ggsave {ggplot2} | R Documentation |
Save a ggplot (or other grid object) with sensible defaults
Description
ggsave()
is a convenient function for saving a plot. It defaults to
saving the last plot that you displayed, using the size of the current
graphics device. It also guesses the type of graphics device from the
extension.
Usage
ggsave(
filename,
plot = last_plot(),
device = NULL,
path = NULL,
scale = 1,
width = NA,
height = NA,
units = c("in", "cm", "mm", "px"),
dpi = 300,
limitsize = TRUE,
bg = NULL,
create.dir = FALSE,
...
)
Arguments
filename |
File name to create on disk. |
plot |
Plot to save, defaults to last plot displayed. |
device |
Device to use. Can either be a device function
(e.g. png), or one of "eps", "ps", "tex" (pictex),
"pdf", "jpeg", "tiff", "png", "bmp", "svg" or "wmf" (windows only). If
|
path |
Path of the directory to save plot to: |
scale |
Multiplicative scaling factor. |
width , height |
Plot size in units expressed by the |
units |
One of the following units in which the |
dpi |
Plot resolution. Also accepts a string input: "retina" (320), "print" (300), or "screen" (72). Applies only to raster output types. |
limitsize |
When |
bg |
Background colour. If |
create.dir |
Whether to create new directories if a non-existing
directory is specified in the |
... |
Other arguments passed on to the graphics device function,
as specified by |
Details
Note: Filenames with page numbers can be generated by including a C
integer format expression, such as %03d
(as in the default file name
for most R graphics devices, see e.g. png()
).
Thus, filename = "figure%03d.png"
will produce successive filenames
figure001.png
, figure002.png
, figure003.png
, etc. To write a filename
containing the %
sign, use %%
. For example, filename = "figure-100%%.png"
will produce the filename figure-100%.png
.
Saving images without ggsave()
In most cases ggsave()
is the simplest way to save your plot, but
sometimes you may wish to save the plot by writing directly to a
graphics device. To do this, you can open a regular R graphics
device such as png()
or pdf()
, print the plot, and then close
the device using dev.off()
. This technique is illustrated in the
examples section.
See Also
The saving section of the online ggplot2 book.
Examples
## Not run:
ggplot(mtcars, aes(mpg, wt)) +
geom_point()
# here, the device is inferred from the filename extension
ggsave("mtcars.pdf")
ggsave("mtcars.png")
# setting dimensions of the plot
ggsave("mtcars.pdf", width = 4, height = 4)
ggsave("mtcars.pdf", width = 20, height = 20, units = "cm")
# passing device-specific arguments to '...'
ggsave("mtcars.pdf", colormodel = "cmyk")
# delete files with base::unlink()
unlink("mtcars.pdf")
unlink("mtcars.png")
# specify device when saving to a file with unknown extension
# (for example a server supplied temporary file)
file <- tempfile()
ggsave(file, device = "pdf")
unlink(file)
# save plot to file without using ggsave
p <-
ggplot(mtcars, aes(mpg, wt)) +
geom_point()
png("mtcars.png")
print(p)
dev.off()
## End(Not run)