Showing 4 open source projects for "ggplot2"

View related business solutions
  • Run Any Workload on Compute Engine VMs Icon
    Run Any Workload on Compute Engine VMs

    From dev environments to AI training, choose preset or custom VMs with 1–96 vCPUs and industry-leading 99.95% uptime SLA.

    Compute Engine delivers high-performance virtual machines for web apps, databases, containers, and AI workloads. Choose from general-purpose, compute-optimized, or GPU/TPU-accelerated machine types—or build custom VMs to match your exact specs. With live migration and automatic failover, your workloads stay online. New customers get $300 in free credits.
    Try Compute Engine
  • AI-generated apps that pass security review Icon
    AI-generated apps that pass security review

    Stop waiting on engineering. Build production-ready internal tools with AI—on your company data, in your cloud.

    Retool lets you generate dashboards, admin panels, and workflows directly on your data. Type something like “Build me a revenue dashboard on my Stripe data” and get a working app with security, permissions, and compliance built in from day one. Whether on our cloud or self-hosted, create the internal software your team needs without compromising enterprise standards or control.
    Try Retool free
  • 1
    plotly

    plotly

    An interactive graphing library for R

    This part of the book teaches you how to leverage the plotly R package to create a variety of interactive graphics. There are two main ways to creating a plotly object: either by transforming a ggplot2 object (via ggplotly()) into a plotly object or by directly initializing a plotly object with plot_ly()/plot_geo()/plot_mapbox(). Both approaches have somewhat complementary strengths and weaknesses, so it can pay off to learn both approaches. Moreover, both approaches are an implementation of the Grammar of Graphics and both are powered by the JavaScript graphing library plotly.js, so many of the same concepts and tools that you learn for one interface can be reused in the other. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    RStudio Cheatsheets

    RStudio Cheatsheets

    Curated collection of official cheat sheets for data science tools

    ...The repository contains source files (R Markdown or LaTeX) that generate the cheat sheets, version history, and metadata (title, author, description) for each. It covers topics such as data wrangling, data import, modeling, visualization, RStudio IDE shortcuts, Shiny development, and the tidyverse suite (dplyr, ggplot2, tidyr, purrr). These cheat sheets are widely used by R learners, educators, and practitioners as quick reference tools, and they often ship with RStudio by default or are linked from RStudio’s help/documentation pages. Users can also contribute new cheat sheet proposals, corrections, or translations via pull requests.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    bbplot

    bbplot

    R package that helps create and export ggplot2 charts

    bbplot is an R package developed by the BBC visual journalism team aimed at helping data journalists and analysts produce chart styles consistent with BBC aesthetics. It provides functions and themes that make it easier to adopt BBC’s visual style (fonts, colors, annotations, layout) in ggplot2 plots. The package includes helper functions for axis labels, captions, legends, branding (e.g. BBC red lines or accents), and common chart types styled for editorial presentation. It offers templates and defaults that reduce styling overhead so users can focus on data and storytelling rather than aesthetic minutiae. Because visual consistency is important in media, bbplot helps non-designers build plots that align with professional publication standards. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    Investing

    Investing

    Investing Returns on the Market as a Whole

    ...The visualizations show “return curves” for different starting years and durations, and also illustrate the probability of losses over various time horizons. The project is centered on transparency in finance and encourages users to examine the data themselves; the code is shared in R and uses ggplot2 for plotting.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Build on Google Cloud with $300 in Free Credit Icon
    Build on Google Cloud with $300 in Free Credit

    New to Google Cloud? Get $300 in free credit to explore Compute Engine, BigQuery, Cloud Run, Vertex AI, and 150+ other products.

    Start your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credit. Spin up VMs, run containers, query exabytes in BigQuery, or build AI apps with Vertex AI and Gemini. Once your credits are used, keep building with 20+ products with free monthly usage, including Compute Engine, Cloud Storage, GKE, and Cloud Run functions. Sign up to start building right away.
    Start Free Trial
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
MongoDB Logo MongoDB