vdiffr is a testthat extension for monitoring the appearance of R plots. It generates reproducible SVG files and registers them as the testthat snapshots.
Add graphical expectations by including
expect_doppelganger()
in your test files.
Run devtools::test()
.
If test()
detected new snapshots or changes to
existing snapshots, run testthat::snapshot_review()
to
review them.
There may be many reasons for a snapshot to fail. Upstream changes (e.g. to the R graphics engine or to ggplot2) may cause subtle differences in your plots that are not actual failures. For this reason, snapshots do not cause failures on CRAN by default. You will only see failures locally or on CI platforms such as Github Actions.
vdiffr integrates with testthat through the
expect_doppelganger()
expectation. It takes as
arguments:
A title. This title is used in two ways. First, the title is
standardised (it is converted to lowercase and any character that is not
alphanumeric or a space is turned into a dash) and used as filename for
storing the figure. Secondly, with ggplot2 figures the title is
automatically added to the plot with ggtitle()
(only if no
ggtitle has been set).
A figure. This can be a ggplot object, a recordedplot, a function
to be called, or more generally any object with a print
method.
The snapshots are recorded in subfolders of the _snaps/
directory.
disp_hist_base <- function() hist(mtcars$disp)
disp_hist_ggplot <- ggplot(mtcars, aes(disp)) + geom_histogram()
vdiffr::expect_doppelganger("Base graphics histogram", disp_hist_base)
vdiffr::expect_doppelganger("ggplot2 histogram", disp_hist_ggplot)
Note that in addition to automatic ggtitles, ggplot2 figures are
assigned the minimalistic theme theme_test()
(unless they
already have been assigned a theme).
It is sometimes difficult to understand the cause of a doppelganger failure. A frequent cause of failure is undeterministic generation of plots. Potential culprits are:
Some of the plot components depend on random variation. Try setting a seed.
The plot depends on some system library. For instance sf plots
depend on libraries like GEOS and GDAL. It might not be possible to test
these plots with vdiffr (which can still be used for manual inspection,
add a [testthat::skip()] before the expect_doppelganger()
call in that case).
To help you understand the causes of a failure, vdiffr automatically
logs the SVG diff of all failures when run under R CMD check. The log is
located in tests/vdiffr.Rout.fail
and should be displayed
on Travis.
You can also set the VDIFFR_LOG_PATH
environment
variable with Sys.setenv()
to unconditionally (also
interactively) log failures in the file pointed by the variable.