--- title: "Getting Started with ggWebGL" output: rmarkdown::html_vignette vignette: > %\VignetteIndexEntry{Getting Started with ggWebGL} %\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown} %\VignetteEncoding{UTF-8} --- ```{r, include = FALSE} knitr::opts_chunk$set(collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>") ``` # Overview `ggWebGL` currently provides a browser-native WebGL backend for a focused subset of `ggplot2`. # Current capabilities The current implementation provides: - WebGL rendering for point, line, and raster layers - four point shader modes: `default`, `density_splat`, `trajectory_age`, and `trajectory_age_glow` - interactive `pan`, `zoom`, and optional `hover` inspection - fixed-scale `facet_wrap()` and `facet_grid()` layouts - `ggplot_webgl()` for htmlwidget conversion - Shiny bindings and manual smoke-test examples under `inst/examples/` - packaged real-data evidence examples and an evaluation suite under `inst/benchmarks/` # Example ```{r eval = FALSE} library(ggplot2) library(ggWebGL) plot <- ggplot(diamonds, aes(carat, price, colour = cut)) + geom_point_webgl(size = 1.1, alpha = 0.18) + theme_webgl( shader = "density_splat", interactions = c("pan", "zoom", "hover") ) ggplot_webgl(plot, height = 520) ```