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==== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rvest/index.html rvest] ==== | ==== [https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rvest/index.html rvest] ==== | ||
[http://blog.rstudio.org/2014/11/24/rvest-easy-web-scraping-with-r/ rvest] package. | [http://blog.rstudio.org/2014/11/24/rvest-easy-web-scraping-with-r/ rvest] package. | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'> | |||
sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev | |||
sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
* https://github.com/hadley/rvest | * https://github.com/hadley/rvest |
Revision as of 16:18, 25 September 2017
Install Rtools for Windows users
See http://goo.gl/gYh6C for a step-by-step instruction (based on Rtools30.exe) with screenshot. Note that in the step of 'Select Components', the default is 'Package authoring installation'. But we want 'Full installation to build 32 or 64 bit R'; that is, check all components (including tcl/tk) available. The "extra" files will be stored in subdirectories of the R source home directory. These files are not needed to build packages, only to build R itself. By default, the 32-bit R source home is C:\R and 64-bit source home is C:\R64. After the installation, these two directories will contain a new directory 'Tcl'.
My preferred way is not to check the option of setting PATH environment. But I manually add the followings to the PATH environment (based on Rtools v3.2.2)
c:\Rtools\bin; c:\Rtools\gcc-4.6.3\bin; C:\Program Files\R\R-3.2.2\bin\i386;
We can make our life easy by creating a file <Rcommand.bat> with the content (also useful if you have C:\cygwin\bin in your PATH although cygwin setup will not do it automatically for you.)
PS. I put <Rcommand.bat> under C:\Program Files\R folder. I create a shortcut called 'Rcmd' on desktop. I enter C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe /K "Rcommand.bat" in the Target entry and "C:\Program Files\R" in Start in entry.
@echo off set PATH=C:\Rtools\bin;c:\Rtools\gcc-4.6.3\bin set PATH=C:\Program Files\R\R-3.2.2\bin\i386;%PATH% set PKG_LIBS=`Rscript -e "Rcpp:::LdFlags()"` set PKG_CPPFLAGS=`Rscript -e "Rcpp:::CxxFlags()"` echo Setting environment for using R cmd
So we can open the Command Prompt anywhere and run <Rcommand.bat> to get all environment variables ready! On Windows Vista, 7 and 8, we need to run it as administrator. OR we can change the security of the property so the current user can have an executive right.
Windows Toolset
Note that R on Windows supports Mingw-w64 (not Mingw which is a separate project). See here for the issue of developing a Qt application that links against R using Rcpp. And http://qt-project.org/wiki/MinGW is the wiki for compiling Qt using MinGW and MinGW-w64.
Build R from its source on Windows OS (not cross compile on Linux)
Reference: https://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/R-admin.html#Installing-R-under-Windows
First we try to build 32-bit R (tested on R 3.2.2 using Rtools33). At the end I will see how to build a 64-bit R.
Download https://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/Rtools/goodies/multilib/local320.zip (read https://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/Rtools/libs.html). create an empty directory, say c:/R/extsoft, and unpack it in that directory by e.g.
unzip local320.zip -d c:/R/extsoft
Tcl: two methods
- Download tcl file from http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/Rtools/R_Tcl_8-5-8.zip. Unzip and put 'Tcl' into R_HOME folder.
- If you have chosen a full installation when running Rtools, then copy C:/R/Tcl or C:/R64/Tcl (not the same) to R_HOME folder.
Open a command prompt as Administrator"
set PATH=c:\Rtools\bin;c:\Rtools\gcc-4.6.3\bin set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Users\brb\Downloads\R-3.2.2\bin\i386;c:\windows;c:\windows\system32 set TMPDIR=C:/tmp tar --no-same-owner -xf R-3.2.2.tar.gz cp -R c:\R64\Tcl c:\Users\brb\Downloads\R-3.2.2 cd R-3.2.2\src\gnuwin32 cp MkRules.dist MkRules.local # Modify MkRules.local file; specifically uncomment + change the following 2 flags. # LOCAL_SOFT = c:/R/extsoft # EXT_LIBS = $(LOCAL_SOFT) make
If we see an error of texi2dvi() complaining pdflatex is not available, it means a vanilla R is successfully built.
If we want to build the recommended packages (MASS, lattice, Matrix, ...) as well, run (check all make option in <R_HOME\src\gnuwin32\Makefile>)
make recommended
If we need to rebuild R for whatever reason, run
make clean
If we want to build R with debug information, run
make DEBUG=T
NB: 1. The above works for creating 32-bit R from its source. If we want to build 64-bit R from its source, we need to modify MkRules.local file to turn on the MULTI flag.
MULTI = 64
and reset the PATH variable
set PATH=c:\Rtools\bin;c:\Rtools\gcc-4.6.3\bin set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Users\brb\Downloads\R-3.2.2\bin\x64;c:\windows;c:\windows\system32
I don't need to mess up with other flags like BINPREF64, M_ARCH, AS_ARCH, RC_ARCH, DT_ARCH or even WIN. The note http://www.stat.yale.edu/~jay/Admin3.3.pdf is kind of old and is not needed. 2. If we have already built 32-bit R and want to continue to build 64-bit R, it is not enough to run 'make clean' before run 'make' again since it will give an error message incompatible ./libR.dll.a when searching for -lR in building Rgraphapp.dll. In fact, libR.dll.a can be cleaned up if we run 'make distclean' but it will also wipe out /bin/i386 folder:(
See also Create_a_standalone_Rmath_library below about how to create and use a standalone Rmath library in your own C/C++/Fortran program. For example, if you want to know the 95-th percentile of a T distribution or generate a bunch of random variables, you don't need to search internet to find a library; you can just use Rmath library.
Build R from its source on Linux (cross compile)
Compile and install an R package
Command line
cd C:\Documents and Settings\brb wget http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/2.11/bioc/src/contrib/affxparser_1.30.2.tar.gz C:\progra~1\r\r-2.15.2\bin\R CMD INSTALL --build affxparser_1.30.2.tar.gz
N.B. the --build is used to create a binary package (i.e. affxparser_1.30.2.zip). In the above example, it will both install the package and create a binary version of the package. If we don't want the binary package, we can ignore the flag.
R console
install.packages("C:/Users/USERNAME/Downloads/DESeq2paper_1.3.tar.gz", repos=NULL, type="source")
See Chapter 6 of R Installation and Administration
Check/Upload to CRAN
http://win-builder.r-project.org/
64 bit toolchain
See January 2010 email https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2010-January/056301.html and R-Admin manual.
From R 2.11.0 there is 64 bit Windows binary for R.
Install R using binary package on Linux OS
Ubuntu/Debian
https://cran.rstudio.com/bin/linux/ubuntu/. For more info about GPG stuff, see GPG Authentication_key.
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys E084DAB9 # Some people have reported difficulties using this approach. The issue is usually related to a firewall blocking port 11371 # So alternatively (no sudo is needed in front of the gpg command) # gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-key E084DAB9 # gpg -a --export E084DAB9 | sudo apt-key add - sudo nano /etc/apt/sources.list # For Ubuntu 14.04 (codename is trusty; https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases) # deb https://cran.rstudio.com/bin/linux/ubuntu trusty/ sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install r-base
Manually create the public key file if the gpg command failed.
Redhat el6
It should be pretty easy to install via the EPEL: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/EPEL
Just follow the instructions to enable the EPEL OR using the command line
sudo rpm -ivh https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm sudo yum update # not sure if this is necessary
and then from the CLI:
sudo yum install R
Install R from source (ix86, x86_64 and arm platforms, Linux system)
Debian system (focus on arm architecture with notes from x86 system)
Simplest configuration
<Method 1 of installing requirements>
On my debian system in Pogoplug (armv5), Raspberry Pi (armv6) OR Beaglebone Black & Udoo(armv7), I can compile R. See R's admin manual. If the OS needs x11, I just need to install 2 required packages.
- install gfortran: apt-get install build-essential gfortran (gfortran is not part of build-essential)
- install readline library: apt-get install libreadline5-dev (pogoplug), apt-get install libreadline6-dev (raspberry pi/BBB), apt-get install libreadline-dev (Ubuntu)
Note: if I need X11, I should install
- libX11 and libX11-devel, libXt, libXt-devel (for fedora)
- libx11-dev (for debian) or xorg-dev (for pogoplug/raspberry pi/BBB/Odroid debian). See here for the difference of x11 and Xorg.
and optional
- texinfo (to fix 'WARNING: you cannot build info or HTML versions of the R manuals')
<Method 2 of installing requirements (recommended)>
Note that it is also safe to install required tools via (please run nano /etc/apt/sources.list to include the repository of your favorite R mirror and also run sudo apt-get update first)
sudo apt-get build-dep r-base
The above command will install R dependence like jdk, tcl, tex, etc. The apt-get build-dep gave a more complete list than apt-get install r-base-dev for some reasons.
[Arm architecture] I also run apt-get install readline-common. I don't know if this is necessary. If x11 is not needed or not available (eg Pogoplug), I can add --with-x=no option in ./configure command. If R will be called from other applications such as Rserve, I can add --enable-R-shlib option in ./configure command. Check out ./configure --help to get a complete list of all options.
After running
wget https://cran.rstudio.com/src/base/R-3/R-3.2.3.tar.gz tar xzvf R-3.2.3.tar.gz cd R-3.2.3 ./configure --enable-R-shlib
(--enable-R-shlib option will create a shared R library libR.so in $RHOME/lib subdirectory. This allows R to be embedded in other applications. See Embedding R.) I got
R is now configured for armv5tel-unknown-linux-gnueabi Source directory: . Installation directory: /usr/local C compiler: gcc -std=gnu99 -g -O2 Fortran 77 compiler: gfortran -g -O2 C++ compiler: g++ -g -O2 Fortran 90/95 compiler: gfortran -g -O2 Obj-C compiler: Interfaces supported: External libraries: readline Additional capabilities: NLS Options enabled: shared R library, shared BLAS, R profiling Recommended packages: yes configure: WARNING: you cannot build info or HTML versions of the R manuals configure: WARNING: you cannot build PDF versions of the R manuals configure: WARNING: you cannot build PDF versions of vignettes and help pages configure: WARNING: I could not determine a browser configure: WARNING: I could not determine a PDF viewer
After that, we can run make to create R binary. If the computer has multiple cores, we can run make in parallel by using the -j flag (for example, '-j4' means to run 4 jobs simultaneously). We can also add time command in front of make to report the make time (useful for benchmark).
make # make -j4 # time make
PS 1. On my raspberry pi machine, it shows R is now configured for armv6l-unknown-linux-gnueabihf and on Beaglebone black it shows R is now configured for armv7l-unknown-linux-gnueabihf.
PS 2. On my Beaglebone black, it took 2 hours to run 'make', Raspberry Pi 2 took 1 hour, Odroid XU4 took 23 minutes and it only took 5 minutes to run 'make -j 12' on my Xeon W3690 @ 3.47Ghz (6 cores with hyperthread) based on R 3.1.2. The timing is obtained by using 'time' command as described above.
PS 3. On my x86 system, it shows
R is now configured for x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu Source directory: . Installation directory: /usr/local C compiler: gcc -std=gnu99 -g -O2 Fortran 77 compiler: gfortran -g -O2 C++ compiler: g++ -g -O2 Fortran 90/95 compiler: gfortran -g -O2 Obj-C compiler: Interfaces supported: X11, tcltk External libraries: readline, lzma Additional capabilities: PNG, JPEG, TIFF, NLS, cairo Options enabled: shared R library, shared BLAS, R profiling, Java Recommended packages: yes
[arm] However, make gave errors for recommanded packages like KernSmooth, MASS, boot, class, cluster, codetools, foreign, lattice, mgcv, nlme, nnet, rpart, spatial, and survival. The error stems from
gcc: SHLIB_LIBADD: No such file or directory. Note that I can get this error message even I try install.packages("MASS", type="source"). A suggested fix is here; adding perl = TRUE in sub() call for two lines in src/library/tools/R/install.R file. However, I got another error shared object 'MASS.so' not found. See also http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/r/r-base/. To build R without recommended packages like ./configure --without-recommended.
make[1]: Entering directory `/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/src/library/Recommended' make[2]: Entering directory `/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/src/library/Recommended' begin installing recommended package MASS * installing *source* package 'MASS' ... ** libs make[3]: Entering directory `/tmp/Rtmp4caBfg/R.INSTALL1d1244924c77/MASS/src' gcc -std=gnu99 -I/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/include -DNDEBUG -I/usr/local/include -fpic -g -O2 -c MASS.c -o MASS.o gcc -std=gnu99 -I/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/include -DNDEBUG -I/usr/local/include -fpic -g -O2 -c lqs.c -o lqs.o gcc -std=gnu99 -shared -L/usr/local/lib -o MASSSHLIB_EXT MASS.o lqs.o SHLIB_LIBADD -L/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/lib -lR gcc: SHLIB_LIBADD: No such file or directory make[3]: *** [MASSSHLIB_EXT] Error 1 make[3]: Leaving directory `/tmp/Rtmp4caBfg/R.INSTALL1d1244924c77/MASS/src' ERROR: compilation failed for package 'MASS' * removing '/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/library/MASS' make[2]: *** [MASS.ts] Error 1 make[2]: Leaving directory `/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/src/library/Recommended' make[1]: *** [recommended-packages] Error 2 make[1]: Leaving directory `/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/src/library/Recommended' make: *** [stamp-recommended] Error 2 root@debian:/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2# root@debian:/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2# bin/R R version 2.15.2 (2012-10-26) -- "Trick or Treat" Copyright (C) 2012 The R Foundation for Statistical Computing ISBN 3-900051-07-0 Platform: armv5tel-unknown-linux-gnueabi (32-bit) R is free software and comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. You are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions. Type 'license()' or 'licence()' for distribution details. R is a collaborative project with many contributors. Type 'contributors()' for more information and 'citation()' on how to cite R or R packages in publications. Type 'demo()' for some demos, 'help()' for on-line help, or 'help.start()' for an HTML browser interface to help. Type 'q()' to quit R. > library(MASS) Error in library(MASS) : there is no package called 'MASS' > library() Packages in library '/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2/library': base The R Base Package compiler The R Compiler Package datasets The R Datasets Package grDevices The R Graphics Devices and Support for Colours and Fonts graphics The R Graphics Package grid The Grid Graphics Package methods Formal Methods and Classes parallel Support for Parallel computation in R splines Regression Spline Functions and Classes stats The R Stats Package stats4 Statistical Functions using S4 Classes tcltk Tcl/Tk Interface tools Tools for Package Development utils The R Utils Package > Sys.info()["machine"] machine "armv5tel" > gc() used (Mb) gc trigger (Mb) max used (Mb) Ncells 170369 4.6 350000 9.4 350000 9.4 Vcells 163228 1.3 905753 7.0 784148 6.0
See http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=679180
PS 4. The complete log of building R from source is in here File:Build R log.txt
Full configuration
Interfaces supported: X11, tcltk External libraries: readline Additional capabilities: PNG, JPEG, TIFF, NLS, cairo Options enabled: shared R library, shared BLAS, R profiling, Java
Update: R 3.0.1 on Beaglebone Black (armv7a) + Ubuntu 13.04
See the page here.
Update: R 3.1.3 & R 3.2.0 on Raspberry Pi 2
It took 134m to run 'make -j 4' on RPi 2 using R 3.1.3.
But I got an error when I ran './configure; make -j 4' using R 3.2.0. The errors start from compiling <main/connections.c> file with 'undefined reference to ....'. The gcc version is 4.6.3.
Install all dependencies for building R
This is a comprehensive list. This list is even larger than r-base-dev.
root@debian:/mnt/usb/R-2.15.2# apt-get build-dep r-base Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state information... Done The following packages will be REMOVED: libreadline5-dev The following NEW packages will be installed: bison ca-certificates ca-certificates-java debhelper defoma ed file fontconfig gettext gettext-base html2text intltool-debian java-common libaccess-bridge-java libaccess-bridge-java-jni libasound2 libasyncns0 libatk1.0-0 libaudit0 libavahi-client3 libavahi-common-data libavahi-common3 libblas-dev libblas3gf libbz2-dev libcairo2 libcairo2-dev libcroco3 libcups2 libdatrie1 libdbus-1-3 libexpat1-dev libflac8 libfontconfig1-dev libfontenc1 libfreetype6-dev libgif4 libglib2.0-dev libgtk2.0-0 libgtk2.0-common libice-dev libjpeg62-dev libkpathsea5 liblapack-dev liblapack3gf libnewt0.52 libnspr4-0d libnss3-1d libogg0 libopenjpeg2 libpango1.0-0 libpango1.0-common libpango1.0-dev libpcre3-dev libpcrecpp0 libpixman-1-0 libpixman-1-dev libpng12-dev libpoppler5 libpulse0 libreadline-dev libreadline6-dev libsm-dev libsndfile1 libthai-data libthai0 libtiff4-dev libtiffxx0c2 libunistring0 libvorbis0a libvorbisenc2 libxaw7 libxcb-render-util0 libxcb-render-util0-dev libxcb-render0 libxcb-render0-dev libxcomposite1 libxcursor1 libxdamage1 libxext-dev libxfixes3 libxfont1 libxft-dev libxi6 libxinerama1 libxkbfile1 libxmu6 libxmuu1 libxpm4 libxrandr2 libxrender-dev libxss-dev libxt-dev libxtst6 luatex m4 openjdk-6-jdk openjdk-6-jre openjdk-6-jre-headless openjdk-6-jre-lib openssl pkg-config po-debconf preview-latex-style shared-mime-info tcl8.5-dev tex-common texi2html texinfo texlive-base texlive-binaries texlive-common texlive-doc-base texlive-extra-utils texlive-fonts-recommended texlive-generic-recommended texlive-latex-base texlive-latex-extra texlive-latex-recommended texlive-pictures tk8.5-dev tzdata-java whiptail x11-xkb-utils x11proto-render-dev x11proto-scrnsaver-dev x11proto-xext-dev xauth xdg-utils xfonts-base xfonts-encodings xfonts-utils xkb-data xserver-common xvfb zlib1g-dev 0 upgraded, 136 newly installed, 1 to remove and 0 not upgraded. Need to get 139 MB of archives. After this operation, 410 MB of additional disk space will be used. Do you want to continue [Y/n]?
Instruction of installing a development version of R under Ubuntu
https://github.com/wch/r-source/wiki (works on Ubuntu 12.04)
Note that texi2dvi has to be installed first to avoid the following error. It is better to follow the Ubuntu instruction (https://github.com/wch/r-source/wiki/Ubuntu-build-instructions) when we work on Ubuntu OS.
$ (cd doc/manual && make front-matter html-non-svn) creating RESOURCES /bin/bash: number-sections: command not found make: [../../doc/RESOURCES] Error 127 (ignored)
To build R, run the following script. To run the built R, type 'bin/R'.
# Get recommended packages if necessary tools/rsync-recommended R_PAPERSIZE=letter \ R_BATCHSAVE="--no-save --no-restore" \ R_BROWSER=xdg-open \ PAGER=/usr/bin/pager \ PERL=/usr/bin/perl \ R_UNZIPCMD=/usr/bin/unzip \ R_ZIPCMD=/usr/bin/zip \ R_PRINTCMD=/usr/bin/lpr \ LIBnn=lib \ AWK=/usr/bin/awk \ CC="ccache gcc" \ CFLAGS="-ggdb -pipe -std=gnu99 -Wall -pedantic" \ CXX="ccache g++" \ CXXFLAGS="-ggdb -pipe -Wall -pedantic" \ FC="ccache gfortran" \ F77="ccache gfortran" \ MAKE="make" \ ./configure \ --prefix=/usr/local/lib/R-devel \ --enable-R-shlib \ --with-blas \ --with-lapack \ --with-readline #CC="clang -O3" \ #CXX="clang++ -03" \ # Workaround for explicit SVN check introduced by # https://github.com/wch/r-source/commit/4f13e5325dfbcb9fc8f55fc6027af9ae9c7750a3 # Need to build FAQ (cd doc/manual && make front-matter html-non-svn) rm -f non-tarball # Get current SVN revsion from git log and save in SVN-REVISION echo -n 'Revision: ' > SVN-REVISION git log --format=%B -n 1 \ | grep "^git-svn-id" \ | sed -E 's/^git-svn-id: https:\/\/svn.r-project.org\/R\/.*?@([0-9]+).*$/\1/' \ >> SVN-REVISION echo -n 'Last Changed Date: ' >> SVN-REVISION git log -1 --pretty=format:"%ad" --date=iso | cut -d' ' -f1 >> SVN-REVISION # End workaround # Set this to the number of cores on your computer make --jobs=4
If we DO NOT use -depth option in git clone command, we can use git checkout SHA1 (40 characters) to get a certain version of code.
git checkout f1d91a0b34dbaa6ac807f3852742e3d646fbe95e # plot(<dendrogram>): Bug 15215 fixed 5/2/2015 git checkout trunk # switch back to trunk
The svn revision number for a certain git revision can be found in the blue box on the github website (git-svn-id). For example, this revision has an svn revision number 68302 even the current trunk is 68319.
Now suppose we have run 'git check trunk', create a devel'R successfully. If we want to build R for a certain svn or git revision, we run 'git checkout SHA1', 'make distclean', code to generate the SVN-REVISION file (it will update this number) and finally './configure' & 'make'.
time (./configure --with-recommended-packages=no && make --jobs=5)
The timing is 4m36s if I skip recommended packages and 7m37s if I don't skip. This is based on Xeon W3690 @ 3.47GHz.
The full bash script is available on Github Gist.
Install multiple versions of R on Ubuntu
- Instruction_of_installing_a_development_version_of_R_under_Ubuntu. You can launch the devel version of R using 'RD' command.
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/24019503/installing-multiple-versions-of-r
- http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/Installing-different-versions-of-R-simultaneously-on-Linux-td879536.html
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8343686/how-to-install-2-different-r-versions-on-debian
To install the devel version of R alongside the current version of R. See this post. For example you need a script that will build r-devel, but install it in a location different from the stable version of R (eg use --prefix=/usr/local/R-X.Y.Z in the config command). Note that the executable is installed in “/usr/local/lib/R-devel/bin”, but that can be changed to others like "/usr/local/bin".
Another fancy way is to use docker.
Minimal installation of R from source
Assume we have installed g++ (or build-essential) and gfortran (Ubuntu has only gcc pre-installed, but not g++),
sudo apt-get install build-essential gfortran
we can go ahead to build a minimal R.
wget http://cran.rstudio.com/src/base/R-3/R-3.1.1.tar.gz tar -xzvf R-3.1.1.tar.gz; cd R-3.1.1 ./configure --with-x=no --with-recommended-packages=no --with-readline=no
See ./configure --help. This still builds the essential packages like base, compiler, datasets, graphics, grDevices, grid, methods, parallel, splines, stats, stats4, tcltk, tools, and utils.
Note that at the end of 'make', it shows an error of 'cannot find any java interpreter. Please make sure java is on your PATH or set JAVA_HOME correspondingly'. Even with the error message, we can use R by typing bin/R.
To check whether we have Java installed, type 'java -version'.
$ java -version java version "1.6.0_32" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (IcedTea6 1.13.4) (6b32-1.13.4-4ubuntu0.12.04.2) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 23.25-b01, mixed mode)
Recommended packages
R can be installed without recommended packages. Keep it in mind. Some people have assumed that a `recommended' package can safely be used unconditionally, but this is not so.
R CMD
- R CMD build someDirectory - create a package
- R CMD check somePackage_1.2-3.tar.gz - check a package
- R CMD INSTALL somePackage_1.2-3.tar.gz - install a package from its source
bin/R (shell script) and bin/exec/R (binary executable) on Linux OS
bin/R is just a shell script to launch bin/exec/R program. So if we try to run the following program
# test.R cat("-- reading arguments\n", sep = ""); cmd_args = commandArgs(); for (arg in cmd_args) cat(" ", arg, "\n", sep="");
from command line like
$ R --slave --no-save --no-restore --no-environ --silent --args arg1=abc < test.R # OR using Rscript -- reading arguments /home/brb/R-3.0.1/bin/exec/R --slave --no-save --no-restore --no-environ --silent --args arg1=abc
we can see R actually call bin/exec/R program.
Ubuntu/Debian
Since the R packages XML & RCurl are frequently used by other packages (e.g. miniCRAN), it is useful to run the following so the install.packages("RCurl") and install.packages("XML") can work without hiccups.
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev
See also Simple bash script for a fresh install of R and its dependencies in Linux.
CentOS 6.x
Install build-essential (make, gcc, gdb, ...).
su yum groupinstall "Development Tools" yum install kernel-devel kernel-headers
Install readline and X11 (probably not necessary if we use ./configure --with-x=no)
yum install readline-devel yum install libX11 libX11-devel libXt libXt-devel
Install libpng (already there) and libpng-devel library. This is for web application purpose because png (and possibly svg) is a standard and preferred graphics format. If we want to output different graphics formats, we have to follow the guide in R-admin manual to install extra graphics libraries in Linux.
yum install libpng-devel rpm -qa | grep "libpng" # make sure both libpng and libpng-devel exist.
Install Java. One possibility is to download from Oracle. We want to download jdk-7u45-linux-x64.rpm and jre-7u45-linux-x64.rpm (assume 64-bit OS).
rpm -Uvh jdk-7u45-linux-x64.rpm rpm -Uvh jre-7u45-linux-x64.rpm # Check java -version
Now we are ready to build R by using "./configure" and then "make" commands.
We can make R accessible from any directory by either run "make install" command or creating an R_HOME environment variable and export it to PATH environment variable, such as
export R_HOME="path to R" export PATH=$PATH:$R_HOME/bin
Install R on Mac
A binary version of R is available on Mac OS X.
Noted that personal R packages will be installed to ~/Library/R directory. More specifically, packages from R 3.3.x will be installed onto ~/Library/R/3.3/library.
For R 3.4.x, the R packages go to /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.4/Resources/library. The advantages of using this folder is 1. the folder is writable by anyone. 2. even the built-in packages can be upgraded by users.
Upgrade R
Online Editor
We can run R on web browsers without installing it on local machines (similar to [/ideone.com Ideone.com] for C++. It does not require an account either (cf RStudio).
RDocumentation
The interactive engine is based on DataCamp Light
For example, tbl_df function from dplyr package.
The website DataCamp allows to run library() on the Script window. After that, we can use the packages on R Console.
Here is a list of (common) R packages that users can use on the web.
The packages on RDocumentation may be outdated. For example, the current stringr on CRAN is v1.2.0 (2/18/2017) but RDocumentation has v1.1.0 (8/19/2016).
Web Applications
See also CRAN Task View: Web Technologies and Services
TexLive
TexLive can be installed by 2 ways
- Ubuntu repository; does not include tlmgr utility for package manager.
