshot
function.
map <- leaflet() %>%
addCouncilStyle(add_dists = T, dist_year = "2023")
mapshot(map, file = "map.png")
The package includes an R Markdown template for writing Council reports. After installing the package, create a new report by choosing New > R Markdown > From Template > City Council Report in RStudio. [In Progress]