--- title: "Choropleth visualisation" output: rmarkdown::html_vignette vignette: > %\VignetteIndexEntry{Choropleth visualisation} %\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown} %\VignetteEncoding{UTF-8} --- ```{r setup, include = FALSE} knitr::opts_chunk$set( fig.path = "figures/visualisation-", collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>" ) ``` ## Introduction This vignette shows how polygon data included in `spatialrisk` can be used to display aggregated values. The emphasis is on reporting and visualisation after a spatial aggregation step. Choropleth maps are useful for showing variation across administrative areas. They should not be interpreted as a substitute for fixed-radius concentration analysis on point-level data. ## Data ```{r, message = FALSE, warning = FALSE} library(spatialrisk) library(sf) library(dplyr) data(nl_gemeente) ``` The object `nl_gemeente` contains municipal geometries for the Netherlands as a simple feature object. For illustration, we create a small table with one value per municipality. In applied work, this table would typically contain observed or modelled values aggregated at municipality level. ```{r} set.seed(1) municipality_values <- nl_gemeente |> st_drop_geometry() |> select(id, code, areaname) |> mutate(value = runif(n(), min = 0, max = 100)) ``` ## Join values to geometries The values are joined back to the municipal geometries before plotting. ```{r} map_data <- nl_gemeente |> left_join(municipality_values, by = c("id", "code", "areaname")) ``` ## Choropleth map The `choropleth()` function uses `tmap`. The `id` argument identifies the column used for polygon labels in interactive maps. ```{r, eval = requireNamespace("tmap", quietly = TRUE)} choropleth( map_data, value = "value", id = "areaname", legend_title = "Value" ) ``` ## Relation to concentration analysis A choropleth map represents values attached to predefined polygons. Fixed-radius concentration analysis answers a different question: what is the total value within a circle of a specified radius around a possible centre? In insurance applications, both views can be useful. The fixed-radius calculation identifies local accumulation of exposure, while the choropleth map can be used to communicate summaries by municipality, province, or another reporting unit. ## Summary This vignette demonstrated how to: - use an included simple feature object; - join aggregated values to polygon geometries; - create a choropleth map for reporting.