- Official website
texlive-latex-extra
https://packages.debian.org/sid/texlive-latex-extra
For example, framed and titling packages are included.
tlmgr - TeX Live package manager
https://www.tug.org/texlive/tlmgr.html
pkgdown: create a website for your package
Building a website with pkgdown: a short guide
Create HTML5 web and slides using knitr, rmarkdown and pandoc
http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/html_document_format.html
HTML5 slides examples
- http://yihui.name/slides/knitr-slides.html
- http://yihui.name/slides/2012-knitr-RStudio.html
- http://yihui.name/slides/2011-r-dev-lessons.html#slide1
- http://inundata.org/R_talks/BARUG/#intro
Software requirement
- Rstudio
- knitr, XML, RCurl (See omegahat or this internal link for installation on Ubuntu)
- pandoc package This is a command line tool. I am testing it on Windows 7.
Slide #22 gives an instruction to create
- regular html file by using RStudio -> Knit HTML button
- HTML5 slides by using pandoc from command line.
Files:
- Rcmd source: 009-slides.Rmd Note that IE 8 was not supported by github. For IE 9, be sure to turn off "Compatibility View".
- markdown output: 009-slides.md
- HTML output: 009-slides.html
We can create Rcmd source in Rstudio by File -> New -> R Markdown.
There are 4 ways to produce slides with pandoc
- S5
- DZSlides
- Slidy
- Slideous
Use the markdown file (md) and convert it with pandoc
pandoc -s -S -i -t dzslides --mathjax html5_slides.md -o html5_slides.html
If we are comfortable with HTML and CSS code, open the html file (generated by pandoc) and modify the CSS style at will.
Built-in examples from rmarkdown
# This is done on my ODroid xu4 running Ubuntu Mate 15.10 (Wily) # I used sudo apt-get install pandoc in shell # and install.packages("rmarkdown") in R 3.2.3 library(rmarkdown) rmarkdown::render("~/R/armv7l-unknown-linux-gnueabihf-library/3.2/rmarkdown/rmarkdown/templates/html_vignette/skeleton/skeleton.Rmd") # the output <skeleton.html> is located under the same dir as <skeleton.Rmd>
Note that the image files in the html are embedded Base64 images in the html file. See
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1207190/embedding-base64-images
- Data URI scheme
- http://www.r-bloggers.com/embed-images-in-rd-documents/
- How to not embed Base64 images in RMarkdown
- Upload plots as PNG file to your wordpress
Examples
Some examples of creating papers (with references) based on knitr can be found on the Papers and reports section of the knitr website.
- https://github.com/EBI-predocs/knitr-example
- https://github.com/timchurches/meta-analyses
- http://www.gastonsanchez.com/depot/knitr-slides
Read the docs Sphinx theme and journal article formats
http://blog.rstudio.org/2016/03/21/r-markdown-custom-formats/
- rticles package
- rmdformats package
rmarkdown news
Useful tricks when including images in Rmarkdown documents
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2017/06/rmarkdown-tricks.html
Reproducible data analysis
Automatic document production with R
https://itsalocke.com/improving-automatic-document-production-with-r/
Documents with logos, watermarks, and corporate styles
http://ellisp.github.io/blog/2017/09/09/rmarkdown
rticles and pinp for articles
- https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/rticles/index.html
- http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/code/pinp.html
Markdown language
According to wikipedia:
Markdown is a lightweight markup language, originally created by John Gruber with substantial contributions from Aaron Swartz, allowing people “to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML)”.
- Markup is a general term for content formatting - such as HTML - but markdown is a library that generates HTML markup.
- Nice summary from stackoverflow.com and more complete list from github.
- An example https://gist.github.com/jeromyanglim/2716336
- Convert mediawiki to markdown using online conversion tool from pandoc.
- R markdown file and use it in RStudio. Customizing Chunk Options can be found in knitr page and rpubs.com.
HTTP protocol
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Http_request_telnet_ubuntu.png
- Query string
- How to capture http header? Use curl -i en.wikipedia.org.
- Web Inspector. Build-in in Chrome. Right click on any page and choose 'Inspect Element'.
- Web server
- Simple TCP/IP web server
- HTTP Made Really Easy
- Illustrated Guide to HTTP
- nweb: a tiny, safe Web server with 200 lines
- Tiny HTTPd
An HTTP server is conceptually simple:
- Open port 80 for listening
- When contact is made, gather a little information (get mainly - you can ignore the rest for now)
- Translate the request into a file request
- Open the file and spit it back at the client
It gets more difficult depending on how much of HTTP you want to support - POST is a little more complicated, scripts, handling multiple requests, etc.
Example in R
> co <- socketConnection(port=8080, server=TRUE, blocking=TRUE) > # Now open a web browser and type http://localhost:8080/index.html > readLines(co,1) [1] "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1" > readLines(co,1) [1] "Host: localhost:8080" > readLines(co,1) [1] "User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:23.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/23.0" > readLines(co,1) [1] "Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8" > readLines(co,1) [1] "Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5" > readLines(co,1) [1] "Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate" > readLines(co,1) [1] "Connection: keep-alive" > readLines(co,1) [1] ""
Example in C (Very simple http server written in C, 187 lines)
Create a simple hello world html page and save it as <index.html> in the current directory (/home/brb/Downloads/)
Launch the server program (assume we have done gcc http_server.c -o http_server)
$ ./http_server -p 50002 Server started at port no. 50002 with root directory as /home/brb/Downloads
Secondly open a browser and type http://localhost:50002/index.html. The server will respond
GET /index.html HTTP/1.1 Host: localhost:50002 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:23.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/23.0 Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5 Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate Connection: keep-alive file: /home/brb/Downloads/index.html GET /favicon.ico HTTP/1.1 Host: localhost:50002 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:23.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/23.0 Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5 Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate Connection: keep-alive file: /home/brb/Downloads/favicon.ico GET /favicon.ico HTTP/1.1 Host: localhost:50003 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:23.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/23.0 Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5 Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate Connection: keep-alive file: /home/brb/Downloads/favicon.ico
The browser will show the page from <index.html> in server.
The only bad thing is the code does not close the port. For example, if I have use Ctrl+C to close the program and try to re-launch with the same port, it will complain socket() or bind(): Address already in use.
Another Example in C (55 lines)
http://mwaidyanatha.blogspot.com/2011/05/writing-simple-web-server-in-c.html
The response is embedded in the C code.
If we test the server program by opening a browser and type "http://localhost:15000/", the server received the follwing 7 lines
GET / HTTP/1.1 Host: localhost:15000 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Ubuntu; Linux i686; rv:23.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/23.0 Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5 Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate Connection: keep-alive
If we include a non-executable file's name in the url, we will be able to download that file. Try "http://localhost:15000/client.c".
If we use telnet program to test, wee need to type anything we want
$ telnet localhost 15000 Trying 127.0.0.1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. ThisCanBeAnything <=== This is what I typed in the client and it is also shown on server HTTP/1.1 200 OK <=== From here is what I got from server Content-length: 37Content-Type: text/html HTML_DATA_HERE_AS_YOU_MENTIONED_ABOVE <=== The html tags are not passed from server, interesting! Connection closed by foreign host. $
See also more examples under C page.
Others
- http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Hello_world/ (Different languages)
- http://kperisetla.blogspot.com/2012/07/simple-http-web-server-in-c.html (Windows web server)
- http://css.dzone.com/articles/web-server-c (handling HTTP GET request, handling content types(txt, html, jpg, zip. rar, pdf, php etc.), sending proper HTTP error codes, serving the files from a web root, change in web root in a config file, zero copy optimization using sendfile method and php file handling.)
- https://github.com/gtungatkar/Simple-HTTP-server
- https://github.com/davidmoreno/onion
shiny
The following is what we see on a browser after we run an example from shiny package. See http://rstudio.github.com/shiny/tutorial/#hello-shiny. Note that the R session needs to be on; i.e. R command prompt will not be returned unless we press Ctrl+C or ESC.
More shiny examples can be found on https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-examples shiny-examples.
shiny depends on websockets, caTools, bitops, digest packages.
Q & A:
- Tutorial: http://wch.github.io/shiny/tutorial/
- Layout: http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/layout-guide.html
Q: If we run runExample('01_hello') in Rserve from an R client, we can continue our work in R client without losing the functionality of the GUI from shiny. Question: how do we kill the job?- If I run the example "01_hello", the browser only shows the control but not graph on Firefox? A: Use Chrome or Opera as the default browser.
- Q: How difficult to put the code in Gist:github? A: Just create an account. Do not even need to create a repository. Just go to http://gist.github.com and create a new gist. The new gist can be secret or public. A secret gist can not be edited again after it is created although it works fine when it was used in runGist() function.
Deploy to run locally
Follow the instruction here, we can do as following (Tested on Windows OS)
- Create a desktop shortcut with target "C:\Program Files\R\R-3.0.2\bin\R.exe" -e "shiny::runExample('01_hello')" . We can name the shortcut as we like, e.g. R+shiny
- Double click the shortcut. The Windows Firewall will be popped up and say it block some features of the program. It does not matter if we choose Allow access or Cancel.
- Look at the command prompt window (black background console window), it will say something like
Listening on port 7510
at the last line of the console. - Open your browser (Chrome or Firefox works), and type the address http://localhost:7510. You will see something magic happen.
- If we don't want to play with it, we can close the browser and close the command console (hit 'x')too.
Deploy on cloud
https://www.r-bloggers.com/deploying-r-rstudio-and-shiny-applications-on-unbuntu-server/
Shiny server series part 1: setting up. It includes setting up A- and CNAME records on DigitalOcean.
Deploy on shinyapps.io
See Getting started with shinyapps.io page.
Shinyapps.io can accept google account to sign up. I create an account and a test application/instance on
- https://taichimd.shinyapps.io/stock/ (quantmod, ggplot2, reshape2, magrittr, rvest packages were used)
The R packages our shiny app uses will be automatically downloaded by shinyapps.io service. See the package dependencies section on http://shiny.rstudio.com/articles/shinyapps.html.
After we run rsconnect() command to deploy our apps, a new subfolder rsconnect will be created under our app folder. I add this folder to .gitignore file.
For the shiny apps we uploaded to shinyapps.io, we can download them back. The download bundle will also include packrat subfolder (packrat.lock file and desc subfolder). See here for more about packrat.
Deploy to run remotely -shiny server
If we want to deploy our shiny apps to WWW, we need to install shiny server.
Following the guide on here, shiny-server is up smoothly on my Ubuntu machine. After I run the command sudo gdebi shiny-server-0.4.0.8-amd64.deb, shiny-server is started. Thanks to upstart in Ubuntu, shiny-server is automatically started whenever the machine is started.
Each app directory needs to be copied to /srv/shiny-server/ (which links to /opt/shiny-server/) directory using sudo.
The default port is 3838. That is, the remote computer can access the website using http://xxx.xxx.x.xx:3838/AppName.
Last but not the least, according to its web page, shiny-server is Experimental quality. Use at your own risk!.
Running shiny server as non-root: run_as
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/36201019/run-shiny-server-as-non-root
- https://support.rstudio.com/hc/en-us/articles/219044787-Root-requirements-for-Shiny-Server
- http://docs.rstudio.com/shiny-server/#run_as
Shiny server installation on RHEL/CentOS 7
https://www.vultr.com/docs/how-to-install-shiny-server-on-centos-7
Shiny https: Securing Shiny Open Source with SSL
Deploy your own shiny server
Example of embedding shiny in your web page
http://michaeltoth.me/popularity-of-baby-names-since-1880.html
The R Shiny packages you need for your web apps
http://enhancedatascience.com/2017/07/10/the-packages-you-need-for-your-r-shiny-application/
Shiny + Docker
- See this post. It uses the gui of Docker called Kitematic.
- https://hub.docker.com/r/rocker/shiny/ Don't run R Shiny as a non-root user.
- Shiny Server on Docker: CentOS 7 Edition
- https://github.com/rocker-org/shiny
- https://www.r-bloggers.com/dockerizing-a-shiny-app/
- https://github.com/keberwein/docker_shiny-server_centos7 (Shiny + RStudio servers)
shinydashboard
shinytheme
shinyapps.io
http://www.rstudio.com/products/shinyapps/
websocket
http://illposed.net/jsm2012.pdf
CentOS
- https://www.vultr.com/docs/how-to-install-shiny-server-on-centos-7
- https://github.com/rstudio/shiny-server/wiki/CentOS-step-by-step-Installation-Instructions
- http://blog.supstat.com/2014/05/install-rstudio-server-on-centos6-5/
Gallery
- Shiny User Showcase
- http://www.showmeshiny.com/
- Example of using googleVis: http://shinyeoda.cloudapp.net/
- Integrate with Javascript: https://github.com/wch/shiny-jsdemo and https://github.com/trestletech/ShinyDash-Sample
- interactiveDisplay (Bioconductor package, there is a STOP Application button too): http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/interactiveDisplay.html
- Party vote characteristics at the New Zealand General Election 2014, More things with the New Zealand Election Study
- genSurv : An interactive web-based tool for survival analysis in genomics research. The paper and the source code.
- gene2drug
- Stock
- http://shiny.rstudio.com/tutorial/written-tutorial/lesson6/
- Stock Closing Price History.
- Multiple stocks.
- google (flash is required, not accurate eg DOW). msn (Nice).
- yahoo (French only).
Persistent data storage in Shiny apps
http://deanattali.com/blog/shiny-persistent-data-storage/
Password protection
- http://ipub.com/shiny-password-protect/
- https://auth0.com/blog/adding-authentication-to-shiny-server/
- https://www.r-bloggers.com/password-protect-shiny-apps/
Install all required R packages
http://padamson.github.io/r/shiny/2016/03/13/install-required-r-packages.html
Three R Shiny tricks to make your Shiny app shines (2/3): Semi-collapsible sidebar
Tips
Shiny tips & tricks for improving your apps and solving common problems by Dean Attali.
Real Examples
- CellMinerDB from NCI/NIH.
Docker
- Using Docker as a Personal Productivity Tool – Running Command Line Apps Bundled in Docker Containers
- Dockerized RStudio server from Duke University. 110 containers were set up on a cloud server (4 cores, 28GB RAM, 400GB disk). Each container has its own port number. Each student is mapped to a single container. https://github.com/mccahill/docker-rstudio
- RStudio in the cloud with Amazon Lightsail and docker
- Mark McCahill (RStudio + Docker)
- https://github.com/Bioconductor-notebooks/Identification-of-Differentially-Expressed-Genes-for-Ectopic-Pregnancy/blob/master/CaseStudy1_EctopicPregnancy.ipynb Reproducible Bioconductor Workflow w/ browser-based interactive notebooks+Container. Paper http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/06/01/144816
httpuv
http and WebSocket library.
RApache
gWidgetsWWW
- http://www.jstatsoft.org/v49/i10/paper
- gWidgetsWWW2 gWidgetsWWW based on Rook
- Compare shiny with gWidgetsWWW2.rapache
Rook
Since R 2.13, the internal web server was exposed.
Tutorual from useR2012 and Jeffrey Horner
Here is another one from http://www.rinfinance.com.
Rook is also supported by [rApache too. See http://rapache.net/manual.html.
Google group. https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/rrook
Advantage
- the web applications are created on desktop, whether it is Windows, Mac or Linux.
- No Apache is needed.
- create multiple applications at the same time. This complements the limit of rApache.
4 lines of code example.
library(Rook) s <- Rhttpd$new() s$start(quiet=TRUE) s$print() s$browse(1) # OR s$browse("RookTest")
Notice that after s$browse() command, the cursor will return to R because the command just a shortcut to open the web page http://127.0.0.1:10215/custom/RookTest.
We can add Rook application to the server; see ?Rhttpd.
s$add( app=system.file('exampleApps/helloworld.R',package='Rook'),name='hello' ) s$add( app=system.file('exampleApps/helloworldref.R',package='Rook'),name='helloref' ) s$add( app=system.file('exampleApps/summary.R',package='Rook'),name='summary' ) s$print() #Server started on 127.0.0.1:10221 #[1] RookTest http://127.0.0.1:10221/custom/RookTest #[2] helloref http://127.0.0.1:10221/custom/helloref #[3] summary http://127.0.0.1:10221/custom/summary #[4] hello http://127.0.0.1:10221/custom/hello # Stops the server but doesn't uninstall the app ## Not run: s$stop() ## End(Not run) s$remove(all=TRUE) rm(s)
For example, the interface and the source code of summary app are given below
app <- function(env) { req <- Rook::Request$new(env) res <- Rook::Response$new() res$write('Choose a CSV file:\n') res$write('<form method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data">\n') res$write('<input type="file" name="data">\n') res$write('<input type="submit" name="Upload">\n</form>\n<br>') if (!is.null(req$POST())){ data <- req$POST()[['data']] res$write("<h3>Summary of Data</h3>"); res$write("<pre>") res$write(paste(capture.output(summary(read.csv(data$tempfile,stringsAsFactors=FALSE)),file=NULL),collapse='\n')) res$write("</pre>") res$write("<h3>First few lines (head())</h3>"); res$write("<pre>") res$write(paste(capture.output(head(read.csv(data$tempfile,stringsAsFactors=FALSE)),file=NULL),collapse='\n')) res$write("</pre>") } res$finish() }
More example:
- http://lamages.blogspot.com/2012/08/rook-rocks-example-with-googlevis.html
- Self-organizing map
- Deploy Rook apps with rApache. First one and two.
- A Simple Prediction Web Service Using the New fiery Package
sumo
Sumo is a fully-functional web application template that exposes an authenticated user's R session within java server pages. See the paper http://journal.r-project.org/archive/2012-1/RJournal_2012-1_Bergsma+Smith.pdf.
Stockplot
FastRWeb
http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/FastRWeb/index.html
Rwui
CGHWithR and WebDevelopR
CGHwithR is still working with old version of R although it is removed from CRAN. Its successor is WebDevelopR. Its The vignette (year 2013) provides a review of several available methods.
manipulate from RStudio
This is not a web application. But the manipulate package can be used to create interactive plot within R(Studio) environment easily. Its source is available at here.
Mathematica also has manipulate function for plotting; see here.
RCloud
RCloud is an environment for collaboratively creating and sharing data analysis scripts. RCloud lets you mix analysis code in R, HTML5, Markdown, Python, and others. Much like Sage, iPython notebooks and Mathematica, RCloud provides a notebook interface that lets you easily record a session and annotate it with text, equations, and supporting images.
See also the Talk in UseR 2014.
Dropbox access
rdrop2 package
Web page scraping
http://www.slideshare.net/schamber/web-data-from-r#btnNext
rvest
rvest package.
sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev
- https://github.com/hadley/rvest
- Visualizing obesity across United States by using data from Wikipedia
- rvest tutorial: scraping the web using R
- https://renkun.me/pipeR-tutorial/Examples/rvest.html
- http://zevross.com/blog/2015/05/19/scrape-website-data-with-the-new-r-package-rvest/
- Google scholar scraping with rvest package
V8: Embedded JavaScript Engine for R
R⁶ — General (Attys) Distributions: V8, rvest, ggbeeswarm, hrbrthemes and tidyverse packages are used.
pubmed.mineR
Text mining of PubMed Abstracts (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed). The algorithms are designed for two formats (text and XML) from PubMed.
R code for scraping the P-values from pubmed, calculating the Science-wise False Discovery Rate, et al (Jeff Leek)
Diving Into Dynamic Website Content with splashr
https://rud.is/b/2017/02/09/diving-into-dynamic-website-content-with-splashr/
Send email
mailR
Easiest. Require rJava package (not trivial to install, see rJava). mailR is an interface to Apache Commons Email to send emails from within R. See also send bulk email
Before we use the mailR package, we have followed here to have Allow less secure apps: 'ON' ; or you might get an error Error: EmailException (Java): Sending the email to the following server failed : smtp.gmail.com:465. Once we turn on this option, we may get an email for the notification of this change. Note that the recipient can be other than a gmail.
> send.mail(from = "[email protected]", to = c("[email protected]", "Recipient 2 <[email protected]>"), replyTo = c("Reply to someone else <[email protected]>") subject = "Subject of the email", body = "Body of the email", smtp = list(host.name = "smtp.gmail.com", port = 465, user.name = "gmail_username", passwd = "password", ssl = TRUE), authenticate = TRUE, send = TRUE) [1] "Java-Object{org.apache.commons.mail.SimpleEmail@7791a895}"
gmailr
More complicated. gmailr provides access the Google's gmail.com RESTful API. Vignette and an example on here. Note that it does not use a password; it uses a json file for oauth authentication downloaded from https://console.cloud.google.com/. See also https://github.com/jimhester/gmailr/issues/1.
library(gmailr) gmail_auth('mysecret.json', scope = 'compose') test_email <- mime() %>% to("[email protected]") %>% from("[email protected]") %>% subject("This is a subject") %>% html_body("<html><body>I wish <b>this</b> was bold</body></html>") send_message(test_email)
sendmailR
sendmailR provides a simple SMTP client. It is not clear how to use the package (i.e. where to enter the password).
GEO (Gene Expression Omnibus)
See this internal link.
Interactive html output
sendplot
RIGHT
The supported plot types include scatterplot, barplot, box plot, line plot and pie plot.
In addition to tooltip boxes, the package can create a table showing all information about selected nodes.
d3Network
- http://christophergandrud.github.io/d3Network/ (old)
- https://christophergandrud.github.io/networkD3/ (new)
library(d3Network) Source <- c("A", "A", "A", "A", "B", "B", "C", "C", "D") Target <- c("B", "C", "D", "J", "E", "F", "G", "H", "I") NetworkData <- data.frame(Source, Target) d3SimpleNetwork(NetworkData, height = 800, width = 1024, file="tmp.html")
htmlwidgets for R
Embed widgets in R Markdown documents and Shiny web applications.
- Official website http://www.htmlwidgets.org/.
- How to write a useful htmlwidgets in R: tips and walk-through a real example
networkD3
This is a port of Christopher Gandrud's d3Network package to the htmlwidgets framework.
scatterD3
scatterD3 is an HTML R widget for interactive scatter plots visualization. It is based on the htmlwidgets R package and on the d3.js javascript library.
d3heatmap
A package generats interactive heatmaps using d3.js and htmlwidgets. The following screenshots shows 3 features.
- Shows the row/column/value under the mouse cursor
- Zoom in a region (click on the zoom-in image will bring back the original heatmap)
- Highlight a row or a column (click the label of another row will highlight another row. Click the same label again will bring back the original image)
svgPanZoom
This 'htmlwidget' provides pan and zoom interactivity to R graphics, including 'base', 'lattice', and 'ggplot2'. The interactivity is provided through the 'svg-pan-zoom.js' library.
DT: An R interface to the DataTables library
plotly
- Power curves and ggplot2.
- TIME SERIES CHARTS BY THE ECONOMIST IN R USING PLOTLY & FIVE INTERACTIVE R VISUALIZATIONS WITH D3, GGPLOT2, & RSTUDIO
- Filled chord diagram
- DASHBOARDS IN R WITH SHINY & PLOTLY
- Plotly Graphs in Shiny
Amazon
Download product information and reviews from Amazon.com
sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev
and in R
install.packages("devtools") install.packages("XML") install.packages("pbapply") install.packages("dplyr") devtools::install_github("56north/Rmazon") product_info <- Rmazon::get_product_info("1593273843") reviews <- Rmazon::get_reviews("1593273843") reviews[1,6] # only show partial characters from the 1st review nchar(reviews[1,6]) as.character(reviews[1,6]) # show the complete text from the 1st review
OCR
Tesseract package: High Quality OCR in R
Creating local repository for CRAN and Bioconductor (focus on Windows binary packages only)
How to set up a local repository
- CRAN specific: http://cran.r-project.org/mirror-howto.html
- Bioconductor specific: http://www.bioconductor.org/about/mirrors/mirror-how-to/
General guide: http://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/R-admin.html#Setting-up-a-package-repository
Utilities such as install.packages can be pointed at any CRAN-style repository, and R users may want to set up their own. The ‘base’ of a repository is a URL such as http://www.omegahat.org/R/: this must be an URL scheme that download.packages supports (which also includes ‘ftp://’ and ‘file://’, but not on most systems ‘https://’). Under that base URL there should be directory trees for one or more of the following types of package distributions:
- "source": located at src/contrib and containing .tar.gz files. Other forms of compression can be used, e.g. .tar.bz2 or .tar.xz files.
- "win.binary": located at bin/windows/contrib/x.y for R versions x.y.z and containing .zip files for Windows.
- "mac.binary.leopard": located at bin/macosx/leopard/contrib/x.y for R versions x.y.z and containing .tgz files.
Each terminal directory must also contain a PACKAGES file. This can be a concatenation of the DESCRIPTION files of the packages separated by blank lines, but only a few of the fields are needed. The simplest way to set up such a file is to use function write_PACKAGES in the tools package, and its help explains which fields are needed. Optionally there can also be a PACKAGES.gz file, a gzip-compressed version of PACKAGES—as this will be downloaded in preference to PACKAGES it should be included for large repositories. (If you have a mis-configured server that does not report correctly non-existent files you will need PACKAGES.gz.)
To add your repository to the list offered by setRepositories(), see the help file for that function.
A repository can contain subdirectories, when the descriptions in the PACKAGES file of packages in subdirectories must include a line of the form
Path: path/to/subdirectory
—once again write_PACKAGES is the simplest way to set this up.
Space requirement if we want to mirror WHOLE repository
- Whole CRAN takes about 92GB (rsync -avn cran.r-project.org::CRAN > ~/Downloads/cran).
- Bioconductor is big (> 64G for BioC 2.11). Please check the size of what will be transferred with e.g. (rsync -avn bioconductor.org::2.11 > ~/Downloads/bioc) and make sure you have enough room on your local disk before you start.
On the other hand, we if only care about Windows binary part, the space requirement is largely reduced.
- CRAN: 2.7GB
- Bioconductor: 28GB.
Misc notes
- If the binary package was built on R 2.15.1, then it cannot be installed on R 2.15.2. But vice is OK.
- Remember to issue "--delete" option in rsync, otherwise old version of package will be installed.
- The repository still need src directory. If it is missing, we will get an error
Warning: unable to access index for repository http://arraytools.no-ip.org/CRAN/src/contrib Warning message: package ‘glmnet’ is not available (for R version 2.15.2)
The error was given by available.packages() function.
To bypass the requirement of src directory, I can use
install.packages("glmnet", contriburl = contrib.url(getOption('repos'), "win.binary"))
but there may be a problem when we use biocLite() command.
I find a workaround. Since the error comes from missing CRAN/src directory, we just need to make sure the directory CRAN/src/contrib exists AND either CRAN/src/contrib/PACKAGES or CRAN/src/contrib/PACKAGES.gz exists.
To create CRAN repository
Before creating a local repository please give a dry run first. You don't want to be surprised how long will it take to mirror a directory.
