# How to annotate() ggplot with latex

I'd like to add latex text to a ggplot2 plot using annotate(). Using expression(), as described here for adding latex to axis labels, does not seem to work. To wit:

# Use expression() to create subscripted text
p <- ggplot(mpg, aes(x=cty, y=hwy)) + geom_point() +
scale_x_continuous(expression(text[subscript]))

# But expression() in annotate adds nothing to the plot
p + annotate("text", x=10, y=40, label=expression(text[subscript]))

# Passing regular text to annotate works fine
p + annotate("text", x=10, y=40, label="foo")


Why are expressions treated differently by annotate than by other ggplot functions? And how can I annotate with latex?

• you might take a look at the tikzDevice package ... – Ben Bolker Sep 20 '12 at 14:21
• Seems to be no longer actively maintained. (But still potentially useful!) – Drew Steen Sep 20 '12 at 14:24
• My understanding is that it's still pretty widely used, and functional, but in a current state of orphanage due to stricter CRAN/R CMD check rules ... it was last modified on R-forge 15 July 2012 ... – Ben Bolker Sep 20 '12 at 14:27
• PS: current development status at groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/tikzdevice/73Hd2Eln3Qk – Ben Bolker Sep 20 '12 at 14:50

You can use the parse argument, without expression:

p + annotate("text", x=10, y=40, label="text[subscript]", parse=TRUE)

• Could you confirm for me whether you get any unusual behavior if you try using label=expression(text[subscript]), parse = TRUE)? (I haven't upgraded to 0.9.2 yet...) – joran Sep 20 '12 at 14:36
• Yeah, it doesn't like that. – Matthew Plourde Sep 20 '12 at 14:39
• Ok...still a little groggy this morning, and I did that by mistake first time through. Never seen that sort of response from R before. Weird. – joran Sep 20 '12 at 14:41
• First time I've seen that as well. It lets you correct the label argument with whatever you type after the '?'. – Matthew Plourde Sep 20 '12 at 14:44
• @Joran's comment - I saw ?, and then R Studio crashed (Max OSX 10.7.4, R 2.14.1, RStudio 0.96.330, ggplot2 0.9.1). – Drew Steen Sep 20 '12 at 15:02

There is an R package called latex2exp which may be helpful. It has function TeX which accepts some LaTeX expressions enclosed with dollar sign $ as in this example: library(latex2exp) library(ggplot2) qplot(1, "A")+ ylab(TeX("Formula:$\\frac{2hc^2}{\\lambda^\\beta}$"))+ xlab(TeX("$\\alpha$"))  More examples can be found in this vignette. • Your example works for labels, but the question was about annotate. Your example isn't working in an annotate layer for me, but, if you specify output='character' and add 'parse=TRUE' to the annotate call it does. annotate(geom='text', x=3, y=3, label=Tex("$\\hat{Y} = B_0 + B_1X_1", output='character'), parse=TRUE) – svannoy Dec 2 '16 at 22:18
• Hi do you know how to add italic style on the text? – Jiaxiang Aug 2 '18 at 8:12
• @Jiaxiang are you familiar with this thread – GegznaV Aug 2 '18 at 14:55
• @Vilmantas Gegzna Yes, I read it before. What I want is to make the Tex() output in the italic style. I try Tex(italic('...')), but it fails. – Jiaxiang Aug 3 '18 at 5:54
• I skimmed through the latex2exp vignette but did not notice anything about italic style. You may try looking look through more carefully. I'm not sure if latex2exp support italic style. – GegznaV Aug 3 '18 at 15:53

The tikzDevice package is back on CRAN (latest version 0.9 published Nov 2015).

Using tikz does require a full LaTeX installation; it may be easiest to do via knitr within a LaTeX document (just set dev="tikz" in the chunk options). However, you can use it to create a standalone figure as well. Ironically, the hardest part of this question was getting a text subscript, which requires an additional LaTeX package (fixltx2e) for the \textsubscript command ...

library(tikzDevice)
## add a package to the defaults
options(tikzLatexPackages=
c(getOption("tikzLatexPackages"),"\\usepackage{fixltx2e}"))
tikz("tikz.tex",standAlone=TRUE)
library("ggplot2"); theme_set(theme_bw())
p <- ggplot(mpg, aes(x=cty, y=hwy)) + geom_point() +
scale_x_continuous(name="text\\textsubscript{subscript}")
p + annotate("text", x=10, y=40, label="text\\textsubscript{subscript}")
dev.off()

system("pdflatex tikz.tex")


• Great answer. Takes a little while to compile, producing a bunch of warnings like Measuring dimensions of: \char77, but it's my preferred solution when unicode lets me down (see stackoverflow.com/questions/27690729/…) – PatrickT Mar 28 '18 at 10:46