
gglyph provides tools for creating network-style
visualizations of directed pairwise relationships using custom edge
glyphs built on top of ggplot2.
The package includes four functions:
geom_glyph(): Create a network-based graph that
illustrates pairwise relationships (statistical and non-statistical)
using custom edgesprocess_data_statistical(): Process statistical data
(e.g., pairwise t-tests) for plottingprocess_data_general(): Process general /
non-statistical data (any data with directional relationships) for
plottinggenerate_mock_data(): Create mock data for
experimenting with geom_glyph()They should be used in the following order: either 4 → 1 or 2/3 → 1.
Please note that the package has two licenses:
You can install the development version from GitHub:
install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("valentinsvelev/gglyph")You can use the package with real data as follows:
library(gglyph)
library(ggplot2)
data(pisa_2022)
data <- process_data_statistical(pisa_2022)
ggplot(data = data) +
geom_glyph()Or by first generating mock data:
library(gglyph)
library(ggplot2)
data <- generate_mock_data(n_nodes = 5, n_edges = 10)
ggplot(data = data) +
geom_glyph()To cite the package use:
Velev, V., & Spitz, A. (2025). gglyph: Network-Style Visualization Of Directed Pairwise Relationships. R package version 0.2.0. https://github.com/valentinsvelev/gglyph
Or for LaTeX users:
@Manual{,
title = {{gglyph: Network-Style Visualization Of Directed Pairwise Relationships}},
author = {Velev, Valentin and Spitz, Andreas},
year = {2025},
note = {R package version 0.2.0},
url = {https://github.com/valentinsvelev/gglyph}
}