Dry run (-n option). Pipe out the process to a text file for an examination.
rsync -avn cran.r-project.org::CRAN > crandryrun.txt
To mirror only partial repository, it is necessary to create directories before running rsync command.
cd mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/CRAN/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 rsync -rtlzv --delete cran.r-project.org::CRAN/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/ ~/Rmirror/CRAN/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 (one line with space before ~/Rmirror) # src directory is very large (~27GB) since it contains source code for each R version. # We just need the files PACKAGES and PACKAGES.gz in CRAN/src/contrib. So I comment out the following line. # rsync -rtlzv --delete cran.r-project.org::CRAN/src/ ~/Rmirror/CRAN/src/ mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/CRAN/src/contrib rsync -rtlzv --delete cran.r-project.org::CRAN/src/contrib/PACKAGES ~/Rmirror/CRAN/src/contrib/ rsync -rtlzv --delete cran.r-project.org::CRAN/src/contrib/PACKAGES.gz ~/Rmirror/CRAN/src/contrib/
And optionally
library(tools) write_PACKAGES("~/Rmirror/CRAN/bin/windows/contrib/2.15", type="win.binary")
and if we want to get src directory
rsync -rtlzv --delete cran.r-project.org::CRAN/src/contrib/*.tar.gz ~/Rmirror/CRAN/src/contrib/ rsync -rtlzv --delete cran.r-project.org::CRAN/src/contrib/2.15.3 ~/Rmirror/CRAN/src/contrib/
We can use du -h to check the folder size.
For example (as of 1/7/2013),
$ du -k ~/Rmirror --max-depth=1 --exclude ".*" | sort -nr | cut -f2 | xargs -d '\n' du -sh 30G /home/brb/Rmirror 28G /home/brb/Rmirror/Bioc 2.7G /home/brb/Rmirror/CRAN
To create Bioconductor repository
Dry run
rsync -avn bioconductor.org::2.11 > biocdryrun.txt
Then creates directories before running rsync.
cd mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc wget -N http://www.bioconductor.org/biocLite.R -P ~/Rmirror/Bioc
where -N is to overwrite original file if the size or timestamp change and -P in wget means an output directory, not a file name.
Optionally, we can add the following in order to see the Bioconductor front page.
rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/BiocViews.html ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/index.html ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/
The software part (aka bioc directory) installation:
cd mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/bin/windows mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/src rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/bin/windows/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/bin/windows # Either rsync whole src directory or just essential files # rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/src/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/src rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/src/contrib/PACKAGES ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/src/contrib/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/src/contrib/PACKAGES.gz ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/src/contrib/ # Optionally the html part mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/html rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/html/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/html mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/vignettes rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/vignettes/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/vignettes mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/news rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/news/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/news mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/licenses rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/licenses/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/licenses mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/manuals rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/manuals/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/manuals mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/readmes rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/bioc/readmes/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/readmes
and annotation (aka data directory) part:
mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/annotation/bin/windows mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/annotation/src/contrib # one line for each of the following rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/data/annotation/bin/windows/ ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/annotation/bin/windows rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/data/annotation/src/contrib/PACKAGES ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/annotation/src/contrib/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/data/annotation/src/contrib/PACKAGES.gz ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/annotation/src/contrib/
and experiment directory:
mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/src/contrib # one line for each of the following # Note that we are cheating by only downloading PACKAGES and PACKAGES.gz files rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/data/experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/PACKAGES ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/data/experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/PACKAGES.gz ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/data/experiment/src/contrib/PACKAGES ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/src/contrib/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/data/experiment/src/contrib/PACKAGES.gz ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/src/contrib/
and extra directory:
mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 mkdir -p ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/src/contrib # one line for each of the following # Note that we are cheating by only downloading PACKAGES and PACKAGES.gz files rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/extra/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/PACKAGES ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/extra/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/PACKAGES.gz ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/extra/src/contrib/PACKAGES ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/src/contrib/ rsync -zrtlv --delete bioconductor.org::2.11/extra/src/contrib/PACKAGES.gz ~/Rmirror/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/src/contrib/
To test local repository
Create soft links in Apache server
su ln -s /home/brb/Rmirror/CRAN /var/www/html/CRAN ln -s /home/brb/Rmirror/Bioc /var/www/html/Bioc ls -l /var/www/html
The soft link mode should be 777.
To test CRAN
Replace the host name arraytools.no-ip.org by IP address 10.133.2.111 if necessary.
r <- getOption("repos"); r["CRAN"] <- "http://arraytools.no-ip.org/CRAN" options(repos=r) install.packages("glmnet")
We can test if the backup server is working or not by installing a package which was removed from the CRAN. For example, 'ForImp' was removed from CRAN in 11/8/2012, but I still a local copy built on R 2.15.2 (run rsync on 11/6/2012).
r <- getOption("repos"); r["CRAN"] <- "http://cran.r-project.org" r <- c(r, BRB='http://arraytools.no-ip.org/CRAN') # CRAN CRANextra BRB # "http://cran.r-project.org" "http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/RWin" "http://arraytools.no-ip.org/CRAN" options(repos=r) install.packages('ForImp')
Note by default, CRAN mirror is selected interactively.
> getOption("repos") CRAN CRANextra "@CRAN@" "http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/RWin"
To test Bioconductor
# CRAN part: r <- getOption("repos"); r["CRAN"] <- "http://arraytools.no-ip.org/CRAN" options(repos=r) # Bioconductor part: options("BioC_mirror" = "http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc") source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R") # This source biocLite.R line can be placed either before or after the previous 2 lines biocLite("aCGH")
If there is a connection problem, check folder attributes.
chmod -R 755 ~/CRAN/bin
- Note that if a binary package was created for R 2.15.1, then it can be installed under R 2.15.1 but not R 2.15.2. The R console will show package xxx is not available (for R version 2.15.2).
- For binary installs, the function also checks for the availability of a source package on the same repository, and reports if the source package has a later version, or is available but no binary version is.
So for example, if the mirror does not have contents under src directory, we need to run the following line in order to successfully run install.packages() function.
options(install.packages.check.source = "no")
- If we only mirror the essential directories, we can run biocLite() successfully. However, the R console will give some warning
> biocLite("aCGH") BioC_mirror: http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc Using Bioconductor version 2.11 (BiocInstaller 1.8.3), R version 2.15. Installing package(s) 'aCGH' Warning: unable to access index for repository http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/src/contrib Warning: unable to access index for repository http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/src/contrib Warning: unable to access index for repository http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 Warning: unable to access index for repository http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 trying URL 'http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc/packages/2.11/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/2.15/aCGH_1.36.0.zip' Content type 'application/zip' length 2431158 bytes (2.3 Mb) opened URL downloaded 2.3 Mb package ‘aCGH’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked The downloaded binary packages are in C:\Users\limingc\AppData\Local\Temp\Rtmp8IGGyG\downloaded_packages Warning: unable to access index for repository http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc/packages/2.11/data/experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 Warning: unable to access index for repository http://arraytools.no-ip.org/Bioc/packages/2.11/extra/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 > library()
CRAN repository directory structure
The information below is specific to R 2.15.2. There are linux and macosx subdirecotries whenever there are windows subdirectory.
bin/winows/contrib/2.15 src/contrib /contrib/2.15.2 /contrib/Archive web/checks /dcmeta /packages /views
A clickable map [1]
Bioconductor package download statistics
http://bioconductor.org/packages/stats/
Bioconductor repository directory structure
The information below is specific to Bioc 2.11 (R 2.15). There are linux and macosx subdirecotries whenever there are windows subdirectory.
bioc/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 /html /install /license /manuals /news /src /vignettes data/annotation/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 /html /licenses /manuals /src /vignettes /experiment/bin/windows/contrib/2.15 /html /manuals /src/contrib /vignettes extra/bin/windows/contrib /html /src /vignettes
List all R packages from CRAN/Bioconductor
Check my daily result based on R 2.15 and Bioc 2.11 in [2]
See METACRAN for packages hosted on CRAN. The 'https://github.com/metacran/PACKAGES' file contains the latest update.
r-hub: the everything-builder the R community needs
https://github.com/r-hub/proposal
Introducing R-hub, the R package builder service
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2016/10/r-hub-public-beta.html
Parallel Computing
- Example code for the book Parallel R by McCallum and Weston.
- A gentle introduction to parallel computing in R
- An introduction to distributed memory parallelism in R and C
- Processing: When does it worth?
Windows Security Warning
It seems it is safe to choose 'Cancel' when Windows Firewall tried to block R program when we use makeCluster() to create a socket cluster.
library(parallel) cl <- makeCluster(2) clusterApply(cl, 1:2, get("+"), 3) stopCluster(cl)
If we like to see current firewall settings, just click Windows Start button, search 'Firewall' and choose 'Windows Firewall with Advanced Security'. In the 'Inbound Rules', we can see what programs (like, R for Windows GUI front-end, or Rserve) are among the rules. These rules are called 'private' in the 'Profile' column. Note that each of them may appear twice because one is 'TCP' protocol and the other one has a 'UDP' protocol.
parallel package
Parallel package was included in R 2.14.0. It is derived from the snow and multicore packages and provides many of the same functions as those packages.
The parallel package provides several *apply functions for R users to quickly modify their code using parallel computing.
- makeCluster(makePSOCKcluster, makeForkCluster), stopCluster. Other cluster types are passed to package snow.
- clusterCall, clusterEvalQ, clusterSplit
- clusterApply, clusterApplyLB
- clusterExport
- clusterMap
- parLapply, parSapply, parApply, parRapply, parCapply
- parLapplyLB, parSapplyLB (load balance version)
- clusterSetRNGStream, nextRNGStream, nextRNGSubStream
Examples (See ?clusterApply)
library(parallel) cl <- makeCluster(2, type = "SOCK") clusterApply(cl, 1:2, function(x) x*3) # OR clusterApply(cl, 1:2, get("*"), 3) # [[1]] # [1] 3 # # [[2]] # [1] 6 parSapply(cl, 1:20, get("+"), 3) # [1] 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 stopCluster(cl)
snow package
Supported cluster types are "SOCK", "PVM", "MPI", and "NWS".
multicore package
This package is removed from CRAN.
Consider using package ‘parallel’ instead.
foreach package
This package depends on one of the following
- doParallel - Foreach parallel adaptor for the parallel package
- doSNOW - Foreach parallel adaptor for the snow package
- doMC - Foreach parallel adaptor for the multicore package
- doMPI - Foreach parallel adaptor for the Rmpi package
- doRedis - Foreach parallel adapter for the rredis package
as a backend.
library(foreach) library(doParallel) m <- matrix(rnorm(9), 3, 3) cl <- makeCluster(2, type = "SOCK") registerDoParallel(cl) foreach(i=1:nrow(m), .combine=rbind) %dopar% (m[i,] / mean(m[i,])) stopCluster(cl)
See also this post Updates to the foreach package and its friends on Oct 2015.
snowfall package
Rmpi package
Some examples/tutorials
- http://trac.nchc.org.tw/grid/wiki/R-MPI_Install
- http://www.arc.vt.edu/resources/software/r/index.php
- https://www.sharcnet.ca/help/index.php/Using_R_and_MPI
- http://math.acadiau.ca/ACMMaC/Rmpi/examples.html
- http://www.umbc.edu/hpcf/resources-tara/how-to-run-R.html
- Ryan Rosario
- http://pj.freefaculty.org/guides/Rcourse/parallel-1/parallel-1.pdf
- * http://biowulf.nih.gov/apps/R.html
OpenMP
- R and openMP: boosting compiled code on multi-core cpu-s from parallelr.com.
BiocParallel
RcppParallel
Apache Spark
Microsoft R Server
- Microsoft R Server (not Microsoft R Open)
GPU
- GPU Programming for All with ‘gpuR from parallelr.com. The gpuR is available on CRAN.
- gputools
Threads
- Rdsm package
- (A Very) Experimental Threading in R and a post from Mad Scientist
Future
Cloud Computing
Install R on Amazon EC2
http://randyzwitch.com/r-amazon-ec2/
Bioconductor on Amazon EC2
http://www.bioconductor.org/help/bioconductor-cloud-ami/
Big Data Analysis
Useful R packages
RInside
- http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/code/rinside.html
- http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/papers/rfinance2010_rcpp_rinside_tutorial_handout.pdf
Ubuntu
With RInside, R can be embedded in a graphical application. For example, $HOME/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.0/RInside/examples/qt directory includes source code of a Qt application to show a kernel density plot with various options like kernel functions, bandwidth and an R command text box to generate the random data. See my demo on Youtube. I have tested this qtdensity example successfully using Qt 4.8.5.
- Follow the instruction cairoDevice to install required libraries for cairoDevice package and then cairoDevice itself.
- Install Qt. Check 'qmake' command becomes available by typing 'whereis qmake' or 'which qmake' in terminal.
- Open Qt Creator from Ubuntu start menu/Launcher. Open the project file $HOME/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.0/RInside/examples/qt/qtdensity.pro in Qt Creator.
- Under Qt Creator, hit 'Ctrl + R' or the big green triangle button on the lower-left corner to build/run the project. If everything works well, you shall see the interactive program qtdensity appears on your desktop.
With RInside + Wt web toolkit installed, we can also create a web application. To demonstrate the example in examples/wt directory, we can do
cd ~/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.0/RInside/examples/wt make sudo ./wtdensity --docroot . --http-address localhost --http-port 8080
Then we can go to the browser's address bar and type http://localhost:8080 to see how it works (a screenshot is in here).
Windows 7
To make RInside works on Windows OS, try the following
- Make sure R is installed under C:\ instead of C:\Program Files if we don't want to get an error like g++.exe: error: Files/R/R-3.0.1/library/RInside/include: No such file or directory.
- Install RTools
- Instal RInside package from source (the binary version will give an error )
- Create a DOS batch file containing necessary paths in PATH environment variable
@echo off set PATH=C:\Rtools\bin;c:\Rtools\gcc-4.6.3\bin;%PATH% set PATH=C:\R\R-3.0.1\bin\i386;%PATH% set PKG_LIBS=`Rscript -e "Rcpp:::LdFlags()"` set PKG_CPPFLAGS=`Rscript -e "Rcpp:::CxxFlags()"` set R_HOME=C:\R\R-3.0.1 echo Setting environment for using R cmd
In the Windows command prompt, run
cd C:\R\R-3.0.1\library\RInside\examples\standard make -f Makefile.win
Now we can test by running any of executable files that make generates. For example, rinside_sample0.
rinside_sample0
As for the Qt application qdensity program, we need to make sure the same version of MinGW was used in building RInside/Rcpp and Qt. See some discussions in
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12280707/using-rinside-with-qt-in-windows
- http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg04377.html
So the Qt and Wt web tool applications on Windows may or may not be possible.
GUI
Qt and R
- http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/qtbase/index.html QtDesigner is such a tool, and its output is compatible with the qtbase R package
- http://qtinterfaces.r-forge.r-project.org
tkrplot
On Ubuntu, we need to install tk packages, such as by
sudo apt-get install tk-dev
Hadoop (eg ~100 terabytes)
See also HighPerformanceComputing
- RHadoop
- Hive
- MapReduce. Introduction by Linux Journal.
- http://www.techspritz.com/category/tutorials/hadoopmapredcue/ Single node or multinode cluster setup using Ubuntu with VirtualBox (Excellent)
- Running Hadoop on Ubuntu Linux (Single-Node Cluster)
- Ubuntu 12.04 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WN2tJk_oL6E and instruction
- Linux Mint http://blog.hackedexistence.com/installing-hadoop-single-node-on-linux-mint
- http://www.r-bloggers.com/search/hadoop
RHadoop
- RDataMining.com based on Mac.
- Ubuntu 12.04 - Crishantha.com, nikhilshah123sh.blogspot.com.Bighadoop.wordpress contains an example.
- RapReduce in R by RevolutionAnalytics with a few examples.
- https://twitter.com/hashtag/rhadoop
- Bigd8ta.com based on Ubuntu 14.04.
Snowdoop: an alternative to MapReduce algorithm
- http://matloff.wordpress.com/2014/11/26/how-about-a-snowdoop-package/
- http://matloff.wordpress.com/2014/12/26/snowdooppartools-update/comment-page-1/#comment-665
XML
On Ubuntu, we need to install libxml2-dev before we can install XML package.
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev
On CentOS,
yum -y install libxml2 libxml2-devel
XML
- http://giventhedata.blogspot.com/2012/06/r-and-web-for-beginners-part-ii-xml-in.html. It gave an example of extracting the XML-values from each XML-tag for all nodes and save them in a data frame using xmlSApply().
- http://www.quantumforest.com/2011/10/reading-html-pages-in-r-for-text-processing/
- https://tonybreyal.wordpress.com/2011/11/18/htmltotext-extracting-text-from-html-via-xpath/
- https://www.tutorialspoint.com/r/r_xml_files.htm
- https://www.datacamp.com/community/tutorials/r-data-import-tutorial#xml
- Extracting data from XML PubMed and Zillow are used to illustrate. xmlTreeParse(), xmlRoot(), xmlName() and xmlSApply().
- https://yihui.name/en/2010/10/grabbing-tables-in-webpages-using-the-xml-package/
library(XML) # Read and parse HTML file doc.html = htmlTreeParse('http://apiolaza.net/babel.html', useInternal = TRUE) # Extract all the paragraphs (HTML tag is p, starting at # the root of the document). Unlist flattens the list to # create a character vector. doc.text = unlist(xpathApply(doc.html, '//p', xmlValue)) # Replace all by spaces doc.text = gsub('\n', ' ', doc.text) # Join all the elements of the character vector into a single # character string, separated by spaces doc.text = paste(doc.text, collapse = ' ')
This post http://stackoverflow.com/questions/25315381/using-xpathsapply-to-scrape-xml-attributes-in-r can be used to monitor new releases from github.com.
> library(RCurl) # getURL() > library(XML) # htmlParse and xpathSApply > xData <- getURL("https://github.com/alexdobin/STAR/releases") > doc = htmlParse(xData) > plain.text <- xpathSApply(doc, "//span[@class='css-truncate-target']", xmlValue) # I look at the source code and search 2.5.3a and find the tag as # <span class="css-truncate-target">2.5.3a</span> > plain.text [1] "2.5.3a" "2.5.2b" "2.5.2a" "2.5.1b" "2.5.1a" [6] "2.5.0c" "2.5.0b" "STAR_2.5.0a" "STAR_2.4.2a" "STAR_2.4.1d" > > # try bwa > > xData <- getURL("https://github.com/lh3/bwa/releases") > doc = htmlParse(xData) > xpathSApply(doc, "//span[@class='css-truncate-target']", xmlValue) [1] "v0.7.15" "v0.7.13" > # try picard > xData <- getURL("https://github.com/broadinstitute/picard/releases") > doc = htmlParse(xData) > xpathSApply(doc, "//span[@class='css-truncate-target']", xmlValue) [1] "2.9.1" "2.9.0" "2.8.3" "2.8.2" "2.8.1" "2.8.0" "2.7.2" "2.7.1" "2.7.0" [10] "2.6.0"
This method can be used to monitor new tags/releases from some projects like Cura, BWA, Picard, STAR. But for some projects like sratools the class attribute in the span element ("css-truncate-target") can be different (such as "tag-name").
xmlview
RCurl
On Ubuntu, we need to install the packages (the first one is for XML package that RCurl suggests)
# Test on Ubuntu 14.04 sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev
Scrape google scholar results
No google ID is required
Seems not work
Error in data.frame(footer = xpathLVApply(doc, xpath.base, "/font/span[@class='gs_fl']", : arguments imply differing number of rows: 2, 0
devtools
devtools package depends on Curl.
# Test on Ubuntu 14.04 sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev
httr
httr imports curl, jsonlite, mime, openssl and R6 packages.
When I tried to install httr package, I got an error and some message:
Configuration failed because openssl was not found. Try installing: * deb: libssl-dev (Debian, Ubuntu, etc) * rpm: openssl-devel (Fedora, CentOS, RHEL) * csw: libssl_dev (Solaris) * brew: openssl (Mac OSX) If openssl is already installed, check that 'pkg-config' is in your PATH and PKG_CONFIG_PATH contains a openssl.pc file. If pkg-config is unavailable you can set INCLUDE_DIR and LIB_DIR manually via: R CMD INSTALL --configure-vars='INCLUDE_DIR=... LIB_DIR=...' -------------------------------------------------------------------- ERROR: configuration failed for package ‘openssl’
It turns out after I run sudo apt-get install libssl-dev in the terminal (Debian), it would go smoothly with installing httr package. Nice httr!
Real example: see this post. Unfortunately I did not get a table result; I only get an html file (R 3.2.5, httr 1.1.0 on Ubuntu and Debian).
Since httr package was used in many other packages, take a look at how others use it. For example, aRxiv package.
curl
curl is independent of RCurl package.
- http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/curl/vignettes/intro.html
- https://www.opencpu.org/posts/curl-release-0-8/
library(curl) h <- new_handle() handle_setform(h, name="aaa", email="bbb" ) req <- curl_fetch_memory("http://localhost/d/phpmyql3_scripts/ch02/form2.html", handle = h) rawToChar(req$content)
rOpenSci packages
rOpenSci contains packages that allow access to data repositories through the R statistical programming environment
DirichletMultinomial
On Ubuntu, we do
sudo apt-get install libgsl0-dev
Create GUI
gWidgets
GenOrd: Generate ordinal and discrete variables with given correlation matrix and marginal distributions
rjson
http://heuristically.wordpress.com/2013/05/20/geolocate-ip-addresses-in-r/
RJSONIO
Accessing Bitcoin Data with R
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2015/11/accessing-bitcoin-data-with-r.html
Plot IP on google map
- http://thebiobucket.blogspot.com/2011/12/some-fun-with-googlevis-plotting-blog.html#more (RCurl, RJONIO, plyr, googleVis)
- http://devblog.icans-gmbh.com/using-the-maxmind-geoip-api-with-r/ (RCurl, RJONIO, maps)
- http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/geoPlot/index.html (geoPlot package (deprecated as 8/12/2013))
- http://archive09.linux.com/feature/135384 (Not R) ApacheMap
- http://batchgeo.com/features/geolocation-ip-lookup/ (Not R) (Enter a spreadsheet of adress, city, zip or a column of IPs and it will show the location on google map)
- http://code.google.com/p/apachegeomap/
The following example is modified from the first of above list.
require(RJSONIO) # fromJSON require(RCurl) # getURL temp = getURL("https://gist.github.com/arraytools/6743826/raw/23c8b0bc4b8f0d1bfe1c2fad985ca2e091aeb916/ip.txt", ssl.verifypeer = FALSE) ip <- read.table(textConnection(temp), as.is=TRUE) names(ip) <- "IP" nr = nrow(ip) Lon <- as.numeric(rep(NA, nr)) Lat <- Lon Coords <- data.frame(Lon, Lat) ip2coordinates <- function(ip) { api <- "http://freegeoip.net/json/" get.ips <- getURL(paste(api, URLencode(ip), sep="")) # result <- ldply(fromJSON(get.ips), data.frame) result <- data.frame(fromJSON(get.ips)) names(result)[1] <- "ip.address" return(result) } for (i in 1:nr){ cat(i, "\n") try( Coords[i, 1:2] <- ip2coordinates(ip$IP[i])[c("longitude", "latitude")] ) } # append to log-file: logfile <- data.frame(ip, Lat = Coords$Lat, Long = Coords$Lon, LatLong = paste(round(Coords$Lat, 1), round(Coords$Lon, 1), sep = ":")) log_gmap <- logfile[!is.na(logfile$Lat), ] require(googleVis) # gvisMap gmap <- gvisMap(log_gmap, "LatLong", options = list(showTip = TRUE, enableScrollWheel = TRUE, mapType = 'hybrid', useMapTypeControl = TRUE, width = 1024, height = 800)) plot(gmap)
The plot.gvis() method in googleVis packages also teaches the startDynamicHelp() function in the tools package, which was used to launch a http server. See Jeffrey Horner's note about deploying Rook App.
Map
leaflet
- rstudio.github.io/leaflet/#installation-and-use
- https://metvurst.wordpress.com/2015/07/24/mapview-basic-interactive-viewing-of-spatial-data-in-r-6/
choroplethr
- http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2014/01/easy-data-maps-with-r-the-choroplethr-package-.html
- http://www.arilamstein.com/blog/2015/06/25/learn-to-map-census-data-in-r/
- http://www.arilamstein.com/blog/2015/09/10/user-question-how-to-add-a-state-border-to-a-zip-code-map/
ggplot2
How to make maps with Census data in R
googleVis
See an example from RJSONIO above.
googleAuthR
Create R functions that interact with OAuth2 Google APIs easily, with auto-refresh and Shiny compatibility.
gtrendsR - Google Trends
- Download and plot Google Trends data with R
- Analyzing Google Trends Data in R
- microarray analysis from 2004-04-01
- ngs next generation sequencing from 2004-04-01
- dna sequencing from 2004-01-01.
- rna sequencing from 2004-01-01. It can be seen RNA sequencing >> DNA sequencing.
- Python vs R – Who Is Really Ahead in Data Science, Machine Learning? and The Incredible Growth of Python by David Robinson
quantmod
Maintaining a database of price files in R. It consists of 3 steps.
- Initial data downloading
- Update existing data
- Create a batch file
Rcpp
- Discussion archive
- (Video) Extending R with C++: A Brief Introduction to Rcpp
- C++14, R and Travis -- A useful hack
Speed Comparison
- A comparison of high-performance computing techniques in R. It compares Rcpp to an R looping operator (like mapply), a parallelized version of a looping operator (like mcmapply), explicit parallelization, via the parallel package or the ParallelR suite.
- In the following example, C++ avoids the overhead of creating an intermediate object (eg vector of the same length as the original vector). The c++ uses an intermediate scalar. So C++ wins R over memory management in this case.
# http://blog.mckuhn.de/2016/03/avoiding-unnecessary-memory-allocations.html library(Rcpp) `%count<%` <- cppFunction(' size_t count_less(NumericVector x, NumericVector y) { const size_t nx = x.size(); const size_t ny = y.size(); if (nx > 1 & ny > 1) stop("Only one parameter can be a vector!"); size_t count = 0; if (nx == 1) { double c = x[0]; for (int i = 0; i < ny; i++) count += c < y[i]; } else { double c = y[0]; for (int i = 0; i < nx; i++) count += x[i] < c; } return count; } ') set.seed(42) N <- 10^7 v <- runif(N, 0, 10000) # Testing on my ODroid xu4 running ubuntu 15.10 system.time(sum(v < 5000)) # user system elapsed # 1.135 0.305 1.453 system.time(v %count<% 5000) # user system elapsed # 0.535 0.000 0.540
Use Rcpp in RStudio
RStudio makes it easy to use Rcpp package.
Open RStudio, click New File -> C++ File. It will create a C++ template on the RStudio editor
#include <Rcpp.h> using namespace Rcpp; // Below is a simple example of exporting a C++ function to R. You can // source this function into an R session using the Rcpp::sourceCpp // function (or via the Source button on the editor toolbar) // For more on using Rcpp click the Help button on the editor toolbar // [[Rcpp::export]] int timesTwo(int x) { return x * 2; }
Now in R console, type
library(Rcpp) sourceCpp("~/Downloads/timesTwo.cpp") timesTwo(9) # [1] 18
See more examples on http://adv-r.had.co.nz/Rcpp.html and Calculating a fuzzy kmeans membership matrix
If we wan to test Boost library, we can try it in RStudio. Consider the following example in stackoverflow.com.
