configure_inset {ggmapinset} | R Documentation |
Configure transformations underpinning a map inset
Description
The configuration returned by this function will often be passed to the
coordinate system via coord_sf_inset()
so that it is propagated to all
relevant layers.
Usage
configure_inset(
shape,
scale = NULL,
translation = NULL,
units = "km",
crs_working = NULL,
centre = deprecated(),
radius = deprecated()
)
Arguments
shape |
Inset shape: see |
scale |
Zoom scale: values larger than one will make the inset bigger. |
translation |
Translation (shift) of the inset relative to the centre.
This can be an |
units |
Base length unit (e.g. |
crs_working |
The coordinate reference system to use internally when applying the transformations. See Details. |
centre , radius |
Details
The default crs_working
uses the equidistant cylindrical coordinate
reference system with the latitude of true scale set to match the latitude of
centre
. This ensures that circular insets will appear circular in most
cases since the projection is not distorted near the centre. The geometries
are converted to this CRS for the inset transformation and constructing the
inset frame, and are converted back to the CRS of centre
at the end.
The default units are kilometres but can be changed with units
instead of specifying the whole projection. The possible values for
units
are
those understood by proj
:
-
"mm"
: millimetre -
"cm"
: centimetre -
"m"
: metre -
"ft"
: foot -
"us-ft"
: US survey foot -
"fath"
: fathom -
"kmi"
: nautical mile -
"us-ch"
: US survey chain -
"us-mi"
: US survey mile -
"km"
: kilometre -
"ind-ft"
: Indian foot (1937) -
"ind-yd"
: Indian yard (1937) -
"mi"
: Statute mile -
"yd"
: yard -
"ch"
: chain -
"link"
: link -
"dm"
: decimeter -
"in"
: inch -
"ind-ch"
: Indian chain -
"us-in"
: US survey inch -
"us-yd"
: US survey yard
Value
An inset configuration object of class inset_config
.
Examples
library(sf)
# circular inset with a 2x enlargement
cfg <- configure_inset(
shape_circle(centre = c(-82, 35), radius = 50),
scale = 2,
translation = c(70, -180),
units = "mi"
)