Dimitri Liakhovitski
2012-Jan-27 17:49 UTC
[R] Overimposing one map in ssplot onto another
Hello!
I have 2 maps - both created in ssplot and both identical in terms of
outline. Is there any way to superimpose Map1 (which has black borders
between Canadian provinces) onto Map2 (which is also a map of Canada)?
Thanks a lot for your hints!
Dimitri
### A. Reading in Canada data at the province and then at the county level:
library(raster)
getData('ISO3') # Canada's code is "CAN"
can1<-getData('GADM', country="CAN", level=1)
can2<-getData('GADM', country="CAN", level=2)
### B. Creating Map1- with borders between provinces:
can1 at data[["groups"]]<-1 # want all provinces to have the same
color, but ideally I'd like the whole map to be transparent.
can1 at data$groups<-as.factor(can1 at data$groups)
spplot(can1,zcol="groups",col.regions="white",colorkey =
FALSE,
lwd=.4, # col='white',
par.settings = list(axis.line = list(col='transparent')))
### C. Creating Map2- with borders between colored counties:
# Creating an (artificial) grouping of Canadian admin units:
nrofunits<-length(can2$NAME_2)
groups<-c(rep(1:6,(nrofunits %/%
6)),rep(1,5))[order(c(rep(1:6,(nrofunits %/% 6)),rep(1,5)))]
# adding values (grouping values) to "data":
can2 at data[["groups"]]<-groups
can2 at data$groups<-as.factor(can2 at data$groups)
classcolors <- rainbow(6)
spplot(can2,zcol="groups",col.regions=classcolors,colorkey
FALSE,lwd=.4,col='white',
par.settings = list(axis.line = list(col='transparent')))
--
Dimitri Liakhovitski
marketfusionanalytics.com
Dimitri Liakhovitski
2012-Jan-27 17:50 UTC
[R] Overimposing one map in ssplot onto another
Sorry, I meant to send it to the map R list, but sent it here by mistake. Still, if someone could help, it'd be great! Thank you! On Fri, Jan 27, 2012 at 12:49 PM, Dimitri Liakhovitski <dimitri.liakhovitski at gmail.com> wrote:> Hello! > > I have 2 maps - both created in ssplot and both identical in terms of > outline. Is there any way to superimpose Map1 (which has black borders > between Canadian provinces) onto Map2 (which is also a map of Canada)? > Thanks a lot for your hints! > Dimitri > > ### A. Reading in Canada data at the province and then at the county level: > library(raster) > getData('ISO3') ?# Canada's code is "CAN" > can1<-getData('GADM', country="CAN", level=1) > can2<-getData('GADM', country="CAN", level=2) > > ### B. Creating Map1- with borders between provinces: > can1 at data[["groups"]]<-1 ? # want all provinces to have the same > color, but ideally I'd like the whole map to be transparent. > can1 at data$groups<-as.factor(can1 at data$groups) > spplot(can1,zcol="groups",col.regions="white",colorkey = FALSE, > lwd=.4, ?# col='white', > ?par.settings = list(axis.line = list(col='transparent'))) > > ### C. Creating Map2- with borders between colored counties: > # Creating an (artificial) grouping of Canadian admin units: > nrofunits<-length(can2$NAME_2) > groups<-c(rep(1:6,(nrofunits %/% > 6)),rep(1,5))[order(c(rep(1:6,(nrofunits %/% 6)),rep(1,5)))] > # adding values (grouping values) to "data": > can2 at data[["groups"]]<-groups > can2 at data$groups<-as.factor(can2 at data$groups) > classcolors <- rainbow(6) > spplot(can2,zcol="groups",col.regions=classcolors,colorkey > FALSE,lwd=.4,col='white', > ?par.settings = list(axis.line = list(col='transparent'))) > > -- > Dimitri Liakhovitski > marketfusionanalytics.com-- Dimitri Liakhovitski marketfusionanalytics.com