// [[Rcpp::depends(BH)]] #include <Rcpp.h> #include <boost/foreach.hpp> #include <boost/math/special_functions/gamma.hpp> #define foreach BOOST_FOREACH using namespace boost::math; //[[Rcpp::export]] Rcpp::NumericVector boost_gamma( Rcpp::NumericVector x ) { foreach( double& elem, x ) { elem = boost::math::tgamma(elem); }; return x; }
Then the R console
boost_gamma(0:10 + 1) # [1] 1 1 2 6 24 120 720 5040 40320 # [10] 362880 3628800 identical( boost_gamma(0:10 + 1), factorial(0:10) ) # [1] TRUE
Example 1. convolution example
First, Rcpp package should be installed (I am working on Linux system). Next we try one example shipped in Rcpp package.
PS. If R was not available in global environment (such as built by ourselves), we need to modify 'Makefile' file by replacing 'R' command with its complete path (4 places).
cd ~/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.0/Rcpp/examples/ConvolveBenchmarks/ make R
Then type the following in an R session to see how it works. Note that we don't need to issue library(Rcpp) in R.
dyn.load("convolve3_cpp.so") x <- .Call("convolve3cpp", 1:3, 4:6) x # 4 13 28 27 18
If we have our own cpp file, we need to use the following way to create dynamic loaded library file. Note that the character (grave accent) ` is not (single quote)'. If you mistakenly use ', it won't work.
export PKG_CXXFLAGS=`Rscript -e "Rcpp:::CxxFlags()"` export PKG_LIBS=`Rscript -e "Rcpp:::LdFlags()"` R CMD SHLIB xxxx.cpp
Example 2. Use together with inline package
library(inline) src <-' Rcpp::NumericVector xa(a); Rcpp::NumericVector xb(b); int n_xa = xa.size(), n_xb = xb.size(); Rcpp::NumericVector xab(n_xa + n_xb - 1); for (int i = 0; i < n_xa; i++) for (int j = 0; j < n_xb; j++) xab[i + j] += xa[i] * xb[j]; return xab; ' fun <- cxxfunction(signature(a = "numeric", b = "numeric"), src, plugin = "Rcpp") fun(1:3, 1:4) # [1] 1 4 10 16 17 12
Example 3. Calling an R function
RcppParallel
caret
- http://topepo.github.io/caret/index.html & https://github.com/topepo/caret/
- https://www.r-project.org/conferences/useR-2013/Tutorials/kuhn/user_caret_2up.pdf
- https://github.com/cran/caret source code mirrored on github
- Cheatsheet https://www.rstudio.com/resources/cheatsheets/
Read/Write Excel files package
- http://www.milanor.net/blog/?p=779
- xlsx: depends on Java
- openxlsx: not depend on Java. Depend on zip application. On Windows, it seems to be OK without installing Rtools. But it can not read xls file; it works on xlsx file.
- readxl: it does not depend on anything although it can only read but not write Excel files. readxl webinar
- writexl package: zero dependency xlsx writer for R
Tested it on Ubuntu machine with R 3.1.3 using <BRCA.xls> file. Usage:
read_excel(path, sheet = 1, col_names = TRUE, col_types = NULL, na = "", skip = 0)
For the Chromosome column, integer values becomes strings (but converted to double, so 5 becomes 5.000000) or NA (empty on sheets).
> head(read_excel("~/Downloads/BRCA.xls", 4)[ , -9], 3) UniqueID (Double-click) CloneID UGCluster 1 HK1A1 21652 Hs.445981 2 HK1A2 22012 Hs.119177 3 HK1A4 22293 Hs.501376 Name Symbol EntrezID 1 Catenin (cadherin-associated protein), alpha 1, 102kDa CTNNA1 1495 2 ADP-ribosylation factor 3 ARF3 377 3 Uroporphyrinogen III synthase UROS 7390 Chromosome Cytoband ChimericClusterIDs Filter 1 5.000000 5q31.2 <NA> 1 2 12.000000 12q13 <NA> 1 3 <NA> 10q25.2-q26.3 <NA> 1
The hidden worksheets become visible (Not sure what are those first rows mean in the output).
> excel_sheets("~/Downloads/BRCA.xls") DEFINEDNAME: 21 00 00 01 0b 00 00 00 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 0d 3b 01 00 00 00 9a 0c 00 00 1a 00 DEFINEDNAME: 21 00 00 01 0b 00 00 00 04 00 00 00 00 00 00 0d 3b 03 00 00 00 9b 0c 00 00 0a 00 DEFINEDNAME: 21 00 00 01 0b 00 00 00 03 00 00 00 00 00 00 0d 3b 02 00 00 00 9a 0c 00 00 06 00 [1] "Experiment descriptors" "Filtered log ratio" "Gene identifiers" [4] "Gene annotations" "CollateInfo" "GeneSubsets" [7] "GeneSubsetsTemp"
The Chinese character works too.
> read_excel("~/Downloads/testChinese.xlsx", 1) 中文 B C 1 a b c 2 1 2 3
readr
Compared to base equivalents like read.csv(), readr is much faster and gives more convenient output: it never converts strings to factors, can parse date/times, and it doesn’t munge the column names.
1.0.0 released.
The read_csv() function from the readr package is as fast as fread() function from data.table package. For files beyond 100MB in size fread() and read_csv() can be expected to be around 5 times faster than read.csv(). See 5.3 of Efficient R Programming book.
Note that fread() can read-n a selection of the columns.
ggplot2
Books
- R Graphics Cookbook by Winston Chang. Lots of recipes. For example, the Axes chapter talks how to set/hide tick marks.
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to Ggplot2 in R
- ggplot2 book and its source code. Before I build the (pdf version) of the book, I need to follow this suggestion by running the following in R before calling make.
- Data Visualization for Social Science
devtools::install_github("hadley/oldbookdown")
- R Graph Essentials Essentials by David Lillis. Chapters 3 and 4.
Some examples:
- Top 50 ggplot2 Visualizations - The Master List
- http://blog.diegovalle.net/2015/01/the-74-most-violent-cities-in-mexico.html
- R Graph Catalog
Introduction
Examples from 'R for Data Science' book - Aesthetic mappings
ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) # template ggplot(data = <DATA>) + <GEOM_FUNCTION>(mapping = aes(<MAPPINGS>)) # add another variable through color, size, alpha or shape ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy, color = class)) ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy, size = class)) ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy, alpha = class)) ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy, shape = class)) ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy), color = "blue") # add another variable through facets ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) + facet_wrap(~ class, nrow = 2) # add another 2 variables through facets ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) + facet_grid(drv ~ cyl)
Examples from 'R for Data Science' book - Geometric objects
# Points ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) # Smoothed ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_smooth(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) # Points + smoother ggplot(data = mpg) + geom_point(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) + geom_smooth(mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) # Colored points + smoother ggplot(data = mpg, mapping = aes(x = displ, y = hwy)) + geom_point(mapping = aes(color = class)) + geom_smooth()
Examples from 'R for Data Science' book - Transformation
# y axis = counts # bar plot ggplot(data = diamonds) + geom_bar(mapping = aes(x = cut)) # Or ggplot(data = diamonds) + stat_count(mapping = aes(x = cut)) # y axis = proportion ggplot(data = diamonds) + geom_bar(mapping = aes(x = cut, y = ..prop.., group = 1)) # bar plot with 2 variables ggplot(data = diamonds) + geom_bar(mapping = aes(x = cut, fill = clarity))
ggthemr: Themes for ggplot2
ggedit – interactive ggplot aesthetic and theme editor
https://www.r-statistics.com/2016/11/ggedit-interactive-ggplot-aesthetic-and-theme-editor/
ggconf: Simpler Appearance Modification of 'ggplot2'
https://github.com/caprice-j/ggconf
Plotting individual observations and group means
https://drsimonj.svbtle.com/plotting-individual-observations-and-group-means-with-ggplot2
Colors
subplot
https://ikashnitsky.github.io/2017/subplots-in-maps/
Easy way to mix multiple graphs on the same page
http://www.sthda.com/english/wiki/ggplot2-easy-way-to-mix-multiple-graphs-on-the-same-page
Time series plot
How to make a line chart with ggplot2
Data Manipulation
- R for Data Science and tidyverse package (it is a collection of ggplot2, tibble, tidyr, readr, purrr & dplyr packages).
- tidyverse, among others, was used at Mining CRAN DESCRIPTION Files (tbl_df(), %>%, summarise(), count(), mutate(), arrange(), unite(), ggplot(), filter(), select(), ...). Note that there is a problem to reproduce the result. I need to run cran <- cran[, -14] to remove the MD5sum column.
- Compile R for Data Science to a PDF
- Data Wrangling with dplyr and tidyr Cheat Sheet
- Best packages for data manipulation in R. It demonstrates to perform the same tasks using data.table and dplyr packages. data.table is faster and it may be a go-to package when performance and memory are the constraints.
5 most useful data manipulation functions
- subset() for making subsets of data (natch)
- merge() for combining data sets in a smart and easy way
- melt()-reshape2 package for converting from wide to long data formats
- dcast()-reshape2 package for converting from long to wide data formats, and for making summary tables
- ddply()-plyr package for doing split-apply-combine operations, which covers a huge swath of the most tricky data operations
data.table
Fast aggregation of large data (e.g. 100GB in RAM or just several GB size file), fast ordered joins, fast add/modify/delete of columns by group using no copies at all, list columns and a fast file reader (fread).
Question: how to make use multicore with data.table package?
library(data.table) x <- fread("mylargefile.txt")
- Note that 'x[, 2] always return 2. If you want to do the thing you want, use x[, 2, with=FALSE] or x[, V2] where V2 is the header name. See the FAQ #1 in data.table.
- Understanding data.table Rolling Joins
- Intro to The data.table Package
- In the Introduction to data.table vignette, the data.table::order() function is SLOWER than base::order() from my Odroid xu4 (running Ubuntu 14.04.4 trusty on uSD)
odt = data.table(col=sample(1e7)) (t1 <- system.time(ans1 <- odt[base::order(col)])) ## uses order from base R # user system elapsed # 2.730 0.210 2.947 (t2 <- system.time(ans2 <- odt[order(col)])) ## uses data.table's order # user system elapsed # 2.830 0.215 3.052 (identical(ans1, ans2)) # [1] TRUE
dplyr, stringr, plyr packages
- Essential functions: 3 rows functions, 3 column functions and 1 mixed function.
select, mutate, rename +------------------+ filter + + arrange + + group_by + + + summarise + +------------------+
- These functions works on data frames and tibble objects.
head(iris %>% filter(Species == "setosa") %>% arrange(Sepal.Length))
- Data Transformation in the book R for Data Science. Five key functions in the dplyr package:
- Filter rows: filter()
- Arrange rows: arrange()
- Select columns: select()
- Add new variables: mutate()
- Grouped summaries: group_by() & summarise()
# filter jan1 <- filter(flights, month == 1, day == 1) filter(flights, month == 11 | month == 12) filter(flights, arr_delay <= 120, dep_delay <= 120) df <- tibble(x = c(1, NA, 3)) filter(df, x > 1) filter(df, is.na(x) | x > 1) # arrange arrange(flights, year, month, day) arrange(flights, desc(arr_delay)) # select select(flights, year, month, day) select(flights, year:day) select(flights, -(year:day)) # mutate flights_sml <- select(flights, year:day, ends_with("delay"), distance, air_time ) mutate(flights_sml, gain = arr_delay - dep_delay, speed = distance / air_time * 60 ) # if you only want to keep the new variables transmute(flights, gain = arr_delay - dep_delay, hours = air_time / 60, gain_per_hour = gain / hours ) # summarise() by_day <- group_by(flights, year, month, day) summarise(by_day, delay = mean(dep_delay, na.rm = TRUE)) # pipe. Note summarise() can return more than 1 variable. delays <- flights %>% group_by(dest) %>% summarise( count = n(), dist = mean(distance, na.rm = TRUE), delay = mean(arr_delay, na.rm = TRUE) ) %>% filter(count > 20, dest != "HNL") flights %>% group_by(year, month, day) %>% summarise(mean = mean(dep_delay, na.rm = TRUE))
- Videos
- Hands-on dplyr tutorial for faster data manipulation in R by Data School. At time 17:00, it compares the %>% operator, with() and aggregate() for finding group mean.
- https://youtu.be/aywFompr1F4 (shorter video) by Roger Peng
- https://youtu.be/8SGif63VW6E by Hadley Wickham
- Efficient R Programming
- Data wrangling: Transformation from R-exercises.
- Express Intro to dplyr by rollingyours.
- the dot.
- stringr and plyr A data.frame is pretty much a list of vectors, so we use plyr to apply over the list and stringr to search and replace in the vectors.
- https://randomjohn.github.io/r-maps-with-census-data/ dplyr and stringr are used
reshape
Data Shape Transformation With Reshape()
reshape2
Use acast() function in reshape2 package. It will convert data.frame used for analysis to a table-like data.frame good for display.
tidyr
An evolution of reshape2. It's designed specifically for data tidying (not general reshaping or aggregating) and works well with dplyr data pipelines.
- http://blog.rstudio.org/2014/07/22/introducing-tidyr/
- http://rpubs.com/seandavi/GEOMetadbSurvey2014
- http://timelyportfolio.github.io/rCharts_factor_analytics/factors_with_new_R.html
- tidyr vs reshape2
- Google: R tidyr
- vignette("tidy-data")
Make wide tables long with gather() (see 6.3.1 of Efficient R Programming)
library(tidyr) library(efficient) data(pew) # wide table dim(pew) # 18 x 10, (religion, '<$10k', '$10--20k', '$20--30k', ..., '>150k') pewt <- gather(data = pew, key = Income, value = Count, -religion) dim(pew) # 162 x 3, (religion, Income, Count) args(gather) # function(data, key, value, ..., na.rm = FALSE, convert = FALSE, factor_key = FALSE)
where the three arguments of gather() requires:
- data: a data frame in which column names will become row vaues
- key: the name of the categorical variable into which the column names in the original datasets are converted.
- value: the name of cell value columns
In this example, the 'religion' column will not be included (-religion).
magrittr
Instead of nested statements, it is using pipe operator %>%. So the code is easier to read. Impressive!
x %>% f(y) # f(x, y) x %>% f(z, .) # f(z, x) x %>% f(y) %>% g(z) # g(f(x, y), z) x %>% select(which(colSums(!is.na(.))>0)) # remove columns with all missing data x %>% select(which(colSums(!is.na(.))>0)) %>% filter((rowSums(!is.na(.))>0)) # remove all-NA columns _and_ rows
iris$Species iris[["Species"]] iris %>% `[[`("Species") iris %>% `[[`(5) iris %>% subset(select = "Species")
- Split-apply-combine: group + summarize + sort/arrange + top n. The following example is from Efficient R programming.
data(wb_ineq, package = "efficient") wb_ineq %>% filter(grepl("g", Country)) %>% group_by(Year) %>% summarise(gini = mean(gini, na.rm = TRUE)) %>% arrange(desc(gini)) %>% top_n(n = 5)
- http://rud.is/b/2015/02/04/a-step-to-the-right-in-r-assignments/
- http://rpubs.com/tjmahr/pipelines_2015
- http://danielmarcelino.com/i-loved-this-crosstable/
- http://moderndata.plot.ly/using-the-pipe-operator-in-r-with-plotly/
- Videos
# Examples from R for Data Science-Import, Tidy, Transform, Visualize, and Model diamonds <- ggplot2::diamonds diamonds2 <- diamonds %>% dplyr::mutate(price_per_carat = price / carat) pryr::object_size(diamonds) pryr::object_size(diamonds2) pryr::object_size(diamonds, diamonds2) rnorm(100) %>% matrix(ncol = 2) %>% plot() %>% str() rnorm(100) %>% matrix(ncol = 2) %T>% plot() %>% str() # 'tee' pipe # %T>% works like %>% except that it returns the lefthand side (rnorm(100) %>% matrix(ncol = 2)) # instead of the righthand side. # If a function does not have a data frame based api, you can use %$%. # It explodes out the variables in a data frame. mtcars %$% cor(disp, mpg) # For assignment, magrittr provides the %<>% operator mtcars <- mtcars %>% transform(cyl = cyl * 2) # can be simplified by mtcars %<>% transform(cyl = cyl * 2)
Upsides of using magrittr: no need to create intermediate objects, code is easy to read.
When not to use the pipe
- your pipes are longer than (say) 10 steps
- you have multiple inputs or outputs
- Functions that use the current environment: assign(), get(), load()
- Functions that use lazy evaluation: tryCatch(), try()
outer()
Genomic sequence
- chartr
> yourSeq <- "AAAACCCGGGTTTNNN" > chartr("ACGT", "TGCA", yourSeq) [1] "TTTTGGGCCCAAANNN"
Data Science
How to prepare data for collaboration
How to share data for collaboration. Especially Page 7 has some (raw data) variable coding guidelines.
- naming variables: using meaning variable names, no spacing in column header, avoiding separator (except an underscore)
- coding variables: be consistent, no spelling error
- date and time: YYYY-MM-DD (ISO 8601 standard). A gene symbol "Oct-4" will be interpreted as a date and reformatted in Excel.
- missing data: "NA". Not leave any cells blank.
- using a code book file (*.docx for example): any lengthy explanation about variables should be put here. See p5 for an example.
Five types of data:
- continuous
- oridinal
- categorical
- missing
- censored
Some extra from Data organization in spreadsheets
- No empty cells
- Put one thing in a cell
- Make a rectangle
- No calculation in the raw data files
- Create a data dictionary (same as code book)
Wrangling categorical data in R
https://peerj.com/preprints/3163.pdf
Some approaches:
- options(stringAsFactors=FALSE)
- Use the tidyverse package
Base R approach:
GSS <- read.csv("XXX.csv") GSS$BaseLaborStatus <- GSS$LaborStatus levels(GSS$BaseLaborStatus) summary(GSS$BaseLaborStatus) GSS$BaseLaborStatus <- as.character(GSS$BaseLaborStatus) GSS$BaseLaborStatus[GSS$BaseLaborStatus == "Temp not working"] <- "Temporarily not working" GSS$BaseLaborStatus[GSS$BaseLaborStatus == "Unempl, laid off"] <- "Unemployed, laid off" GSS$BaseLaborStatus[GSS$BaseLaborStatus == "Working fulltime"] <- "Working full time" GSS$BaseLaborStatus[GSS$BaseLaborStatus == "Working parttime"] <- "Working part time" GSS$BaseLaborStatus <- factor(GSS$BaseLaborStatus)
Tidyverse approach:
GSS <- GSS %>% mutate(tidyLaborStatus = recode(LaborStatus, `Temp not working` = "Temporarily not working", `Unempl, laid off` = "Unemployed, laid off", `Working fulltime` = "Working full time", `Working parttime ` = "Working part time"))
jpeg
If we want to create the image on this wiki left hand side panel, we can use the jpeg package to read an existing plot and then edit and save it.
We can also use the jpeg package to import and manipulate a jpg image. See Fun with Heatmaps and Plotly.
cairoDevice
PS. Not sure the advantage of functions in this package compared to R's functions (eg. Cairo_svg() vs svg()) or even Cairo package.
For ubuntu OS, we need to install 2 libraries and 1 R package RGtk2.
sudo apt-get install libgtk2.0-dev libcairo2-dev
On Windows OS, we may got the error: unable to load shared object 'C:/Program Files/R/R-3.0.2/library/cairoDevice/libs/x64/cairoDevice.dll' . We need to follow the instruction in here.
igraph
creating directed networks with igraph
Identifying dependencies of R functions and scripts
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8761857/identifying-dependencies-of-r-functions-and-scripts
library(mvbutils) foodweb(where = "package:batr") foodweb( find.funs("package:batr"), prune="survRiskPredict", lwd=2) foodweb( find.funs("package:batr"), prune="classPredict", lwd=2)
iterators
Iterator is useful over for-loop if the data is already a collection. It can be used to iterate over a vector, data frame, matrix, file
Iterator can be combined to use with foreach package http://www.exegetic.biz/blog/2013/11/iterators-in-r/ has more elaboration.
Colors
- http://www.bauer.uh.edu/parks/truecolor.htm Interactive RGB, Alpha and Color Picker
- http://deanattali.com/blog/colourpicker-package/ Not sure what it is doing
- How to Choose the Best Colors For Your Data Charts
- How to expand color palette with ggplot and RColorBrewer
- Colors in ggplot2
- Color names in R
colortools
Tools that allow users generate color schemes and palettes
colourpicker
A Colour Picker Tool for Shiny and for Selecting Colours in Plots
rex
Friendly Regular Expressions
formatR
The best strategy to avoid failure is to put comments in complete lines or after complete R expressions.
See also this discussion on stackoverflow talks about R code reformatting.
library(formatR) tidy_source("Input.R", file = "output.R", width.cutoff=70) tidy_source("clipboard") # default width is getOption("width") which is 127 in my case.
Some issues
- Comments appearing at the beginning of a line within a long complete statement. This will break tidy_source().
cat("abcd", # This is my comment "defg")
will result in
> tidy_source("clipboard") Error in base::parse(text = code, srcfile = NULL) : 3:1: unexpected string constant 2: invisible(".BeGiN_TiDy_IdEnTiFiEr_HaHaHa# This is my comment.HaHaHa_EnD_TiDy_IdEnTiFiEr") 3: "defg" ^
- Comments appearing at the end of a line within a long complete statement won't break tidy_source() but tidy_source() cannot re-locate/tidy the comma sign.
cat("abcd" ,"defg" # This is my comment ,"ghij")
will become
cat("abcd", "defg" # This is my comment , "ghij")
Still bad!!
- Comments appearing at the end of a line within a long complete statement breaks tidy_source() function. For example,
cat("</p>", "<HR SIZE=5 WIDTH=\"100%\" NOSHADE>", ifelse(codeSurv == 0,"<h3><a name='Genes'><b><u>Genes which are differentially expressed among classes:</u></b></a></h3>", #4/9/09 "<h3><a name='Genes'><b><u>Genes significantly associated with survival:</u></b></a></h3>"), file=ExternalFileName, sep="\n", append=T)
will result in
> tidy_source("clipboard", width.cutoff=70) Error in base::parse(text = code, srcfile = NULL) : 3:129: unexpected SPECIAL 2: "<HR SIZE=5 WIDTH=\"100%\" NOSHADE>" , 3: ifelse ( codeSurv == 0 , "<h3><a name='Genes'><b><u>Genes which are differentially expressed among classes:</u></b></a></h3>" , %InLiNe_IdEnTiFiEr%
- width.cutoff parameter is not always working. For example, there is no any change for the following snippet though I hope it will move the cat() to the next line.
if (codePF & !GlobalTest & !DoExactPermTest) cat(paste("Multivariate Permutations test was computed based on", NumPermutations, "random permutations"), "<BR>", " ", file = ExternalFileName, sep = "\n", append = T)
- It merges lines though I don't always want to do that. For example
cat("abcd" ,"defg" ,"ghij")
will become
cat("abcd", "defg", "ghij")
Download papers
biorxivr
Search and Download Papers from the bioRxiv Preprint Server
aRxiv
Interface to the arXiv API
pdftools
http://ropensci.org/blog/2016/03/01/pdftools-and-jeroen
Different ways of using R
dyn.load
Error: “not resolved from current namespace” error, when calling C routines from R
Solution: add getNativeSymbolInfo() around your C/Fortran symbols. Search Google:r dyn.load not resolved from current namespace
R call C/C++
Mainly talks about .C() and .Call().
- R-Extension manual of course.
- http://faculty.washington.edu/kenrice/sisg-adv/sisg-07.pdf
- http://www.stat.berkeley.edu/scf/paciorek-cppWorkshop.pdf (Very useful)
- http://www.stat.harvard.edu/ccr2005/
- http://mazamascience.com/WorkingWithData/?p=1099
R call Fortran 90
Embedding R
- See Writing for R Extensions Manual Chapter 8.
- Talk by Simon Urbanek in UseR 2004.
- Technical report by Friedrich Leisch in 2007.
- https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/attachments/20110729/b7d86ed7/attachment.pl
An very simple example (do not return from shell) from Writing R Extensions manual
The command-line R front-end, R_HOME/bin/exec/R, is one such example. Its source code is in file <src/main/Rmain.c>.
This example can be run by
R_HOME/bin/R CMD R_HOME/bin/exec/R
Note:
- R_HOME/bin/exec/R is the R binary. However, it couldn't be launched directly unless R_HOME and LD_LIBRARY_PATH are set up. Again, this is explained in Writing R Extension manual.
- R_HOME/bin/R is a shell-script front-end where users can invoke it. It sets up the environment for the executable. It can be copied to /usr/local/bin/R. When we run R_HOME/bin/R, it actually runs R_HOME/bin/R CMD R_HOME/bin/exec/R (see line 259 of R_HOME/bin/R as in R 3.0.2) so we know the important role of R_HOME/bin/exec/R.
More examples of embedding can be found in tests/Embedding directory. Read <index.html> for more information about these test examples.
An example from Bioconductor workshop
- What is covered in this section is different from Create and use a standalone Rmath library.
- Use eval() function. See R-Ext 8.1 and 8.2 and 5.11.
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2463437/r-from-c-simplest-possible-helloworld (obtained from searching R_tryEval on google)
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7457635/calling-r-function-from-c
Example: Create <embed.c> file
#include <Rembedded.h> #include <Rdefines.h> static void doSplinesExample(); int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { Rf_initEmbeddedR(argc, argv); doSplinesExample(); Rf_endEmbeddedR(0); return 0; } static void doSplinesExample() { SEXP e, result; int errorOccurred; // create and evaluate 'library(splines)' PROTECT(e = lang2(install("library"), mkString("splines"))); R_tryEval(e, R_GlobalEnv, &errorOccurred); if (errorOccurred) { // handle error } UNPROTECT(1); // 'options(FALSE)' ... PROTECT(e = lang2(install("options"), ScalarLogical(0))); // ... modified to 'options(example.ask=FALSE)' (this is obscure) SET_TAG(CDR(e), install("example.ask")); R_tryEval(e, R_GlobalEnv, NULL); UNPROTECT(1); // 'example("ns")' PROTECT(e = lang2(install("example"), mkString("ns"))); R_tryEval(e, R_GlobalEnv, &errorOccurred); UNPROTECT(1); }
Then build the executable. Note that I don't need to create R_HOME variable.
cd tar xzvf cd R-3.0.1 ./configure --enable-R-shlib make cd tests/Embedding make ~/R-3.0.1/bin/R CMD ./Rtest nano embed.c # Using a single line will give an error and cannot not show the real problem. # ../../bin/R CMD gcc -I../../include -L../../lib -lR embed.c # A better way is to run compile and link separately gcc -I../../include -c embed.c gcc -o embed embed.o -L../../lib -lR -lRblas ../../bin/R CMD ./embed
Note that if we want to call the executable file ./embed directly, we shall set up R environment by specifying R_HOME variable and including the directories used in linking R in LD_LIBRARY_PATH. This is based on the inform provided by Writing R Extensions.
export R_HOME=/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2 export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/lib ./embed # No need to include R CMD in front.
