From OP:
Edit: the package author mentions it's possible [to do this] but I don't
know what 'reveal timing' argument he is referring to.
On Twitter, Thomas Lin Pedersen was referring to how the transition_reveal
line is driving the frames of the animation. So we can feed it one variable to be the "heartbeat" of the animation, while leaving the original variables for the plots.
My first approach was to make a new variable, reveal_time
, which would be the heartbeat. I would increment it more at pause points, so that the animation would spend more time on those data points. Here I did that by adding 10 at the pause point days, and only 1 on other days.
library(dplyr)
airq_slowdown <- airq %>%
group_by(Month) %>%
mutate(show_time = case_when(Day %in% c(10,20,31) ~ 10,
TRUE ~ 1),
reveal_time = cumsum(show_time)) %>%
ungroup()
Then I fed that into the animation, changing the source data frame and the transition_reveal
line.
library(gganimate)
a <- ggplot(airq_slowdown, aes(Day, Temp, group = Month)) +
geom_line() +
geom_segment(aes(xend = 31, yend = Temp), linetype = 2, colour = 'grey') +
geom_point(size = 2) +
geom_text(aes(x = 31.1, label = Month), hjust = 0) +
transition_reveal(reveal_time) + # Edit, previously had (Month, reveal_time)
coord_cartesian(clip = 'off') +
labs(title = 'Temperature in New York', y = 'Temperature (°F)') +
theme_minimal() +
theme(plot.margin = margin(5.5, 40, 5.5, 5.5))
animate(a, nframe = 50)
But when I did that, I realized that it wasn't pausing -- it was just slowing down the tweening. Sort of a "bullet time" effect -- cool but not quite what I was looking for.
So my second approach was to actually copy the paused lines of the animation. By doing so, there would be no tweening and there would be real pauses:
airq_pause <- airq %>%
mutate(show_time = case_when(Day %in% c(10,20,31) ~ 10,
TRUE ~ 1)) %>%
# uncount is a tidyr function which copies each line 'n' times
uncount(show_time) %>%
group_by(Month) %>%
mutate(reveal_time = row_number()) %>%
ungroup()