Question: Create a data frame in C? Answer: Use data.frame() via an eval() call from C. Or see the code is stats/src/model.c, as part of model.frame.default. Or using Rcpp as here.
Reference http://bioconductor.org/help/course-materials/2012/Seattle-Oct-2012/AdvancedR.pdf
Create a Simple Socket Server in R
This example is coming from this paper.
Create an R function
simpleServer <- function(port=6543) { sock <- socketConnection ( port=port , server=TRUE) on.exit(close( sock )) cat("\nWelcome to R!\nR>" ,file=sock ) while(( line <- readLines ( sock , n=1)) != "quit") { cat(paste("socket >" , line , "\n")) out<- capture.output (try(eval(parse(text=line )))) writeLines ( out , con=sock ) cat("\nR> " ,file =sock ) } }
Then run simpleServer(). Open another terminal and try to communicate with the server
$ telnet localhost 6543 Trying 127.0.0.1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. Welcome to R! R> summary(iris[, 3:5]) Petal.Length Petal.Width Species Min. :1.000 Min. :0.100 setosa :50 1st Qu.:1.600 1st Qu.:0.300 versicolor:50 Median :4.350 Median :1.300 virginica :50 Mean :3.758 Mean :1.199 3rd Qu.:5.100 3rd Qu.:1.800 Max. :6.900 Max. :2.500 R> quit Connection closed by foreign host.
Rserve
Note the way of launching Rserve is like the way we launch C program when R was embedded in C. See Call R from C/C++ or Example from Bioconductor workshop.
See my Rserve page.
(Commercial) StatconnDcom
R.NET
RJava
Terminal
# jdk 7 sudo apt-get install openjdk-7-* update-alternatives --config java # oracle jdk 8 sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:webupd8team/java sudo apt-get update echo debconf shared/accepted-oracle-license-v1-1 select true | sudo debconf-set-selections echo debconf shared/accepted-oracle-license-v1-1 seen true | sudo debconf-set-selections sudo apt-get -y install openjdk-8-jdk
and then run the following (thanks to http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12872699/error-unable-to-load-installed-packages-just-now) to fix an error: libjvm.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory.
- Create the file /etc/ld.so.conf.d/java.conf with the following entries:
/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle/jre/lib/amd64 /usr/lib/jvm/java-8-oracle/jre/lib/amd64/server
- And then run sudo ldconfig
Now go back to R
install.packages("rJava")
Done!
RCaller
RApache
littler
http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/code/littler.html
Difference between Rscript and littler
RInside: Embed R in C++
See RInside
(From RInside documentation) The RInside package makes it easier to embed R in your C++ applications. There is no code you would execute directly from the R environment. Rather, you write C++ programs that embed R which is illustrated by some the included examples.
The included examples are armadillo, eigen, mpi, qt, standard, threads and wt.
To run 'make' when we don't have a global R, we should modify the file <Makefile>. Also if we just want to create one executable file, we can do, for example, 'make rinside_sample1'.
To run any executable program, we need to specify LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable, something like
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/lib
The real build process looks like (check <Makefile> for completeness)
g++ -I/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/include \ -I/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/library/Rcpp/include \ -I/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/library/RInside/include -g -O2 -Wall \ -I/usr/local/include \ rinside_sample0.cpp \ -L/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/lib -lR -lRblas -lRlapack \ -L/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/library/Rcpp/lib -lRcpp \ -Wl,-rpath,/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/library/Rcpp/lib \ -L/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/library/RInside/lib -lRInside \ -Wl,-rpath,/home/brb/Downloads/R-3.0.2/library/RInside/lib \ -o rinside_sample0
Hello World example of embedding R in C++.
#include <RInside.h> // for the embedded R via RInside int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { RInside R(argc, argv); // create an embedded R instance R["txt"] = "Hello, world!\n"; // assign a char* (string) to 'txt' R.parseEvalQ("cat(txt)"); // eval the init string, ignoring any returns exit(0); }
The above can be compared to the Hello world example in Qt.
#include <QApplication.h> #include <QPushButton.h> int main( int argc, char **argv ) { QApplication app( argc, argv ); QPushButton hello( "Hello world!", 0 ); hello.resize( 100, 30 ); app.setMainWidget( &hello ); hello.show(); return app.exec(); }
RFortran
RFortran is an open source project with the following aim:
To provide an easy to use Fortran software library that enables Fortran programs to transfer data and commands to and from R.
It works only on Windows platform with Microsoft Visual Studio installed:(
Call R from other languages
JRI
ryp2
http://rpy.sourceforge.net/rpy2.html
Create a standalone Rmath library
R has many math and statistical functions. We can easily use these functions in our C/C++/Fortran. The definite guide of doing this is on Chapter 9 "The standalone Rmath library" of R-admin manual.
Here is my experience based on R 3.0.2 on Windows OS.
Create a static library <libRmath.a> and a dynamic library <Rmath.dll>
Suppose we have downloaded R source code and build R from its source. See Build_R_from_its_source. Then the following 2 lines will generate files <libRmath.a> and <Rmath.dll> under C:\R\R-3.0.2\src\nmath\standalone directory.
cd C:\R\R-3.0.2\src\nmath\standalone make -f Makefile.win
Use Rmath library in our code
set CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH=C:\R\R-3.0.2\src\include set LIBRARY_PATH=C:\R\R-3.0.2\src\nmath\standalone # It is not LD_LIBRARY_PATH in above. # Created <RmathEx1.cpp> from the book "Statistical Computing in C++ and R" web site # http://math.la.asu.edu/~eubank/CandR/ch4Code.cpp # It is OK to save the cpp file under any directory. # Force to link against the static library <libRmath.a> g++ RmathEx1.cpp -lRmath -lm -o RmathEx1.exe # OR g++ RmathEx1.cpp -Wl,-Bstatic -lRmath -lm -o RmathEx1.exe # Force to link against dynamic library <Rmath.dll> g++ RmathEx1.cpp Rmath.dll -lm -o RmathEx1Dll.exe
Test the executable program. Note that the executable program RmathEx1.exe can be transferred to and run in another computer without R installed. Isn't it cool!
c:\R>RmathEx1 Enter a argument for the normal cdf: 1 Enter a argument for the chi-squared cdf: 1 Prob(Z <= 1) = 0.841345 Prob(Chi^2 <= 1)= 0.682689
Below is the cpp program <RmathEx1.cpp>.
//RmathEx1.cpp #define MATHLIB_STANDALONE #include <iostream> #include "Rmath.h" using std::cout; using std::cin; using std::endl; int main() { double x1, x2; cout << "Enter a argument for the normal cdf:" << endl; cin >> x1; cout << "Enter a argument for the chi-squared cdf:" << endl; cin >> x2; cout << "Prob(Z <= " << x1 << ") = " << pnorm(x1, 0, 1, 1, 0) << endl; cout << "Prob(Chi^2 <= " << x2 << ")= " << pchisq(x2, 1, 1, 0) << endl; return 0; }
Calling R.dll directly
See Chapter 8.2.2 of R Extensions. This is related to embedding R under Windows. The file <R.dll> on Windows is like <libR.so> on Linux.
bookdown.org
The website is full of open-source books written with R markdown.
- Announce bookdown
- bookdown package: Authoring Books and Technical Documents with R Markdown
- Compile R for Data Science to a PDF
Writing a R book and self-publishing it in Amazon
https://msperlin.github.io/2017-02-16-Writing-a-book/
Scheduling R Markdown Reports via Email
http://www.analyticsforfun.com/2016/01/scheduling-r-markdown-reports-via-email.html
Create presentation file (beamer)
- http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/beamer_presentation_format.html
- http://www.theresearchkitchen.com/archives/1017 (markdown and presentation files)
- http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/
- Create Rmd file first in Rstudio by File -> R markdown. Select Presentation > choose pdf (beamer) as output format.
- Edit the template created by RStudio.
- Click 'Knit pdf' button (Ctrl+Shift+k) to create/display the pdf file.
An example of Rmd is
--- title: "My Example" author: You Know Me date: Dec 32, 2014 output: beamer_presentation --- ## R Markdown This is an R Markdown presentation. Markdown is a simple formatting syntax for authoring HTML, PDF, and MS Word documents. For more details on using R Markdown see <http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com>. When you click the **Knit** button a document will be generated that includes both content as well as the output of any embedded R code chunks within the document. ## Slide with Bullets - Bullet 1 - Bullet 2 - Bullet 3. Mean is $\frac{1}{n} \sum_{i=1}^n x_i$. $$ \mu = \frac{1}{n} \sum_{i=1}^n x_i $$ ## New slide ![picture of BDGE](/home/brb/Pictures/BDGEFinished.png) ## Slide with R Code and Output ```{r} summary(cars) ``` ## Slide with Plot ```{r, echo=FALSE} plot(cars) ```
Create HTML report
ReportingTools (Jason Hackney) from Bioconductor.
htmlTable package
The htmlTable package is intended for generating tables using HTML formatting. This format is compatible with Markdown when used for HTML-output. The most basic table can easily be created by just passing a matrix or a data.frame to the htmlTable-function.
- http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/htmlTable/vignettes/general.html
- http://gforge.se/2014/01/fast-track-publishing-using-knitr-part-iv/
formattable
http://www.magesblog.com/2016/01/formatting-table-output-in-r.html
htmltab package
This package is NOT used to CREATE html report but EXTRACT html table.
ztable package
Makes zebra-striped tables (tables with alternating row colors) in LaTeX and HTML formats easily from a data.frame, matrix, lm, aov, anova, glm or coxph objects.
Create academic report
reports package in CRAN and in github repository. The youtube video gives an overview of the package.
Create pdf and epub files
# Idea: # knitr pdflatex # rnw -------> tex ----------> pdf library(knitr) knit("example.rnw") # create example.tex file
- A very simple example <002-minimal.Rnw> from yihui.name works fine on linux.
git clone https://github.com/yihui/knitr-examples.git
- <knitr-minimal.Rnw>. I have no problem to create pdf file on Windows but still cannot generate pdf on Linux from tex file. Some people suggested to run sudo apt-get install texlive-fonts-recommended to install missing fonts. It works!
To see a real example, check out DESeq2 package (inst/doc subdirectory). In addition to DESeq2, I also need to install DESeq, BiocStyle, airway, vsn, gplots, and pasilla packages from Bioconductor. Note that, it is best to use sudo/admin account to install packages.
Or starts with markdown file. Download the example <001-minimal.Rmd> and remove the last line of getting png file from internet.
# Idea: # knitr pandoc # rmd -------> md ----------> pdf git clone https://github.com/yihui/knitr-examples.git cd knitr-examples R -e "library(knitr); knit('001-minimal.Rmd')" pandoc 001-minimal.md -o 001-minimal.pdf # require pdflatex to be installed !!
To create an epub file (not success yet on Windows OS, missing figures on Linux OS)
# Idea: # knitr pandoc # rnw -------> tex ----------> markdown or epub library(knitr) knit("DESeq2.Rnw") # create DESeq2.tex system("pandoc -f latex -t markdown -o DESeq2.md DESeq2.tex")
## Windows OS, epub cannot be built pandoc: Error: "source" (line 41, column 7): unexpected "k" expecting "{document}" ## Linux OS, epub missing figures and R codes. ## First install texlive base and extra packages ## sudo apt-get install texlive-latex-base texlive-latex-extra pandoc: Could not find media `figure/SchwederSpjotvoll-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/sortedP-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/figHeatmap2c-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/figHeatmap2b-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/figHeatmap2a-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/plotCountsAdv-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/plotCounts-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/MA-1', skipping... pandoc: Could not find media `figure/MANoPrior-1', skipping...
The problems are at least
- figures need to be generated under the same directory as the source code
- figures cannot be in the format of pdf (DESeq2 generates both pdf and png files format)
- missing R codes
Convert tex to epub
Create Word report
knitr + pandoc
- http://www.r-statistics.com/2013/03/write-ms-word-document-using-r-with-as-little-overhead-as-possible/
- http://www.carlboettiger.info/2012/04/07/writing-reproducibly-in-the-open-with-knitr.html
- http://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/articles_docx.html
It is better to create rmd file in RStudio. Rstudio provides a template for rmd file and it also provides a quick reference to R markdown language.
# Idea: # knitr pandoc # rmd -------> md --------> docx library(knitr) knit2html("example.rmd") #Create md and html files
and then
FILE <- "example" system(paste0("pandoc -o ", FILE, ".docx ", FILE, ".md"))
Note. For example reason, if I play around the above 2 commands for several times, the knit2html() does not work well. However, if I click 'Knit HTML' button on the RStudio, it then works again.
Another way is
library(pander) name = "demo" knit(paste0(name, ".Rmd"), encoding = "utf-8") Pandoc.brew(file = paste0(name, ".md"), output = paste0(-name, "docx"), convert = "docx")
Note that once we have used knitr command to create a md file, we can use pandoc shell command to convert it to different formats:
- A pdf file: pandoc -s report.md -t latex -o report.pdf
- A html file: pandoc -s report.md -o report.html (with the -c flag html files can be added easily)
- Openoffice: pandoc report.md -o report.odt
- Word docx: pandoc report.md -o report.docx
We can also create the epub file for reading on Kobo ereader. For example, download this file and save it as example.Rmd. I need to remove the line containing the link to http://i.imgur.com/RVNmr.jpg since it creates an error when I run pandoc (not sure if it is the pandoc version I have is too old). Now we just run these 2 lines to get the epub file. Amazing!
knit("example.Rmd") pandoc("example.md", format="epub")
PS. If we don't remove the link, we will get an error message (pandoc 1.10.1 on Windows 7)
> pandoc("Rmd_to_Epub.md", format="epub") executing pandoc -f markdown -t epub -o Rmd_to_Epub.epub "Rmd_to_Epub.utf8md" pandoc.exe: .\.\http://i.imgur.com/RVNmr.jpg: openBinaryFile: invalid argument (Invalid argument) Error in (function (input, format, ext, cfg) : conversion failed In addition: Warning message: running command 'pandoc -f markdown -t epub -o Rmd_to_Epub.epub "Rmd_to_Epub.utf8md"' had status 1
pander
Try pandoc[1] with a minimal reproducible example, you might give a try to my "pander" package [2] too:
library(pander) Pandoc.brew(system.file('examples/minimal.brew', package='pander'), output = tempfile(), convert = 'docx')
Where the content of the "minimal.brew" file is something you might have got used to with Sweave - although it's using "brew" syntax instead. See the examples of pander [3] for more details. Please note that pandoc should be installed first, which is pretty easy on Windows.
- http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/
- http://rapporter.github.com/pander/
- http://rapporter.github.com/pander/#examples
R2wd
Use R2wd package. However, only 32-bit R is allowed and sometimes it can not produce all 'table's.
> library(R2wd) > wdGet() Loading required package: rcom Loading required package: rscproxy rcom requires a current version of statconnDCOM installed. To install statconnDCOM type installstatconnDCOM() This will download and install the current version of statconnDCOM You will need a working Internet connection because installation needs to download a file. Error in if (wdapp[["Documents"]][["Count"]] == 0) wdapp[["Documents"]]$Add() : argument is of length zero
The solution is to launch 32-bit R instead of 64-bit R since statconnDCOM does not support 64-bit R.
Convert from pdf to word
The best rendering of advanced tables is done by converting from pdf to Word. See http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/wiki/Main/SweaveConvert
rtf
Use rtf package for Rich Text Format (RTF) Output.
xtable
Package xtable will produce html output. If you save the file and then open it with Word, you will get serviceable results. I've had better luck copying the output from xtable and pasting it into Excel.
ReporteRs
Microsoft Word, Microsoft Powerpoint and HTML documents generation from R. The source code is hosted on https://github.com/davidgohel/ReporteRs
R Graphs Gallery
- Romain François
- R Graph Catalog written using R + Shiny. The source code is available on Github.
- Forest plot
COM client or server
Client
RDCOMClient where excel.link depends on it.
Server
Use R under proxy
http://support.rstudio.org/help/kb/faq/configuring-r-to-use-an-http-proxy
What is the best place to save Rconsole on Windows platform
Put it in C:/Users/USERNAME/Documents folder so no matter how R was upgraded/downgraded, it always find my preference.
RStudio
- Github
- Installing RStudio (1.0.44) on Ubuntu will not install Java even the source code contains 37.5% Java??
- Preview
Launch RStudio
If multiple versions of R was detected, Rstudio can not be launched successfully. A java-like clock will be spinning without a stop. The trick is to click Ctrl key and click the Rstudio at the same time. After done that, it will show up a selection of R to choose from.
Create .Rproj file
If you have an existing package that doesn't have an .Rproj file, you can use devtools::use_rstudio("path/to/package") to add it.
With an RStudio project file, you can
- Restore .RData into workspace at startup
- Save workspace to .RData on exit
- Always save history (even if no saving .RData)
- etc
package search
https://github.com/RhoInc/CRANsearcher
Git
(Video) Happy Git and Gihub for the useR – Tutorial
Visual Studio
R and Python support now built in to Visual Studio 2017
List files using regular expression
- Extension
list.files(pattern = "\\.txt$")
where the dot (.) is a metacharacter. It is used to refer to any character.
- Start with
list.files(pattern = "^Something")
Using Sys.glob()"' as
> Sys.glob("~/Downloads/*.txt") [1] "/home/brb/Downloads/ip.txt" "/home/brb/Downloads/valgrind.txt"
Hidden tool: rsync in Rtools
c:\Rtools\bin>rsync -avz "/cygdrive/c/users/limingc/Downloads/a.exe" "/cygdrive/c/users/limingc/Documents/" sending incremental file list a.exe sent 323142 bytes received 31 bytes 646346.00 bytes/sec total size is 1198416 speedup is 3.71 c:\Rtools\bin>
And rsync works best when we need to sync folder.
c:\Rtools\bin>rsync -avz "/cygdrive/c/users/limingc/Downloads/binary" "/cygdrive/c/users/limingc/Documents/" sending incremental file list binary/ binary/Eula.txt binary/cherrytree.lnk binary/depends64.chm binary/depends64.dll binary/depends64.exe binary/mtputty.exe binary/procexp.chm binary/procexp.exe binary/pscp.exe binary/putty.exe binary/sqlite3.exe binary/wget.exe sent 4115294 bytes received 244 bytes 1175868.00 bytes/sec total size is 8036311 speedup is 1.95 c:\Rtools\bin>rm c:\users\limingc\Documents\binary\procexp.exe cygwin warning: MS-DOS style path detected: c:\users\limingc\Documents\binary\procexp.exe Preferred POSIX equivalent is: /cygdrive/c/users/limingc/Documents/binary/procexp.exe CYGWIN environment variable option "nodosfilewarning" turns off this warning. Consult the user's guide for more details about POSIX paths: http://cygwin.com/cygwin-ug-net/using.html#using-pathnames c:\Rtools\bin>rsync -avz "/cygdrive/c/users/limingc/Downloads/binary" "/cygdrive/c/users/limingc/Documents/" sending incremental file list binary/ binary/procexp.exe sent 1767277 bytes received 35 bytes 3534624.00 bytes/sec total size is 8036311 speedup is 4.55 c:\Rtools\bin>
Unforunately, if the destination is a network drive, I could get a permission denied (13) error. See also http://superuser.com/questions/69620/rsync-file-permissions-on-windows
Install rgdal package (geospatial Data) on ubuntu
Terminal
sudo apt-get install libgdal1-dev libproj-dev
R
install.packages("rgdal")
Set up Emacs on Windows
Edit the file C:\Program Files\GNU Emacs 23.2\site-lisp\site-start.el with something like
(setq-default inferior-R-program-name "c:/program files/r/r-2.15.2/bin/i386/rterm.exe")
Database
A modern database interface for R
RSQLite
- https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/RSQLite/vignettes/RSQLite.html
- https://github.com/rstats-db/RSQLite
Creating a new database:
library(DBI) mydb <- dbConnect(RSQLite::SQLite(), "my-db.sqlite") dbDisconnect(mydb) unlink("my-db.sqlite") # temporary database mydb <- dbConnect(RSQLite::SQLite(), "") dbDisconnect(mydb)
Loading data:
mydb <- dbConnect(RSQLite::SQLite(), "") dbWriteTable(mydb, "mtcars", mtcars) dbWriteTable(mydb, "iris", iris) dbListTables(mydb) dbListFields(con, "mtcars") dbReadTable(con, "mtcars")
Queries:
dbGetQuery(mydb, 'SELECT * FROM mtcars LIMIT 5') dbGetQuery(mydb, 'SELECT * FROM iris WHERE "Sepal.Length" < 4.6') dbGetQuery(mydb, 'SELECT * FROM iris WHERE "Sepal.Length" < :x', params = list(x = 4.6)) res <- dbSendQuery(con, "SELECT * FROM mtcars WHERE cyl = 4") dbFetch(res)
Batched queries:
dbClearResult(rs) rs <- dbSendQuery(mydb, 'SELECT * FROM mtcars') while (!dbHasCompleted(rs)) { df <- dbFetch(rs, n = 10) print(nrow(df)) } dbClearResult(rs)
Multiple parameterised queries:
rs <- dbSendQuery(mydb, 'SELECT * FROM iris WHERE "Sepal.Length" = :x') dbBind(rs, param = list(x = seq(4, 4.4, by = 0.1))) nrow(dbFetch(rs)) #> [1] 4 dbClearResult(rs)
Statements:
dbExecute(mydb, 'DELETE FROM iris WHERE "Sepal.Length" < 4') #> [1] 0 rs <- dbSendStatement(mydb, 'DELETE FROM iris WHERE "Sepal.Length" < :x') dbBind(rs, param = list(x = 4.5)) dbGetRowsAffected(rs) #> [1] 4 dbClearResult(rs)
sqldf
Manipulate R data frames using SQL. Depends on RSQLite. A use of gsub, reshape2 and sqldf with healthcare data
RPostgreSQL
RMySQL
MongoDB
- http://www.r-bloggers.com/r-and-mongodb/
- http://watson.nci.nih.gov/~sdavis/blog/rmongodb-using-R-with-mongo/
odbc
RODBC
DBI
dbplyr
- To use databases with dplyr, you need to first install dbplyr
- https://db.rstudio.com/dplyr/
- Five commonly used backends: RMySQL, RPostgreSQ, RSQLite, ODBC, bigrquery.
- http://www.datacarpentry.org/R-ecology-lesson/05-r-and-databases.html
Create a new SQLite database:
surveys <- read.csv("data/surveys.csv") plots <- read.csv("data/plots.csv") my_db_file <- "portal-database.sqlite" my_db <- src_sqlite(my_db_file, create = TRUE) copy_to(my_db, surveys) copy_to(my_db, plots) my_db
Connect to a database:
download.file(url = "https://ndownloader.figshare.com/files/2292171", destfile = "portal_mammals.sqlite", mode = "wb") library(dbplyr) library(dplyr) mammals <- src_sqlite("portal_mammals.sqlite")
Querying the database with the SQL syntax:
tbl(mammals, sql("SELECT year, species_id, plot_id FROM surveys"))
Querying the database with the dplyr syntax:
surveys <- tbl(mammals, "surveys") surveys %>% select(year, species_id, plot_id) head(surveys, n = 10) show_query(head(surveys, n = 10)) # show which SQL commands are actually sent to the database
Simple database queries:
surveys %>% filter(weight < 5) %>% select(species_id, sex, weight)
Laziness (instruct R to stop being lazy):
data_subset <- surveys %>% filter(weight < 5) %>% select(species_id, sex, weight) %>% collect()
Complex database queries:
plots <- tbl(mammals, "plots") plots # # The plot_id column features in the plots table surveys # The plot_id column also features in the surveys table # Join databases method 1 plots %>% filter(plot_id == 1) %>% inner_join(surveys) %>% collect()
Github
R source
https://github.com/wch/r-source/ Daily update, interesting, should be visited every day. Clicking 1000+ commits to look at daily changes.
If we are interested in a certain branch (say 3.2), look for R-3-2-branch.
R packages (only) source (metacran)
- https://github.com/cran/ by Gábor Csárdi, the author of igraph software.
Bioconductor packages source
Send local repository to Github in R by using reports package
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WdOI_-aZV0Y
My collection
- https://github.com/arraytools
- https://gist.github.com/4383351 heatmap using leukemia data
- https://gist.github.com/4382774 heatmap using sequential data
- https://gist.github.com/4484270 biocLite
How to download
Clone ~ Download.
- Command line
git clone https://gist.github.com/4484270.git
This will create a subdirectory called '4484270' with all cloned files there.
- Within R
library(devtools) source_gist("4484270")
or First download the json file from
https://api.github.com/users/MYUSERLOGIN/gists
and then
library(RJSONIO) x <- fromJSON("~/Downloads/gists.json") setwd("~/Downloads/") gist.id <- lapply(x, "[[", "id") lapply(gist.id, function(x){ cmd <- paste0("git clone https://gist.github.com/", x, ".git") system(cmd) })
Jekyll
An Easy Start with Jekyll, for R-Bloggers
Connect R with Arduino
- http://lamages.blogspot.com/2012/10/connecting-real-world-to-r-with-arduino.html
- http://jean-robert.github.io/2012/11/11/thermometer-R-using-Arduino-Java.html
- http://bio7.org/?p=2049
- http://www.rforge.net/Arduino/svn.html
Android App
- R Instructor $4.84
- Statistical Distribution (Not R related app)
Time series
Time series stock price plot
- http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2015/08/plotting-time-series-in-r.html (ggplot2, xts, dygraphs)
- https://timelyportfolio.github.io/rCharts_time_series/history.html
library(quantmod) getSymbols("AAPL") getSymbols("IBM") # similar to AAPL getSymbols("CSCO") # much smaller than AAPL, IBM getSymbols("DJI") # Dow Jones, huge chart_Series(Cl(AAPL), TA="add_TA(Cl(IBM), col='blue', on=1); add_TA(Cl(CSCO), col = 'green', on=1)", col='orange', subset = '2017::2017-08') tail(Cl(DJI))
Circular plot
- http://freakonometrics.hypotheses.org/20667 which uses https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/circlize/ circlize] package.
- https://www.biostars.org/p/17728/
- RCircos package from CRAN.
- OmicCircos from Bioconductor.
Word cloud
- Text mining and word cloud fundamentals in R : 5 simple steps you should know
- 7 Alternatives to Word Clouds for Visualizing Long Lists of Data
Venn Diagram
- limma http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/r/faq/venn.htm - only black and white?
- VennDiagram - input has to be the numbers instead of the original vector?
- http://manuals.bioinformatics.ucr.edu/home/R_BioCondManual#TOC-Venn-Diagrams and the R code or the Bioc package systemPipeR
# systemPipeR package method library(systemPipeR) setlist <- list(A=sample(letters, 18), B=sample(letters, 16), C=sample(letters, 20), D=sample(letters, 22), E=sample(letters, 18)) OLlist <- overLapper(setlist[1:3], type="vennsets") vennPlot(list(OLlist)) # R script source method source("http://faculty.ucr.edu/~tgirke/Documents/R_BioCond/My_R_Scripts/overLapper.R") setlist <- list(A=sample(letters, 18), B=sample(letters, 16), C=sample(letters, 20), D=sample(letters, 22), E=sample(letters, 18)) # or (obtained by dput(setlist)) setlist <- structure(list(A = c("o", "h", "u", "p", "i", "s", "a", "w", "b", "z", "n", "c", "k", "j", "y", "m", "t", "q"), B = c("h", "r", "x", "y", "b", "t", "d", "o", "m", "q", "g", "v", "c", "u", "f", "z"), C = c("b", "e", "t", "u", "s", "j", "o", "k", "d", "l", "g", "i", "w", "n", "p", "a", "y", "x", "m", "z"), D = c("f", "g", "b", "k", "j", "m", "e", "q", "i", "d", "o", "l", "c", "t", "x", "r", "s", "u", "w", "a", "z", "n"), E = c("u", "w", "o", "k", "n", "h", "p", "z", "l", "m", "r", "d", "q", "s", "x", "b", "v", "t"), F = c("o", "j", "r", "c", "l", "l", "u", "b", "f", "d", "u", "m", "y", "t", "y", "s", "a", "g", "t", "m", "x", "m" )), .Names = c("A", "B", "C", "D", "E", "F")) OLlist <- overLapper(setlist[1:3], type="vennsets") counts <- list(sapply(OLlist$Venn_List, length)) vennPlot(counts=counts)
Amazing plots
New R logo 2/11/2016
- http://rud.is/b/2016/02/11/plot-the-new-svg-r-logo-with-ggplot2/
- https://www.stat.auckland.ac.nz/~paul/Reports/Rlogo/Rlogo.html
library(sp) library(maptools) library(ggplot2) library(ggthemes) # rgeos requires the installation of GEOS from http://trac.osgeo.org/geos/ system("curl http://download.osgeo.org/geos/geos-3.5.0.tar.bz2 | tar jx") system("cd geos-3.5.0; ./configure; make; sudo make install") library(rgeos) r_wkt_gist_file <- "https://gist.githubusercontent.com/hrbrmstr/07d0ccf14c2ff109f55a/raw/db274a39b8f024468f8550d7aeaabb83c576f7ef/rlogo.wkt" if (!file.exists("rlogo.wkt")) download.file(r_wkt_gist_file, "rlogo.wkt") rlogo <- readWKT(paste0(readLines("rlogo.wkt", warn=FALSE))) # rgeos rlogo_shp <- SpatialPolygonsDataFrame(rlogo, data.frame(poly=c("halo", "r"))) # sp rlogo_poly <- fortify(rlogo_shp, region="poly") # ggplot2 ggplot(rlogo_poly) + geom_polygon(aes(x=long, y=lat, group=id, fill=id)) + scale_fill_manual(values=c(halo="#b8babf", r="#1e63b5")) + coord_equal() + theme_map() + theme(legend.position="none")
3D plot
Using persp function to create the following plot.
### Random pattern # Create matrix with random values with dimension of final grid rand <- rnorm(441, mean=0.3, sd=0.1) mat.rand <- matrix(rand, nrow=21) # Create another matrix for the colors. Start by making all cells green fill <- matrix("green3", nr = 21, nc = 21) # Change colors in each cell based on corresponding mat.rand value fcol <- fill fcol[] <- terrain.colors(40)[cut(mat.rand, stats::quantile(mat.rand, seq(0,1, len = 41), na.rm=T), include.lowest = TRUE)] # Create concave surface using expontential function x <- -10:10 y <- x^2 y <- as.matrix(y) y1 <- y for(i in 1:20){tmp <- cbind(y,y1); y1 <- tmp[,1]; y <- tmp;} mat <- tmp[1:21, 1:21] # Plot it up! persp(1:21, 1:21, t(mat)/10, theta = 90, phi = 35,col=fcol, scale = FALSE, axes = FALSE, box = FALSE) ### Organized pattern # Same as before rand <- rnorm(441, mean=0.3, sd=0.1) # Create concave surface using expontential function x <- -10:10 y <- x^2 y <- as.matrix(y) for(i in 1:20){tmp <- cbind(y,y); y1 <- tmp[,1]; y <- tmp;} mat <- tmp[1:21, 1:21] ###Organize rand by y and put into matrix form o <- order(rand,as.vector(mat)) o.tmp <- cbind(rand[o], rev(sort(as.vector(mat)))) mat.org <- matrix(o.tmp[,1], nrow=21) half.1 <- mat.org[,seq(1,21,2)] half.2 <- mat.org[,rev(seq(2,20,2))] full <- cbind(half.1, half.2) full <- t(full) # Again, create color matrix and populate using rand values zi <- full[-1, -1] + full[-1, -21] + full[-21,-1] + full[-21, -21] fill <- matrix("green3", nr = 20, nc = 20) fcol <- fill fcol[] <- terrain.colors(40)[cut(zi, stats::quantile(zi, seq(0,1, len = 41), na.rm=T), include.lowest = TRUE)] # Plot it up! persp(1:21, 1:21, t(mat)/10, theta = 90, phi = 35,col=t(fcol), scale = FALSE, axes = FALSE, box = FALSE)
Christmas tree
http://wiekvoet.blogspot.com/2014/12/merry-christmas.html
# http://blogs.sas.com/content/iml/2012/12/14/a-fractal-christmas-tree/ # Each row is a 2x2 linear transformation # Christmas tree L <- matrix( c(0.03, 0, 0 , 0.1, 0.85, 0.00, 0.00, 0.85, 0.8, 0.00, 0.00, 0.8, 0.2, -0.08, 0.15, 0.22, -0.2, 0.08, 0.15, 0.22, 0.25, -0.1, 0.12, 0.25, -0.2, 0.1, 0.12, 0.2), nrow=4) # ... and each row is a translation vector B <- matrix( c(0, 0, 0, 1.5, 0, 1.5, 0, 0.85, 0, 0.85, 0, 0.3, 0, 0.4), nrow=2) prob = c(0.02, 0.6,.08, 0.07, 0.07, 0.07, 0.07) # Iterate the discrete stochastic map N = 1e5 #5 # number of iterations x = matrix(NA,nrow=2,ncol=N) x[,1] = c(0,2) # initial point k <- sample(1:7,N,prob,replace=TRUE) # values 1-7 for (i in 2:N) x[,i] = crossprod(matrix(L[,k[i]],nrow=2),x[,i-1]) + B[,k[i]] # iterate # Plot the iteration history png('card.png') par(bg='darkblue',mar=rep(0,4)) plot(x=x[1,],y=x[2,], col=grep('green',colors(),value=TRUE), axes=FALSE, cex=.1, xlab='', ylab='' )#,pch='.') bals <- sample(N,20) points(x=x[1,bals],y=x[2,bals]-.1, col=c('red','blue','yellow','orange'), cex=2, pch=19 ) text(x=-.7,y=8, labels='Merry', adj=c(.5,.5), srt=45, vfont=c('script','plain'), cex=3, col='gold' ) text(x=0.7,y=8, labels='Christmas', adj=c(.5,.5), srt=-45, vfont=c('script','plain'), cex=3, col='gold' )
Happy Thanksgiving
Happy Valentine's Day
https://rud.is/b/2017/02/14/geom%E2%9D%A4%EF%B8%8F/
treemap
Voronoi diagram
- https://www.stat.auckland.ac.nz/~paul/Reports/VoronoiTreemap/voronoiTreeMap.html
- http://letstalkdata.com/2014/05/creating-voronoi-diagrams-with-ggplot/
Silent Night
# https://aschinchon.wordpress.com/2014/03/13/the-lonely-acacia-is-rocked-by-the-wind-of-the-african-night/ depth <- 9 angle<-30 #Between branches division L <- 0.90 #Decreasing rate of branches by depth nstars <- 300 #Number of stars to draw mstars <- matrix(runif(2*nstars), ncol=2) branches <- rbind(c(1,0,0,abs(jitter(0)),1,jitter(5, amount = 5)), data.frame()) colnames(branches) <- c("depth", "x1", "y1", "x2", "y2", "inertia") for(i in 1:depth) { df <- branches[branches$depth==i,] for(j in 1:nrow(df)) { branches <- rbind(branches, c(df[j,1]+1, df[j,4], df[j,5], df[j,4]+L^(2*i+1)*sin(pi*(df[j,6]+angle)/180), df[j,5]+L^(2*i+1)*cos(pi*(df[j,6]+angle)/180), df[j,6]+angle+jitter(10, amount = 8))) branches <- rbind(branches, c(df[j,1]+1, df[j,4], df[j,5], df[j,4]+L^(2*i+1)*sin(pi*(df[j,6]-angle)/180), df[j,5]+L^(2*i+1)*cos(pi*(df[j,6]-angle)/180), df[j,6]-angle+jitter(10, amount = 8))) } } nodes <- rbind(as.matrix(branches[,2:3]), as.matrix(branches[,4:5])) png("image.png", width = 1200, height = 600) plot.new() par(mai = rep(0, 4), bg = "gray12") plot(nodes, type="n", xlim=c(-7, 3), ylim=c(0, 5)) for (i in 1:nrow(mstars)) { points(x=10*mstars[i,1]-7, y=5*mstars[i,2], col = "blue4", cex=.7, pch=16) points(x=10*mstars[i,1]-7, y=5*mstars[i,2], col = "blue", cex=.3, pch=16) points(x=10*mstars[i,1]-7, y=5*mstars[i,2], col = "white", cex=.1, pch=16) } # The moon points(x=-5, y=3.5, cex=40, pch=16, col="lightyellow") # The tree for (i in 1:nrow(branches)) {lines(x=branches[i,c(2,4)], y=branches[i,c(3,5)], col = paste("gray", as.character(sample(seq(from=50, to=round(50+5*branches[i,1]), by=1), 1)), sep = ""), lwd=(65/(1+3*branches[i,1])))} rm(branches) dev.off()
Google Analytics
GAR package
http://www.analyticsforfun.com/2015/10/query-your-google-analytics-data-with.html
Linear Programming
http://www.r-bloggers.com/modeling-and-solving-linear-programming-with-r-free-book/
Read rrd file
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RRDtool
- http://oss.oetiker.ch/rrdtool/
- https://github.com/pldimitrov/Rrd
- http://plamendimitrov.net/blog/2014/08/09/r-package-for-working-with-rrd-files/
Amazon Alexa
R and Singularity
https://www.rstudio.com/rviews/2017/03/29/r-and-singularity/
Teach kids about R with Minecraft
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2017/06/teach-kids-about-r-with-minecraft.html
Secure API keys
Securely store API keys in R scripts with the "secret" package
Vision and image recognition
- https://www.stoltzmaniac.com/google-vision-api-in-r-rooglevision/ Google vision API IN R] – RoogleVision
- Computer Vision Algorithms for R users and https://github.com/bnosac/image
Turn pictures into coloring pages
https://gist.github.com/jeroen/53a5f721cf81de2acba82ea47d0b19d0
R packages
R package management
- available.packages(); see packageStatus().
- download.packages()
- packageStatus(), update(), upgrade(). packageStatus() will return a list with two components:
- inst - a data frame with columns as the matrix returned by installed.packages plus "Status", a factor with levels c("ok", "upgrade"). Note: the manual does not mention "unavailable" case (but I do get it) in R 3.2.0?
- avail - a data frame with columns as the matrix returned by available.packages plus "Status", a factor with levels c("installed", "not installed", "unavailable"). Note: I don't get the "unavailable" case in R 3.2.0?
> x <- packageStatus() > names(x) [1] "inst" "avail" > dim(x[['inst']]) [1] 225 17 > x[['inst']][1:3, ] Package LibPath Version Priority Depends Imports acepack acepack C:/Program Files/R/R-3.1.2/library 1.3-3.3 <NA> <NA> <NA> adabag adabag C:/Program Files/R/R-3.1.2/library 4.0 <NA> rpart, mlbench, caret <NA> affxparser affxparser C:/Program Files/R/R-3.1.2/library 1.38.0 <NA> R (>= 2.6.0) <NA> LinkingTo Suggests Enhances acepack <NA> <NA> <NA> adabag <NA> <NA> <NA> affxparser <NA> R.oo (>= 1.18.0), R.utils (>= 1.32.4),\nAffymetrixDataTestFiles <NA> License License_is_FOSS License_restricts_use OS_type MD5sum NeedsCompilation Built acepack MIT + file LICENSE <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> yes 3.1.2 adabag GPL (>= 2) <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> no 3.1.2 affxparser LGPL (>= 2) <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> 3.1.1 Status acepack ok adabag ok affxparser unavailable > dim(x[['avail']]) [1] 6538 18 > x[['avail']][1:3, ] Package Version Priority Depends Imports LinkingTo A3 A3 0.9.2 <NA> R (>= 2.15.0), xtable, pbapply <NA> <NA> ABCExtremes ABCExtremes 1.0 <NA> SpatialExtremes, combinat <NA> <NA> ABCanalysis ABCanalysis 1.0.1 <NA> R (>= 2.10) Hmisc, plotrix <NA> Suggests Enhances License License_is_FOSS License_restricts_use OS_type Archs A3 randomForest, e1071 <NA> GPL (>= 2) <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> ABCExtremes <NA> <NA> GPL-2 <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> ABCanalysis <NA> <NA> GPL-3 <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> MD5sum NeedsCompilation File Repository Status A3 <NA> <NA> <NA> http://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/contrib/3.1 not installed ABCExtremes <NA> <NA> <NA> http://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/contrib/3.1 not installed ABCanalysis <NA> <NA> <NA> http://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/contrib/3.1 not installed
- packageVersion(), packageDescription()
- install.packages(), remove.packages().
- installed.packages(); see packageStatus().
- update.packages(), old.packages(), new.packages()
- setRepositories()
- contrib.url()
- chooseCRANmirror(), chooseBioCmirror()
- suppressForeignCheck()
install.packages()
By default, install.packages() will check versions and install uninstalled packages shown in 'Depends', 'Imports', and 'LinkingTo' fields. See R-exts manual.
If we want to install packages listed in 'Suggests' field, we should specify it explicitly by using dependencies argument:
install.packages(XXXX, dependencies = c("Depends", "Imports", "Suggests", "LinkingTo")) # OR install.packages(XXXX, dependencies = TRUE)
For example, if I use a plain install.packages() command to install downloader package
install.packages("downloader")
it will only install 'digest' and 'downloader' packages. If I use
install.packages("downloader", dependencies=TRUE)
it will also install 'testhat' package.
The install.packages function source code can be found in R -> src -> library -> utils -> R -> packages2.R file from Github repository (put 'install.packages' in the search box).
CRAN Package Depends on Bioconductor Package
For example, if I run install.packages("NanoStringNorm") to install the package from CRAN, I may get
ERROR: dependency ‘vsn’ is not available for package ‘NanoStringNorm’
This is because the NanoStringNorm package depends on the vsn package which is on Bioconductor.
One solution is to run
setRepositories(ind=1:2)
and then the install.packages() command. See this post.
This will also install the BiocInstaller package if it has not been installed before. See also Install Bioconductor Packages.
install a tar.gz from a local directory
R CMD INSTALL <package-name>.tar.gz
Or in R:
install.packages(<pathtopackage>, repos = NULL, type="source")
Query an R package installed locally
packageDescription("MASS") packageVersion("MASS")
Query an R package (from CRAN) basic information
packageStatus() # Summarize information about installed packages available.packages() # List Available Packages at CRAN-like Repositories
The available.packages() command is useful for understanding package dependency. Use setRepositories() or 'RGUI -> Packages -> select repositories' to select repositories and options()$repos to check or change the repositories.
Also the packageStatus() is another useful function for query how many packages are in the repositories, how many have been installed, and individual package status (installed or not, needs to be upgraded or not).
> options()$repos > packageStatus() Number of installed packages: ok upgrade unavailable C:/Program Files/R/R-3.0.1/library 110 0 1 Number of available packages (each package counted only once): installed not installed http://watson.nci.nih.gov/cran_mirror/bin/windows/contrib/3.0 76 4563 http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/RWin/bin/windows/contrib/3.0 0 5 http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/2.12/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.0 16 625 http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/2.12/data/annotation/bin/windows/contrib/3.0 4 686 > tmp <- available.packages() > str(tmp) chr [1:5975, 1:17] "A3" "ABCExtremes" "ABCp2" "ACCLMA" "ACD" "ACNE" "ADGofTest" "ADM3" "AER" ... - attr(*, "dimnames")=List of 2 ..$ : chr [1:5975] "A3" "ABCExtremes" "ABCp2" "ACCLMA" ... ..$ : chr [1:17] "Package" "Version" "Priority" "Depends" ... > tmp[1:3,] Package Version Priority Depends Imports LinkingTo Suggests A3 "A3" "0.9.2" NA "xtable, pbapply" NA NA "randomForest, e1071" ABCExtremes "ABCExtremes" "1.0" NA "SpatialExtremes, combinat" NA NA NA ABCp2 "ABCp2" "1.1" NA "MASS" NA NA NA Enhances License License_is_FOSS License_restricts_use OS_type Archs MD5sum NeedsCompilation File A3 NA "GPL (>= 2)" NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ABCExtremes NA "GPL-2" NA NA NA NA NA NA NA ABCp2 NA "GPL-2" NA NA NA NA NA NA NA Repository A3 "http://watson.nci.nih.gov/cran_mirror/bin/windows/contrib/3.0" ABCExtremes "http://watson.nci.nih.gov/cran_mirror/bin/windows/contrib/3.0" ABCp2 "http://watson.nci.nih.gov/cran_mirror/bin/windows/contrib/3.0"
And the following commands find which package depends on Rcpp and also which are from bioconductor repository.
> pkgName <- "Rcpp" > rownames(tmp)[grep(pkgName, tmp[,"Depends"])] > tmp[grep("Rcpp", tmp[,"Depends"]), "Depends"] > ind <- intersect(grep(pkgName, tmp[,"Depends"]), grep("bioconductor", tmp[, "Repository"])) > rownames(grep)[ind] NULL > rownames(tmp)[ind] [1] "ddgraph" "DESeq2" "GeneNetworkBuilder" "GOSemSim" "GRENITS" [6] "mosaics" "mzR" "pcaMethods" "Rdisop" "Risa" [11] "rTANDEM"
Analyzing data on CRAN packages
New undocumented function in R 3.4.0: tools::CRAN_package_db()
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2017/05/analyzing-data-on-cran-packages.html
Install personal R packages after upgrade R, .libPaths()
Scenario: We already have installed many R packages under R 3.1.X in the user's directory. Now we upgrade R to a new version (3.2.X). We like to have these packages available in R 3.2.X.
For Windows OS, refer to R for Windows FAQ
The follow method works on Linux and Windows.
Make sure only one instance of R is running
# Step 1. update R's built-in packages and install them on my personal directory update.packages(ask=FALSE, checkBuilt = TRUE, repos="http://cran.rstudio.com") # Step 2. update Bioconductor packages .libPaths() # The first one is my personal directory # [1] "/home/brb/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.2" # [2] "/usr/local/lib/R/site-library" # [3] "/usr/lib/R/site-library" # [4] "/usr/lib/R/library" Sys.getenv("R_LIBS_USER") # equivalent to .libPaths()[1] ul <- unlist(strsplit(Sys.getenv("R_LIBS_USER"), "/")) src <- file.path(paste(ul[1:(length(ul)-1)], collapse="/"), "3.1") des <- file.path(paste(ul[1:(length(ul)-1)], collapse="/"), "3.2") pkg <- dir(src, full.names = TRUE) if (!file.exists(des)) dir.create(des) # If 3.2 subdirectory does not exist yet! file.copy(pkg, des, overwrite=FALSE, recursive = TRUE) source("http://www.bioconductor.org/biocLite.R") biocLite(ask = FALSE)
From Robert Kabacoff (R in Action)
- If you have a customized Rprofile.site file (see appendix B), save a copy outside of R.
- Launch your current version of R and issue the following statements
oldip <- installed.packages()[,1] save(oldip, file="path/installedPackages.Rdata")
where path is a directory outside of R.
- Download and install the newer version of R.
- If you saved a customized version of the Rprofile.site file in step 1, copy it into the new installation.
- Launch the new version of R, and issue the following statements
load("path/installedPackages.Rdata") newip <- installed.packages()[,1] for(i in setdiff(oldip, newip)) install.packages(i)
where path is the location specified in step 2.
- Delete the old installation (optional).
This approach will install only packages that are available from the CRAN. It won’t find packages obtained from other locations. In fact, the process will display a list of packages that can’t be installed For example for packages obtained from Bioconductor, use the following method to update packages
source(http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R) biocLite(PKGNAME)
List vignettes from a package
vignette(package=PACKAGENAME)
List data from a package
data(package=PACKAGENAME)
List installed packages and versions
- http://heuristicandrew.blogspot.com/2015/06/list-of-user-installed-r-packages-and.html
- checkpoint package
ip <- as.data.frame(installed.packages()[,c(1,3:4)]) rownames(ip) <- NULL unique(ip$Priority) # [1] <NA> base recommended # Levels: base recommended ip <- ip[is.na(ip$Priority),1:2,drop=FALSE] print(ip, row.names=FALSE)
Query the names of outdated packages
psi <- packageStatus()$inst subset(psi, Status == "upgrade", drop = FALSE) # Package LibPath Version Priority Depends # RcppArmadillo RcppArmadillo C:/Users/brb/Documents/R/win-library/3.2 0.5.100.1.0 <NA> <NA> # Matrix Matrix C:/Program Files/R/R-3.2.0/library 1.2-0 recommended R (>= 2.15.2), methods # Imports LinkingTo Suggests # RcppArmadillo Rcpp (>= 0.11.0) Rcpp RUnit, Matrix, pkgKitten # Matrix graphics, grid, stats, utils, lattice <NA> expm, MASS # Enhances License License_is_FOSS License_restricts_use OS_type MD5sum # RcppArmadillo <NA> GPL (>= 2) <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> # Matrix MatrixModels, graph, SparseM, sfsmisc GPL (>= 2) <NA> <NA> <NA> <NA> # NeedsCompilation Built Status # RcppArmadillo yes 3.2.0 upgrade # Matrix yes 3.2.0 upgrade
The above output does not show the package version from the latest packages on CRAN. So the following snippet does that.
psi <- packageStatus()$inst pl <- unname(psi$Package[psi$Status == "upgrade"]) # List package names out <- cbind(subset(psi, Status == "upgrade")[, c("Package", "Version")], ap[match(pl, ap$Package), "Version"]) colnames(out)[2:3] <- c("OldVersion", "NewVersion") rownames(out) <- NULL out # Package OldVersion NewVersion # 1 RcppArmadillo 0.5.100.1.0 0.5.200.1.0 # 2 Matrix 1.2-0 1.2-1
To consider also the packages from Bioconductor, we have the following code. Note that "3.1" means the Bioconductor version and "3.2" is the R version. See Bioconductor release versions page.
psic <- packageStatus(repos = c(contrib.url(getOption("repos")), "http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2", "http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/data/annotation/bin/windows/contrib/3.2"))$inst subset(psic, Status == "upgrade", drop = FALSE) pl <- unname(psic$Package[psic$Status == "upgrade"]) # ap <- as.data.frame(available.packages()[, c(1,2,3)], stringsAsFactors = FALSE) ap <- as.data.frame(available.packages(c(contrib.url(getOption("repos")), "http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2", "http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/data/annotation/bin/windows/contrib/3.2"))[, c(1:3)], stringAsFactors = FALSE) out <- cbind(subset(psic, Status == "upgrade")[, c("Package", "Version")], ap[match(pl, ap$Package), "Version"]) colnames(out)[2:3] <- c("OldVersion", "NewVersion") rownames(out) <- NULL out # Package OldVersion NewVersion # 1 limma 3.24.5 3.24.9 # 2 RcppArmadillo 0.5.100.1.0 0.5.200.1.0 # 3 Matrix 1.2-0 1.2-1
Searching for packages in CRAN
Query top downloaded packages
- cranlogs package - Download Logs from the RStudio CRAN Mirror
- http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2015/06/working-with-the-rstudio-cran-logs.html
Would you like to use a personal library instead?
The problem can happen if the R was installed to the C:\Program Files\R folder by users but then some main packages want to be upgraded. R will always pops a message 'Would you like to use a personal library instead?'.
To suppress the message and use the personal library always,
- Run R as administrator. If you do that, main packages can be upgraded from C:\Program Files\R\R-X.Y.Z\library folder.
- Writable R package directory cannot be found and a this. A solution here is to change the security of the R library folder so the user has a full control on the folder.
- Does R run under Windows Vista/7/8/Server 2008? There are 3 ways to get around the issue.
- I don’t have permission to write to the R-3.3.2\library directory
Actually the following hints will help us to create a convenient function UpdateMainLibrary() which will install updated main packages in the user's Documents directory without a warning dialog.
- .libPaths() only returns 1 string "C:/Program Files/R/R-x.y.z/library" on the machines that does not have this problem
- .libPaths() returns two strings "C:/Users/USERNAME/Documents/R/win-library/x.y" & "C:/Program Files/R/R-x.y.z/library" on machines with the problem.
UpdateMainLibrary <- function() { # Update main/site packages # The function is used to fix the problem 'Would you like to use a personal library instead?' if (length(.libPaths()) == 1) return() ind_mloc <- grep("Program", .libPaths()) # main library e.g. 2 ind_ploc <- grep("Documents", .libPaths()) # personal library e.g. 1 if (length(ind_mloc) > 0L && length(ind_ploc) > 0L) # search outdated main packages old_mloc <- ! old.packages(.libPaths()[ind_mloc])[, "Package"] %in% installed.packages(.libPaths()[ind_ploc])[, "Package"] oldpac <- old.packages(.libPaths()[ind_mloc])[old_mloc, "Package"] if (length(oldpac) > 0L) install.packages(oldpac, .libPaths()[ind_ploc]) }
Warning: cannot remove prior installation of package
Instance 1.
# Install the latest hgu133plus2cdf package # Remove/Uninstall hgu133plus2.db package # Put/Install an old version of IRanges (eg version 1.18.2 while currently it is version 1.18.3) # Test on R 3.0.1 library(hgu133plus2cdf) # hgu133pluscdf does not depend or import IRanges source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R") biocLite("hgu133plus2.db", ask=FALSE) # hgu133plus2.db imports IRanges # Warning:cannot remove prior installation of package 'IRanges' # Open Windows Explorer and check IRanges folder. Only see libs subfolder.
Note:
- In the above example, all packages were installed under C:\Program Files\R\R-3.0.1\library\.
- In another instance where I cannot reproduce the problem, new R packages were installed under C:\Users\xxx\Documents\R\win-library\3.0\. The different thing is IRanges package CAN be updated but if I use packageVersion("IRanges") command in R, it still shows the old version.
- The above were tested on a desktop.
Instance 2.
# On a fresh R 3.2.0, I install Bioconductor's depPkgTools & lumi packages. Then I close R, re-open it, # and install depPkgTools package again. > source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R") Bioconductor version 3.1 (BiocInstaller 1.18.2), ?biocLite for help > biocLite("pkgDepTools") BioC_mirror: http://bioconductor.org Using Bioconductor version 3.1 (BiocInstaller 1.18.2), R version 3.2.0. Installing package(s) ‘pkgDepTools’ trying URL 'http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2/pkgDepTools_1.34.0.zip' Content type 'application/zip' length 390579 bytes (381 KB) downloaded 381 KB package ‘pkgDepTools’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked Warning: cannot remove prior installation of package ‘pkgDepTools’ The downloaded binary packages are in C:\Users\brb\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpYd2l7i\downloaded_packages > library(pkgDepTools) Error in library(pkgDepTools) : there is no package called ‘pkgDepTools’
The pkgDepTools library folder appears in C:\Users\brb\Documents\R\win-library\3.2, but it is empty. The weird thing is if I try the above steps again, I cannot reproduce the problem.
Warning: Unable to move temporary installation
The problem seems to happen only on virtual machines (Virtualbox).
- Warning: unable to move temporary installation `C:\Users\brb\Documents\R\win-library\3.0\fileed8270978f5\quadprog` to `C:\Users\brb\Documents\R\win-library\3.0\quadprog` when I try to run 'install.packages("forecast").
- Warning: unable to move temporary installation ‘C:\Users\brb\Documents\R\win-library\3.2\file5e0104b5b49\plyr’ to ‘C:\Users\brb\Documents\R\win-library\3.2\plyr’ when I try to run 'biocLite("lumi")'. The other dependency packages look fine although I am not sure if any unknown problem can happen (it does, see below).
Here is a note of my trouble shooting.
- If I try to ignore the warning and load the lumi package. I will get an error.
- If I try to run biocLite("lumi") again, it will only download & install lumi without checking missing 'plyr' package. Therefore, when I try to load the lumi package, it will give me an error again.
- Even I install the plyr package manually, library(lumi) gives another error - missing mclust package.
> biocLite("lumi") trying URL 'http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2/BiocInstaller_1.18.2.zip' Content type 'application/zip' length 114097 bytes (111 KB) downloaded 111 KB ... package ‘lumi’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked The downloaded binary packages are in C:\Users\brb\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpyUjsJD\downloaded_packages Old packages: 'BiocParallel', 'Biostrings', 'caret', 'DESeq2', 'gdata', 'GenomicFeatures', 'gplots', 'Hmisc', 'Rcpp', 'RcppArmadillo', 'rgl', 'stringr' Update all/some/none? [a/s/n]: a also installing the dependencies ‘Rsamtools’, ‘GenomicAlignments’, ‘plyr’, ‘rtracklayer’, ‘gridExtra’, ‘stringi’, ‘magrittr’ trying URL 'http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2/Rsamtools_1.20.1.zip' Content type 'application/zip' length 8138197 bytes (7.8 MB) downloaded 7.8 MB ... package ‘Rsamtools’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘GenomicAlignments’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘plyr’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked Warning: unable to move temporary installation ‘C:\Users\brb\Documents\R\win-library\3.2\file5e0104b5b49\plyr’ to ‘C:\Users\brb\Documents\R\win-library\3.2\plyr’ package ‘rtracklayer’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘gridExtra’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘stringi’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘magrittr’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘BiocParallel’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘Biostrings’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked Warning: cannot remove prior installation of package ‘Biostrings’ package ‘caret’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘DESeq2’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘gdata’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘GenomicFeatures’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘gplots’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘Hmisc’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘Rcpp’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘RcppArmadillo’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘rgl’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked package ‘stringr’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked The downloaded binary packages are in C:\Users\brb\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpyUjsJD\downloaded_packages > library(lumi) Error in loadNamespace(i, c(lib.loc, .libPaths()), versionCheck = vI[[i]]) : there is no package called ‘plyr’ Error: package or namespace load failed for ‘lumi’ > search() [1] ".GlobalEnv" "package:BiocInstaller" "package:Biobase" "package:BiocGenerics" "package:parallel" "package:stats" [7] "package:graphics" "package:grDevices" "package:utils" "package:datasets" "package:methods" "Autoloads" [13] "package:base" > biocLite("lumi") BioC_mirror: http://bioconductor.org Using Bioconductor version 3.1 (BiocInstaller 1.18.2), R version 3.2.0. Installing package(s) ‘lumi’ trying URL 'http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2/lumi_2.20.1.zip' Content type 'application/zip' length 18185326 bytes (17.3 MB) downloaded 17.3 MB package ‘lumi’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked The downloaded binary packages are in C:\Users\brb\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpyUjsJD\downloaded_packages > search() [1] ".GlobalEnv" "package:BiocInstaller" "package:Biobase" "package:BiocGenerics" "package:parallel" "package:stats" [7] "package:graphics" "package:grDevices" "package:utils" "package:datasets" "package:methods" "Autoloads" [13] "package:base" > library(lumi) Error in loadNamespace(i, c(lib.loc, .libPaths()), versionCheck = vI[[i]]) : there is no package called ‘plyr’ Error: package or namespace load failed for ‘lumi’ > biocLite("plyr") BioC_mirror: http://bioconductor.org Using Bioconductor version 3.1 (BiocInstaller 1.18.2), R version 3.2.0. Installing package(s) ‘plyr’ trying URL 'http://cran.rstudio.com/bin/windows/contrib/3.2/plyr_1.8.2.zip' Content type 'application/zip' length 1128621 bytes (1.1 MB) downloaded 1.1 MB package ‘plyr’ successfully unpacked and MD5 sums checked The downloaded binary packages are in C:\Users\brb\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpyUjsJD\downloaded_packages > library(lumi) Error in loadNamespace(j <- i[[1L]], c(lib.loc, .libPaths()), versionCheck = vI[[j]]) : there is no package called ‘mclust’ Error: package or namespace load failed for ‘lumi’ > ?biocLite Warning messages: 1: In read.dcf(file.path(p, "DESCRIPTION"), c("Package", "Version")) : cannot open compressed file 'C:/Users/brb/Documents/R/win-library/3.2/Biostrings/DESCRIPTION', probable reason 'No such file or directory' 2: In find.package(if (is.null(package)) loadedNamespaces() else package, : there is no package called ‘Biostrings’ > library(lumi) Error in loadNamespace(j <- i[[1L]], c(lib.loc, .libPaths()), versionCheck = vI[[j]]) : there is no package called ‘mclust’ In addition: Warning messages: 1: In read.dcf(file.path(p, "DESCRIPTION"), c("Package", "Version")) : cannot open compressed file 'C:/Users/brb/Documents/R/win-library/3.2/Biostrings/DESCRIPTION', probable reason 'No such file or directory' 2: In find.package(if (is.null(package)) loadedNamespaces() else package, : there is no package called ‘Biostrings’ Error: package or namespace load failed for ‘lumi’
Other people also have the similar problem. The possible cause is the virus scanner locks the file and R cannot move them.
Some possible solutions:
- Delete ALL folders under R/library (e.g. C:/Progra~1/R/R-3.2.0/library) folder and install the main package again using install.packages() or biocLite().
- For specific package like 'lumi' from Bioconductor, we can find out all dependency packages and then install them one by one.
- Find out and install the top level package which misses dependency packages.
- This is based on the fact that install.packages() or biocLite() sometimes just checks & installs the 'Depends' and 'Imports' packages and won't install all packages recursively
- we can do a small experiment by removing a package which is not directly dependent/imported by another package; e.g. 'iterators' is not dependent/imported by 'glment' directly but indirectly. So if we run remove.packages("iterators"); install.packages("glmnet"), then the 'iterator' package is still missing.
- A real example is if the missing packages are 'Biostrings', 'limma', 'mclust' (these are packages that 'minfi' directly depends/imports although they should be installed when I run biocLite("lumi") command), then I should just run the command remove.packages("minfi"); biocLite("minfi"). If we just run biocLite("lumi") or biocLite("methylumi"), the missing packages won't be installed.
Error in download.file(url, destfile, method, mode = "wb", ...) and cache
HTTP status was '404 Not Found'
Tested on an existing R-3.2.0 session. Note that VariantAnnotation 1.14.4 was just uploaded to Bioc.
> biocLite("COSMIC.67") BioC_mirror: http://bioconductor.org Using Bioconductor version 3.1 (BiocInstaller 1.18.3), R version 3.2.0. Installing package(s) ‘COSMIC.67’ also installing the dependency ‘VariantAnnotation’ trying URL 'http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2/VariantAnnotation_1.14.3.zip' Error in download.file(url, destfile, method, mode = "wb", ...) : cannot open URL 'http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/bioc/bin/windows/contrib/3.2/VariantAnnotation_1.14.3.zip' In addition: Warning message: In download.file(url, destfile, method, mode = "wb", ...) : cannot open: HTTP status was '404 Not Found' Warning in download.packages(pkgs, destdir = tmpd, available = available, : download of package ‘VariantAnnotation’ failed installing the source package ‘COSMIC.67’ trying URL 'http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.1/data/experiment/src/contrib/COSMIC.67_1.4.0.tar.gz' Content type 'application/x-gzip' length 40999037 bytes (39.1 MB)
However, when I tested on a new R-3.2.0 (just installed in VM), the COSMIC package installation is successful. That VariantAnnotation version 1.14.4 was installed (this version was just updated today from Bioconductor).
The cause of the error is the available.package() function will read the rds file first from cache in a tempdir (C:\Users\XXXX\AppData\Local\Temp\RtmpYYYYYY). See lines 51-55 of <packages.R>.
dest <- file.path(tempdir(), paste0("repos_", URLencode(repos, TRUE), ".rds")) if(file.exists(dest)) { res0 <- readRDS(dest) } else { ... }
Since my R was opened 1 week ago, the rds file it reads today contains old information. Note that Bioconductor does not hold the source code or binary code for the old version of packages. This explains why biocLite() function broke. When I restart R, the original problem is gone.
If we look at the source code of available.packages(), we will see we could use cacheOK option in download.file() function.
download.file(url, destfile, method, cacheOK = FALSE, quiet = TRUE, mode ="wb")
Error in unloadNamespace(package)
> d3heatmap(mtcars, scale = "column", colors = "Blues") Error: 'col_numeric' is not an exported object from 'namespace:scales' > packageVersion("scales") [1] ‘0.2.5’ > library(scales) Error in unloadNamespace(package) : namespace ‘scales’ is imported by ‘ggplot2’ so cannot be unloaded In addition: Warning message: package ‘scales’ was built under R version 3.2.1 Error in library(scales) : Package ‘scales’ version 0.2.4 cannot be unloaded > search() [1] ".GlobalEnv" "package:d3heatmap" "package:ggplot2" [4] "package:microbenchmark" "package:COSMIC.67" "package:BiocInstaller" [7] "package:stats" "package:graphics" "package:grDevices" [10] "package:utils" "package:datasets" "package:methods" [13] "Autoloads" "package:base"
If I open a new R session, the above error will not happen!
The problem occurred because the 'scales' package version required by the d3heatmap package/function is old. See this post. And when I upgraded the 'scales' package, it was locked by the package was imported by the ggplot2 package.
Unload a package
See an example below.
require(splines) detach(package:splines, unload=TRUE)
METACRAN - Search and browse all CRAN/R packages
- Source code on https://github.com/metacran. The 'PACKAGES' file is updated regularly to Github.
- Announcement on R/mailing list
- Author's homepage on http://gaborcsardi.org/.
New R packages as reported by CRANberries
http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2015/07/mranspackages-spotlight.html
#---------------------------- # SCRAPE CRANBERRIES FILES TO COUNT NEW PACKAGES AND PLOT # library(ggplot2) # Build a vextor of the directories of interest year <- c("2013","2014","2015") month <- c("01","02","03","04","05","06","07","08","09","10","11","12") span <-c(rep(month,2),month[1:7]) dir <- "http://dirk.eddelbuettel.com/cranberries" url2013 <- file.path(dir,"2013",month) url2014 <- file.path(dir,"2014",month) url2015 <- file.path(dir,"2015",month[1:7]) url <- c(url2013,url2014,url2015) # Read each directory and count the new packages new_p <- vector() for(i in url){ raw.data <- readLines(i) new_p[i] <- length(grep("New package",raw.data,value=TRUE)) } # Plot time <- seq(as.Date("2013-01-01"), as.Date("2015-07-01"), by="months") new_pkgs <- data.frame(time,new_p) ggplot(new_pkgs, aes(time,y=new_p)) + geom_line() + xlab("") + ylab("Number of new packages") + geom_smooth(method='lm') + ggtitle("New R packages as reported by CRANberries")
Top new packages in 2015
- 2015 R packages roundup by CHRISTOPH SAFFERLING
- R trends in 2015 by MAX GORDON
R package dependencies
- Package tools' functions package.dependencies(), pkgDepends(), etc are deprecated now, mostly in favor of package_dependencies() which is both more flexible and efficient. See R 3.3.0 News.
Depends, Imports, Suggests, Enhances, LinkingTo
See Writing R Extensions and install.packages().
- Depends: list of package names which this package depends on. Those packages will be attached (so it is better to use Imports instead of Depends as much as you can) before the current package when library or require is called. The ‘Depends’ field can also specify a dependence on a certain version of R.
- Imports: lists packages whose namespaces are imported from (as specified in the NAMESPACE file) but which do not need to be attached.
- Suggests: lists packages that are not necessarily needed. This includes packages used only in examples, tests or vignettes, and packages loaded in the body of functions.
- Enhances: lists packages “enhanced” by the package at hand, e.g., by providing methods for classes from these packages, or ways to handle objects from these packages.
- LinkingTo: A package that wishes to make use of header files in other packages needs to declare them as a comma-separated list in the field ‘LinkingTo’ in the DESCRIPTION file.
Bioconductor's pkgDepTools package
The is an example of querying the dependencies of the notorious 'lumi' package which often broke the installation script. I am using R 3.2.0 and Bioconductor 3.1.
The getInstallOrder function is useful to get a list of all (recursive) dependency packages.
source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R") if (!require(pkgDepTools)) { biocLite("pkgDepTools", ask = FALSE) library(pkgDepTools) } MkPlot <- FALSE library(BiocInstaller) biocUrl <- biocinstallRepos()["BioCsoft"] biocDeps <- makeDepGraph(biocUrl, type="source", dosize=FALSE) # pkgDepTools defines its makeDepGraph() PKG <- "lumi" if (MkPlot) { if (!require(Biobase)) { biocLite("Biobase", ask = FALSE) library(Biobase) } if (!require(Rgraphviz)) { biocLite("Rgraphviz", ask = FALSE) library(Rgraphviz) } categoryNodes <- c(PKG, names(acc(biocDeps, PKG)[[1]])) categoryGraph <- subGraph(categoryNodes, biocDeps) nn <- makeNodeAttrs(categoryGraph, shape="ellipse") plot(categoryGraph, nodeAttrs=nn) # Complete but plot is too complicated & font is too small. } system.time(allDeps <- makeDepGraph(biocinstallRepos(), type="source", keep.builtin=TRUE, dosize=FALSE)) # takes a little while # user system elapsed # 175.737 10.994 186.875 # Warning messages: # 1: In .local(from, to, graph) : edges replaced: ‘SNPRelate|gdsfmt’ # 2: In .local(from, to, graph) : # edges replaced: ‘RCurl|methods’, ‘NA|bitops’ # When needed.only=TRUE, only those dependencies not currently installed are included in the list. x1 <- sort(getInstallOrder(PKG, allDeps, needed.only=TRUE)$packages); x1 [1] "affy" "affyio" [3] "annotate" "AnnotationDbi" [5] "base64" "beanplot" [7] "Biobase" "BiocParallel" [9] "biomaRt" "Biostrings" [11] "bitops" "bumphunter" [13] "colorspace" "DBI" [15] "dichromat" "digest" [17] "doRNG" "FDb.InfiniumMethylation.hg19" [19] "foreach" "futile.logger" [21] "futile.options" "genefilter" [23] "GenomeInfoDb" "GenomicAlignments" [25] "GenomicFeatures" "GenomicRanges" [27] "GEOquery" "ggplot2" [29] "gtable" "illuminaio" [31] "IRanges" "iterators" [33] "labeling" "lambda.r" [35] "limma" "locfit" [37] "lumi" "magrittr" [39] "matrixStats" "mclust" [41] "methylumi" "minfi" [43] "multtest" "munsell" [45] "nleqslv" "nor1mix" [47] "org.Hs.eg.db" "pkgmaker" [49] "plyr" "preprocessCore" [51] "proto" "quadprog" [53] "RColorBrewer" "Rcpp" [55] "RCurl" "registry" [57] "reshape" "reshape2" [59] "rngtools" "Rsamtools" [61] "RSQLite" "rtracklayer" [63] "S4Vectors" "scales" [65] "siggenes" "snow" [67] "stringi" "stringr" [69] "TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene" "XML" [71] "xtable" "XVector" [73] "zlibbioc" # When needed.only=FALSE the complete list of dependencies is given regardless of the set of currently installed packages. x2 <- sort(getInstallOrder(PKG, allDeps, needed.only=FALSE)$packages); x2 [1] "affy" "affyio" "annotate" [4] "AnnotationDbi" "base64" "beanplot" [7] "Biobase" "BiocGenerics" "BiocInstaller" [10] "BiocParallel" "biomaRt" "Biostrings" [13] "bitops" "bumphunter" "codetools" [16] "colorspace" "DBI" "dichromat" [19] "digest" "doRNG" "FDb.InfiniumMethylation.hg19" [22] "foreach" "futile.logger" "futile.options" [25] "genefilter" "GenomeInfoDb" "GenomicAlignments" [28] "GenomicFeatures" "GenomicRanges" "GEOquery" [31] "ggplot2" "graphics" "grDevices" [34] "grid" "gtable" "illuminaio" [37] "IRanges" "iterators" "KernSmooth" [40] "labeling" "lambda.r" "lattice" [43] "limma" "locfit" "lumi" [46] "magrittr" "MASS" "Matrix" [49] "matrixStats" "mclust" "methods" [52] "methylumi" "mgcv" "minfi" [55] "multtest" "munsell" "nleqslv" [58] "nlme" "nor1mix" "org.Hs.eg.db" [61] "parallel" "pkgmaker" "plyr" [64] "preprocessCore" "proto" "quadprog" [67] "RColorBrewer" "Rcpp" "RCurl" [70] "registry" "reshape" "reshape2" [73] "rngtools" "Rsamtools" "RSQLite" [76] "rtracklayer" "S4Vectors" "scales" [79] "siggenes" "snow" "splines" [82] "stats" "stats4" "stringi" [85] "stringr" "survival" "tools" [88] "TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene" "utils" "XML" [91] "xtable" "XVector" "zlibbioc" > sort(setdiff(x2, x1)) # Not all R's base packages are included; e.g. 'base', 'boot', ... [1] "BiocGenerics" "BiocInstaller" "codetools" "graphics" "grDevices" [6] "grid" "KernSmooth" "lattice" "MASS" "Matrix" [11] "methods" "mgcv" "nlme" "parallel" "splines" [16] "stats" "stats4" "survival" "tools" "utils"
miniCRAN package
miniCRAN package can be used to identify package dependencies or create a local CRAN repository. It can be used on repositories other than CRAN, such as Bioconductor.
- http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2014/07/dependencies-of-popular-r-packages.html
- http://www.r-bloggers.com/introducing-minicran-an-r-package-to-create-a-private-cran-repository/
- http://www.magesblog.com/2014/09/managing-r-package-dependencies.html
- Using miniCRAN in Azure ML
- developing internal CRAN Repositories
Before we go into R, we need to install some packages from Ubuntu terminal. See here.
# Consider glmnet package (today is 4/29/2015) # Version: 2.0-2 # Depends: Matrix (≥ 1.0-6), utils, foreach # Suggests: survival, knitr, lars if (!require("miniCRAN")) { install.packages("miniCRAN", dependencies = TRUE, repos="http://cran.rstudio.com") # include 'igraph' in Suggests. library(miniCRAN) } if (!"igraph" %in% installed.packages()[,1]) install.packages("igraph") tags <- "glmnet" pkgDep(tags, suggests=TRUE, enhances=TRUE) # same as pkgDep(tags) # [1] "glmnet" "Matrix" "foreach" "codetools" "iterators" "lattice" "evaluate" "digest" # [9] "formatR" "highr" "markdown" "stringr" "yaml" "mime" "survival" "knitr" # [17] "lars" dg <- makeDepGraph(tags, suggests=TRUE, enhances=TRUE) # miniCRAN defines its makeDepGraph() plot(dg, legendPosition = c(-1, 1), vertex.size=20)
We can also display the dependence for a package from the Bioconductor repository.
tags <- "DESeq2" # Depends S4Vectors, IRanges, GenomicRanges, Rcpp (>= 0.10.1), RcppArmadillo (>= 0.3.4.4) # Imports BiocGenerics(>= 0.7.5), Biobase, BiocParallel, genefilter, methods, locfit, geneplotter, ggplot2, Hmisc # Suggests RUnit, gplots, knitr, RColorBrewer, BiocStyle, airway,\npasilla (>= 0.2.10), DESeq, vsn # LinkingTo Rcpp, RcppArmadillo index <- function(url, type="source", filters=NULL, head=5, cols=c("Package", "Version")){ contribUrl <- contrib.url(url, type=type) available.packages(contribUrl, type=type, filters=filters) } bioc <- local({ env <- new.env() on.exit(rm(env)) evalq(source("http://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R", local=TRUE), env) biocinstallRepos() # return URLs }) bioc # BioCsoft # "http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.0/bioc" # BioCann # "http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.0/data/annotation" # BioCexp # "http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.0/data/experiment" # BioCextra # "http://bioconductor.org/packages/3.0/extra" # CRAN # "http://cran.fhcrc.org" # CRANextra # "http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/pub/RWin" str(index(bioc["BioCsoft"])) # similar to cranJuly2014 object system.time(dg <- makeDepGraph(tags, suggests=TRUE, enhances=TRUE, availPkgs = index(bioc["BioCsoft"]))) # Very quick! plot(dg, legendPosition = c(-1, 1), vertex.size=20)
The dependencies of GenomicFeature and GenomicAlignments are more complicated. So we turn the 'suggests' option to FALSE.
tags <- "GenomicAlignments" dg <- makeDepGraph(tags, suggests=FALSE, enhances=FALSE, availPkgs = index(bioc["BioCsoft"])) plot(dg, legendPosition = c(-1, 1), vertex.size=20)
MRAN (CRAN only)
Reverse dependence
Install packages offline
http://www.mango-solutions.com/wp/2017/05/installing-packages-without-internet/
Install a packages locally and its dependencies
It's impossible to install the dependencies if you want to install a package locally. See Windows-GUI: "Install Packages from local zip files" and dependencies
Create a new R package, namespace, documentation
- http://cran.r-project.org/doc/contrib/Leisch-CreatingPackages.pdf (highly recommend)
- https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2013-July/066975.html
- Benefit of import in a namespace
- This youtube video from Tyler Rinker teaches how to use RStudio to develop an R package and also use Git to do version control. Very useful!
- Developing R packages by Jeff Leek in Johns Hopkins University.
- R packages book by Hadley Wickham.
- R package primer a minimal tutorial from Karl Broman.
- How to make and share an R package in 3 steps (6/14/2017)
R package depends vs imports
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8637993/better-explanation-of-when-to-use-imports-depends
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/9893791/imports-and-depends
- https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2013-August/067082.html
In the namespace era Depends is never really needed. All modern packages have no technical need for Depends anymore. Loosely speaking the only purpose of Depends today is to expose other package's functions to the user without re-exporting them.
load = functions exported in myPkg are available to interested parties as myPkg::foo or via direct imports - essentially this means the package can now be used
attach = the namespace (and thus all exported functions) is attached to the search path - the only effect is that you have now added the exported functions to the global pool of functions - sort of like dumping them in the workspace (for all practical purposes, not technically)
import a function into a package = make sure that this function works in my package regardless of the search path (so I can write fn1 instead of pkg1::fn1 and still know it will come from pkg1 and not someone's workspace or other package that chose the same name)
The distinction is between "loading" and "attaching" a package. Loading it (which would be done if you had MASS::loglm, or imported it) guarantees that the package is initialized and in memory, but doesn't make it visible to the user without the explicit MASS:: prefix. Attaching it first loads it, then modifies the user's search list so the user can see it.
Loading is less intrusive, so it's preferred over attaching. Both library() and require() would attach it.
R package suggests
stringr has suggested htmlwidgets. An error will come out if the suggested packages are not available.
> library(stringr) > str_view(c("abc", "a.c", "bef"), "a\\.c") Error in loadNamespace(name) : there is no package called ‘htmlwidgets’
Useful functions for accessing files in packages
- system.file()
- path.package() and normalizePath().
> system.file(package = "batr") [1] "f:/batr" > system.file("extdata", package = "batr") > path.package("batr") [1] "f:\\batr" # sometimes it returns the forward slash format for some reason; C:/Program Files/R/R-3.4.0/library/batr # so it is best to add normalizePath(). > normalizePath(path.package("batr"))
Create R package with devtools and roxygen2
A useful post by Jacob Montgomery. Watch the youtube video there.
The process requires 3 components: RStudio software, devtools and roxygen2 (creating documentation from R code) packages.
MAKING PACKAGES IN R USING DEVTOOLS
R code workflow from Hadley Wickham.
devtools cheatsheet (2 pages)
How to use devtools::load_all("FolderName"). load_all() loads any modified R files, and recompile and reload any modified C or Fortran files.
# Step 1 library(devtools) # Step 2 dir.create(file.path("MyCode", "R"), recursive = TRUE) cat("foo=function(x){x*2}", file = file.path("MyCode", "R", "foo.R")) write.dcf(list(Package = "MyCode", Title = "My Code for this project", Description = "To tackle this problem", Version = "0.0", License = "For my eyes only", Author = "First Last <[email protected]>", Maintainer = "First Last <[email protected]>"), file = file.path("MyCode", "DESCRIPTION")) # OR # create("path/to/package/pkgname") # create() will create R/ directory, DESCRIPTION and NAMESPACE files. # Step 3 (C/Fortran code, optional) dir.create(file.path("MyCode", "src")) cat("void cfoo(double *a, double *b, double *c){*c=*a+*b;}\n", file = file.path("MyCode", "src", "cfoo.c")) cat("useDynLib(MyCode)\n", file = file.path("MyCode", "NAMESPACE")) # Step 4 load_all("MyCode") # Step 5 # Modify R/C/Fortran code and run load_all("MyCode") # Step 6 (Automatically generate the documentation, optional) document() # Step 7 (Deployment, optional) build("MyCode") # Step 8 (Install the package, optional) install()
Note:
- load_all("FolderName") will make the FolderName to become like a package to be loaded into the current R session so the 2nd item returned from search() will be "package:FolderName". However, the FolderName does not exist under Program Files/R/R-X.Y.Z/library nor Documents/R/win-library/X.Y/ (Windows OS).
- build("FolderName") will create a tarball in the current directory. User can install the new package for example using Packages -> Install packages from local files on Windows OS.
- For the simplest R package, the source code only contains a file <DESCRIPTION> and a folder <R> with individual R files in the text format.
Binary packages
- No .R files in the R/ directory. There are 3 files that store the parsed functions in an efficient file format. This is the result of loading all the R code and then saving the functions with save().
- A Meta/ directory contains a number of Rds files. These files contain cached metadata about the package, like what topics the help files cover and parsed version of the DESCRIPTION file.
- An html/ directory.
- libs/ directory if you have any code in the src/' directory
- The contents of inst/ are moved to the top-level directory.
What is a library?
A library is simply a directory containing installed packages.
You can use .libPaths() to see which libraries are currently active.
.libPaths() lapply(.libPaths(), dir)
Object names
- Variable and function names should be lower case.
- Use an underscore (_) to separate words within a name (reserve . for S3 methods).
- Camel case is a legitimate alternative, but be consistent! For example, preProcess(), twoClassData, createDataPartition(), trainingRows, trainPredictors, testPredictors, trainClasses, testClasses have been used in Applied Predictive Modeling by Kuhn & Johnson.
- Generally, variable names should be nouns and function names should be verb.
Spacing
- Add a space around the operators +, -, \ and *.
- Include a space around the assignment operators, <- and =.
- Add a space around any comparison operators such as == and <.
Indentation
- Use two spaces to indent code.
- Never mix tabs and spaces.
- RStudio can automatically convert the tab character to spaces (see Tools -> Global options -> Code).
formatR package
Use formatR package to clean up poorly formatted code
install.packages("formatR") formatR::tidy_dir("R")
Another way is to use the linter package.
install.packages("lintr") lintr:::lin_package()
Minimal R package for submission
https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2013-August/067257.html and CRAN Repository Policy.
Continuous Integration: Travis-CI (Linux, Mac)
- A Beginner's Guide to Travis-CI
- testhat package
- http://johnmuschelli.com/neuroc/getting_ready_for_submission/index.html#61_travis
Continuous Integration: Appveyor (Windows)
- Appveyor is a continuous integration service that builds projects on Windows machines.
- http://johnmuschelli.com/neuroc/getting_ready_for_submission/index.html#62_appveyor
Submit packages to cran
- http://f.briatte.org/r/submitting-packages-to-cran
- https://rmhogervorst.github.io/cleancode/blog/2016/07/09/submtting-to-cran-first-experience.html
- Preparing Your Package for for Submission
- https://builder.r-hub.io/
Build R package faster using multicore
http://www.rexamine.com/2015/07/speeding-up-r-package-installation-process/
The idea is edit the /lib64/R/etc/Renviron file (where /lib64/R/etc/ is the result to a call to the R.home() function in R) and set:
MAKE='make -j 8' # submit 8 jobs at once
Then build R package as regular, for example,
$ time R CMD INSTALL ~/R/stringi --preclean --configure-args='--disable-pkg-config'
Tricks
Getting help
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/r and R page contains resources.
- https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/
- https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/
Better Coder
- http://www.mango-solutions.com/wp/2015/10/10-top-tips-for-becoming-a-better-coder/
- Writing Good R Code and Writing Well
Change default R repository
Edit global Rprofile file. On *NIX platforms, it's located in /usr/lib/R/library/base/R/Rprofile although local .Rprofile settings take precedence.
For example, I can specify the R mirror I like by creating a single line <.Rprofile> file under my home directory.
local({ r = getOption("repos") r["CRAN"] = "https://cran.rstudio.com/" options(repos = r) }) options(continue = " ") message("Hi MC, loading ~/.Rprofile") if (interactive()) { .Last <- function() try(savehistory("~/.Rhistory")) }
Change the default web browser
When I run help.start() function in LXLE, it cannot find its default web browser (seamonkey).
> help.start() If the browser launched by 'xdg-open' is already running, it is *not* restarted, and you must switch to its window. Otherwise, be patient ... > /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: x-www-browser: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: firefox: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: mozilla: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: epiphany: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: konqueror: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: chromium-browser: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: google-chrome: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: links2: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: links: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: lynx: not found /usr/bin/xdg-open: 461: /usr/bin/xdg-open: w3m: not found xdg-open: no method available for opening 'http://127.0.0.1:27919/doc/html/index.html'
The solution is to put
options(browser='seamonkey')
in the .Rprofile of your home directory. If the browser is not in the global PATH, we need to put the full path above.
For one-time only purpose, we can use the browser option in help.start() function:
> help.start(browser="seamonkey") If the browser launched by 'seamonkey' is already running, it is *not* restarted, and you must switch to its window. Otherwise, be patient ...
We can work made a change (or create the file) ~/.Renviron or etc/Renviron. See
- Changing default browser in options().
- https://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/utils/html/browseURL.html
Rconsole, Rprofile.site, Renviron.site files
- https://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/r-release/R-admin.html (Rprofile.site)
- https://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/r-release/R-intro.html (Rprofile.site, Renviron.site, Rconsole (Windows only))
- https://cran.r-project.org/doc/manuals/r-release/R-exts.html (Renviron.site)
- How to store and use webservice keys and authentication details
- Use your .Rprofile to give you important notifications
If we like to install R packages to a personal directory, follow this. Just add the line
R_LIBS_SITE=F:/R/library
to the file R_HOME/etc/x64/Renviron.site.
Note that on Windows OS, R/etc contains
$ ls -l /c/Progra~1/r/r-3.2.0/etc total 142 -rw-r--r-- 1 Administ 1043 Jun 20 2013 Rcmd_environ -rw-r--r-- 1 Administ 1924 Mar 17 2010 Rconsole -rw-r--r-- 1 Administ 943 Oct 3 2011 Rdevga -rw-r--r-- 1 Administ 589 May 20 2013 Rprofile.site -rw-r--r-- 1 Administ 251894 Jan 17 2015 curl-ca-bundle.crt drwxr-xr-x 1 Administ 0 Jun 8 10:30 i386 -rw-r--r-- 1 Administ 1160 Dec 31 2014 repositories -rw-r--r-- 1 Administ 30188 Mar 17 2010 rgb.txt drwxr-xr-x 3 Administ 0 Jun 8 10:30 x64 $ ls /c/Progra~1/r/r-3.2.0/etc/i386 Makeconf $ cat /c/Progra~1/r/r-3.2.0/etc/Rconsole # Optional parameters for the console and the pager # The system-wide copy is in R_HOME/etc. # A user copy can be installed in `R_USER'. ## Style # This can be `yes' (for MDI) or `no' (for SDI). MDI = yes # MDI = no # the next two are only relevant for MDI toolbar = yes statusbar = no ## Font. # Please use only fixed width font. # If font=FixedFont the system fixed font is used; in this case # points and style are ignored. If font begins with "TT ", only # True Type fonts are searched for. font = TT Courier New points = 10 style = normal # Style can be normal, bold, italic # Dimensions (in characters) of the console. rows = 25 columns = 80 # Dimensions (in characters) of the internal pager. pgrows = 25 pgcolumns = 80 # should options(width=) be set to the console width? setwidthonresize = yes # memory limits for the console scrolling buffer, in chars and lines # NB: bufbytes is in bytes for R < 2.7.0, chars thereafter. bufbytes = 250000 buflines = 8000 # Initial position of the console (pixels, relative to the workspace for MDI) # xconsole = 0 # yconsole = 0 # Dimension of MDI frame in pixels # Format (w*h+xorg+yorg) or use -ve w and h for offsets from right bottom # This will come up maximized if w==0 # MDIsize = 0*0+0+0 # MDIsize = 1000*800+100+0 # MDIsize = -50*-50+50+50 # 50 pixels space all round # The internal pager can displays help in a single window # or in multiple windows (one for each topic) # pagerstyle can be set to `singlewindow' or `multiplewindows' pagerstyle = multiplewindows ## Colours for console and pager(s) # (see rwxxxx/etc/rgb.txt for the known colours). background = White normaltext = NavyBlue usertext = Red highlight = DarkRed ## Initial position of the graphics window ## (pixels, <0 values from opposite edge) xgraphics = -25 ygraphics = 0 ## Language for messages language = ## Default setting for console buffering: 'yes' or 'no' buffered = yes
and on Linux
brb@brb-T3500:~$ whereis R R: /usr/bin/R /etc/R /usr/lib/R /usr/bin/X11/R /usr/local/lib/R /usr/share/R /usr/share/man/man1/R.1.gz brb@brb-T3500:~$ ls /usr/lib/R bin COPYING etc lib library modules site-library SVN-REVISION brb@brb-T3500:~$ ls /usr/lib/R/etc javaconf ldpaths Makeconf Renviron Renviron.orig Renviron.site Renviron.ucf repositories Rprofile.site brb@brb-T3500:~$ ls /usr/local/lib/R site-library
and
brb@brb-T3500:~$ cat /usr/lib/R/etc/Rprofile.site ## Emacs please make this -*- R -*- ## empty Rprofile.site for R on Debian ## ## Copyright (C) 2008 Dirk Eddelbuettel and GPL'ed ## ## see help(Startup) for documentation on ~/.Rprofile and Rprofile.site # ## Example of .Rprofile # options(width=65, digits=5) # options(show.signif.stars=FALSE) # setHook(packageEvent("grDevices", "onLoad"), # function(...) grDevices::ps.options(horizontal=FALSE)) # set.seed(1234) # .First <- function() cat("\n Welcome to R!\n\n") # .Last <- function() cat("\n Goodbye!\n\n") # ## Example of Rprofile.site # local({ # # add MASS to the default packages, set a CRAN mirror # old <- getOption("defaultPackages"); r <- getOption("repos") # r["CRAN"] <- "http://my.local.cran" # options(defaultPackages = c(old, "MASS"), repos = r) #}) brb@brb-T3500:~$ cat /usr/lib/R/etc/Renviron.site ## Emacs please make this -*- R -*- ## empty Renviron.site for R on Debian ## ## Copyright (C) 2008 Dirk Eddelbuettel and GPL'ed ## ## see help(Startup) for documentation on ~/.Renviron and Renviron.site # ## Example ~/.Renviron on Unix # R_LIBS=~/R/library # PAGER=/usr/local/bin/less # ## Example .Renviron on Windows # R_LIBS=C:/R/library # MY_TCLTK="c:/Program Files/Tcl/bin" # ## Example of setting R_DEFAULT_PACKAGES (from R CMD check) # R_DEFAULT_PACKAGES='utils,grDevices,graphics,stats' # # this loads the packages in the order given, so they appear on # # the search path in reverse order. brb@brb-T3500:~$
Saving and loading history automatically
- http://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-patched/library/utils/html/savehistory.html
- http://www.statmethods.net/interface/customizing.html. Note .Rprofile will automatically loaded from the current directory
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16734937/saving-and-loading-history-automatically
- The history file will always be read from the $HOME directory and the history file will be overwritten by a new session. These two problems can be solved if we define R_HISTFILE system variable.
Linux or Mac
In ~/.profile or ~/.bashrc I put:
export R_HISTFILE=~/.Rhistory
In ~/.Rprofile I put:
if (interactive()) { .Last <- function() try(savehistory("~/.Rhistory")) }
Windows
If you launch R by clicking its icon from Windows Desktop, the R starts in C:\User\$USER\Documents directory. So we can create a new file .Rprofile in this directory.
if (interactive()) { # .First <- function() try(utils::loadhistory("~/.Rhistory")) .Last <- function() try(savehistory(file.path(Sys.getenv("HOME"), ".Rhistory"))) }
R release versions
rversions: Query the main 'R' 'SVN' repository to find the released versions & dates.
Detect number of running R instances in Windows
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/15935931/detect-number-of-running-r-instances-in-windows-within-r
C:\Program Files\R>tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq Rscript.exe" INFO: No tasks are running which match the specified criteria. C:\Program Files\R>tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq Rgui.exe" Image Name PID Session Name Session# Mem Usage ========================= ======== ================ =========== ============ Rgui.exe 1096 Console 1 44,712 K C:\Program Files\R>tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq Rserve.exe" Image Name PID Session Name Session# Mem Usage ========================= ======== ================ =========== ============ Rserve.exe 6108 Console 1 381,796 K
In R, we can use
> system('tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq Rgui.exe" ', intern = TRUE) [1] "" [2] "Image Name PID Session Name Session# Mem Usage" [3] "========================= ======== ================ =========== ============" [4] "Rgui.exe 1096 Console 1 44,804 K" > length(system('tasklist /FI "IMAGENAME eq Rgui.exe" ', intern = TRUE))-3
Editor
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_(programming_language)#Editors_and_IDEs
- Emacs + ESS. The ESS is useful in the case I want to tidy R code (the tidy_source() function in the formatR package sometimes gives errors; eg when I tested it on an R file like <GetComparisonResults.R> from BRB-ArrayTools v4.4 stable).
- Rstudio - editor/R terminal/R graphics/file browser/package manager. The new version (0.98) also provides a new feature for debugging step-by-step. See also RStudio Tricks
- geany - I like the feature that it shows defined functions on the side panel even for R code. RStudio can also do this (see the bottom of the code panel).
- Rgedit which includes a feature of splitting screen into two panes and run R in the bottom panel. See here.
- Komodo IDE with browser preview http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wv89OOw9roI at 4:06 and http://docs.activestate.com/komodo/4.4/editor.html
GUI for Data Analysis
Rcmdr
http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/Rcmdr/index.html
Deducer
http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/Deducer/index.html
Scope
See
- Assignments within functions in the An Introduction to R manual.
- source() does not work like C's preprocessor where statements in header files will be literally inserted into the code. It does not work when you define a variable in a function but want to use it outside the function (even through source())
## foo.R ## cat(ArrayTools, "\n") ## End of foo.R # 1. Error predict <- function() { ArrayTools <- "C:/Program Files" # or through load() function source("foo.R") # or through a function call; foo() } predict() # Object ArrayTools not found # 2. OK. Make the variable global predict <- function() { ArrayTools <<- "C:/Program Files' source("foo.R") } predict() ArrayTools # 3. OK. Create a global variable ArrayTools <- "C:/Program Files" predict <- function() { source("foo.R") } predict()
Note that any ordinary assignments done within the function are local and temporary and are lost after exit from the function.
Example 1.
> ttt <- data.frame(type=letters[1:5], JpnTest=rep("999", 5), stringsAsFactors = F) > ttt type JpnTest 1 a 999 2 b 999 3 c 999 4 d 999 5 e 999 > jpntest <- function() { ttt$JpnTest[1] ="N5"; print(ttt)} > jpntest() type JpnTest 1 a N5 2 b 999 3 c 999 4 d 999 5 e 999 > ttt type JpnTest 1 a 999 2 b 999 3 c 999 4 d 999 5 e 999
Example 2. How can we set global variables inside a function? The answer is to use the "<<-" operator or assign(, , envir = .GlobalEnv) function.
Other resource: Advanced R by Hadley Wickham.
Example 3. Writing functions in R, keeping scoping in mind
Speedup R code
- Strategies to speedup R code from DataScience+
Profiler
(Video) Understand Code Performance with the profiler
Vectorization
http://www.noamross.net/blog/2014/4/16/vectorization-in-r--why.html
Mean of duplicated rows
- rowsum()
- use ave() and unique()
- data.table package
- plyr package
- aggregate() function. Too slow! http://slowkow.com/2015/01/28/data-table-aggregate/. Don't use aggregate post.
> attach(mtcars) dim(mtcars) [1] 32 11 > head(mtcars) mpg cyl disp hp drat wt qsec vs am gear carb Mazda RX4 21.0 6 160 110 3.90 2.620 16.46 0 1 4 4 Mazda RX4 Wag 21.0 6 160 110 3.90 2.875 17.02 0 1 4 4 Datsun 710 22.8 4 108 93 3.85 2.320 18.61 1 1 4 1 Hornet 4 Drive 21.4 6 258 110 3.08 3.215 19.44 1 0 3 1 Hornet Sportabout 18.7 8 360 175 3.15 3.440 17.02 0 0 3 2 Valiant 18.1 6 225 105 2.76 3.460 20.22 1 0 3 1 > aggdata <-aggregate(mtcars, by=list(cyl,vs), FUN=mean, na.rm=TRUE) > print(aggdata) Group.1 Group.2 mpg cyl disp hp drat wt qsec vs 1 4 0 26.00000 4 120.30 91.0000 4.430000 2.140000 16.70000 0 2 6 0 20.56667 6 155.00 131.6667 3.806667 2.755000 16.32667 0 3 8 0 15.10000 8 353.10 209.2143 3.229286 3.999214 16.77214 0 4 4 1 26.73000 4 103.62 81.8000 4.035000 2.300300 19.38100 1 5 6 1 19.12500 6 204.55 115.2500 3.420000 3.388750 19.21500 1 am gear carb 1 1.0000000 5.000000 2.000000 2 1.0000000 4.333333 4.666667 3 0.1428571 3.285714 3.500000 4 0.7000000 4.000000 1.500000 5 0.0000000 3.500000 2.500000 > detach(mtcars) # Another example: select rows with a minimum value from a certain column (yval in this case) > mydf <- read.table(header=T, text=' id xval yval A 1 1 A -2 2 B 3 3 B 4 4 C 5 5 ') > x = mydf$xval > y = mydf$yval > aggregate(mydf[, c(2,3)], by=list(id=mydf$id), FUN=function(x) x[which.min(y)]) id xval yval 1 A 1 1 2 B 3 3 3 C 5 5
Apply family
Vectorize, aggregate, apply, by, eapply, lapply, mapply, rapply, replicate, scale, sapply, split, tapply, and vapply. Check out this.
- apply – Apply a Functions Over Array Margins
- sapply – Apply a Function over a List or Vector
- lapply – Apply a Function over a List or Vector
- tapply – Apply a Function Over a "Ragged" Array
- mapply – Multivariate version of sapply
- rapply – A recursive version of lapply
- eapply – Apply a Function over values in an environment
However, apply is just a wrap of a loop. The performance is not better than a for loop. See
- http://tolstoy.newcastle.edu.au/R/help/06/05/27255.html (answered by Brian Ripley)
- https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-help/2014-October/422455.html (has one example)
The package 'pbapply' creates a text-mode progress bar - it works on any platforms. On Windows platform, check out this post. It uses winProgressBar() and setWinProgressBar() functions.
Progress bar
What is the cost of a progress bar in R?
lapply and Map
- Examples of using lapply + split on a data frame. See rollingyours.wordpress.com.
- Map() and Reduce() in functional programming
sapply & vapply
- This discusses why vapply is safer and faster than sapply.
- Vector output: sapply and vapply from Advanced R (Hadley Wickham).
rapply - recursive version of lapply
- http://4dpiecharts.com/tag/recursive/
- Search in R source code. Mainly r-source/src/library/stats/R/dendrogram.R.
plyr and dplyr packages
Practical Data Science for Stats - a PeerJ Collection
The Split-Apply-Combine Strategy for Data Analysis (plyr package) in J. Stat Software.
A quick introduction to plyr with a summary of apply functions in R and compare them with functions in plyr package.
- plyr has a common syntax -- easier to remember
- plyr requires less code since it takes care of the input and output format
- plyr can easily be run in parallel -- faster
Tutorials
- Introduction to dplyr from http://dplyr.tidyverse.org/.
- A video of dplyr package can be found on vimeo.
- Hands-on dplyr tutorial for faster data manipulation in R from dataschool.io.
Examples of using dplyr:
- Medicines under evaluation
- CBI GEO Metadata Survey
- Logistic Regression by Page Piccinini. mutate(), inner_join() and %>%.
- DESeq2 post analysis select(), gather(), arrange() and %>%.
tibble
Tibbles are data frames, but slightly tweaked to work better in the tidyverse.
> data(pew, package = "efficient") > dim(pew) [1] 18 10 > class(pew) # tibble is also a data frame!! [1] "tbl_df" "tbl" "data.frame" > tidyr::gather(pew, key=Income, value = Count, -religion) # make wide tables long # A tibble: 162 x 3 religion Income Count <chr> <chr> <int> 1 Agnostic <$10k 27 2 Atheist <$10k 12 ... > mean(tidyr::gather(pew, key=Income, value = Count, -religion)[, 3]) [1] NA Warning message: In mean.default(tidyr::gather(pew, key = Income, value = Count, : argument is not numeric or logical: returning NA > mean(tidyr::gather(pew, key=Income, value = Count, -religion)[[3]]) [1] 181.6975
llply()
llply is equivalent to lapply except that it will preserve labels and can display a progress bar. This is handy if we want to do a crazy thing.
LLID2GOIDs <- lapply(rLLID, function(x) get("org.Hs.egGO")[[x]])
where rLLID is a list of entrez ID. For example,
get("org.Hs.egGO")[["6772"]]
returns a list of 49 GOs.
ddply()
http://lamages.blogspot.com/2012/06/transforming-subsets-of-data-in-r-with.html
ldply()
An R Script to Automatically download PubMed Citation Counts By Year of Publication
mclapply()
paralle package is a mult-core version of lapply()
Note that Windows OS can not take advantage of it.
Another choice for Windows OS is to use parLapply() function in parallel package.
ncores <- as.integer( Sys.getenv('NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS') ) cl <- makeCluster(getOption("cl.cores", ncores)) LLID2GOIDs2 <- parLapply(cl, rLLID, function(x) { library(org.Hs.eg.db); get("org.Hs.egGO")[[x]]} ) stopCluster(cl)
It does work. Cut the computing time from 100 sec to 29 sec on 4 cores.
The mclapply() implementation relies on forking and Windows does not support forking. mclapply from the parallel package is implemented as a serial function on Windows systems. The parallelsugar package was created based on the above idea.
parallelsugar package
If we load parallelsugar, the default implementation of parallel::mclapply, which used fork based clusters, will be overwritten by parallelsugar::mclapply, which is implemented with socket clusters.
library(parallel) system.time( mclapply(1:4, function(xx){ Sys.sleep(10) }) ) ## user system elapsed ## 0.00 0.00 40.06 library(parallelsugar) ## ## Attaching package: ‘parallelsugar’ ## ## The following object is masked from ‘package:parallel’: ## ## mclapply system.time( mclapply(1:4, function(xx){ Sys.sleep(10) }) ) ## user system elapsed ## 0.04 0.08 12.98
Regular Expression
- ?grep (returns numeric values), ?grepl (returns a logical vector) and ?regexpr (returns numeric values) in R.
- http://www.regular-expressions.info/rlanguage.html
- http://biostat.mc.vanderbilt.edu/wiki/pub/Main/SvetlanaEdenRFiles/regExprTalk.pdf
- http://www.johndcook.com/r_language_regex.html
- http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/R_Programming/Text_Processing#Regular_Expressions
- http://rpubs.com/Lionel/19068
- http://ucfagls.wordpress.com/2012/08/15/processing-sample-labels-using-regular-expressions-in-r/
- http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/how-to-use-regular-expressions-in-r.html
- http://www.r-bloggers.com/example-8-27-using-regular-expressions-to-read-data-with-variable-number-of-words-in-a-field/
- http://www.r-bloggers.com/using-regular-expressions-in-r-case-study-in-cleaning-a-bibtex-database/
- http://cbio.ensmp.fr/~thocking/papers/2011-08-16-directlabels-and-regular-expressions-for-useR-2011/2011-useR-named-capture-regexp.pdf
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5214677/r-find-the-last-dot-in-a-string
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10294284/remove-all-special-characters-from-a-string-in-r
Specific to R
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression
- PCRE and newlines tells the differences of \r\n (newline for Windows), \r (newline for UNIX, hex 0D) and \n (newline for old Mac, hex 0A). The tab \t has hex 09.
- http://www.autohotkey.com/docs/misc/RegEx-QuickRef.htm
- http://opencompany.org/download/regex-cheatsheet.pdf
- http://r-exercises.com/2016/10/30/regular-expressions-part-1/
Syntax
The following table is from endmemo.com.
Syntax | Description |
---|---|
\\d | Digit, 0,1,2 ... 9 |
\\D | Not Digit |
\\s | Space |
\\S | Not Space |
\\w | Word |
\\W | Not Word |
\\t | Tab |
\\n | New line |
^ | Beginning of the string |
$ | End of the string |
\ | Escape special characters, e.g. \\ is "\", \+ is "+" |
d)n/ matches "en" and "dn" | |
• | Any character, except \n or line terminator |
[ab] | a or b |
[^ab] | Any character except a and b |
[0-9] | All Digit |
[A-Z] | All uppercase A to Z letters |
[a-z] | All lowercase a to z letters |
[A-z] | All Uppercase and lowercase a to z letters |
i+ | i at least one time |
i* | i zero or more times |
i? | i zero or 1 time |
i{n} | i occurs n times in sequence |
i{n1,n2} | i occurs n1 - n2 times in sequence |
i{n1,n2}? | non greedy match, see above example |
i{n,} | i occures >= n times |
[:alnum:] | Alphanumeric characters: [:alpha:] and [:digit:] |
[:alpha:] | Alphabetic characters: [:lower:] and [:upper:] |
[:blank:] | Blank characters: e.g. space, tab |
[:cntrl:] | Control characters |
[:digit:] | Digits: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 |
[:graph:] | Graphical characters: [:alnum:] and [:punct:] |
[:lower:] | Lower-case letters in the current locale |
[:print:] | Printable characters: [:alnum:], [:punct:] and space |
[:punct:] | } ~ |
[:space:] | Space characters: tab, newline, vertical tab, form feed, carriage return, space |
[:upper:] | Upper-case letters in the current locale |
[:xdigit:] | Hexadecimal digits: 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F a b c d e f |
grep()
sub() and gsub()
The sub function changes only the first occurrence of the regular expression, while the gsub function performs the substitution on all occurrences within the string.
regexpr() and gregexpr()
The output from these functions is a vector of starting positions of the regular expressions which were found; if no match occurred, a value of -1 is returned.
The regexpr function will only provide information about the first match in its input string(s), while the gregexpr function returns information about all matches found.
Note that in C++, the std::string::find() and Qt's QRegExp::indexIn() can do R's regexpr() does. I am not aware of any gregexpr()-equivalent function in C++.
The following example is coming from the book 'Data Manipulation with R' by Phil Spector, Chapter 7, Character Manipulation.
tst = c('one x7 two b1', 'three c5 four b9', 'five six seven', 'a8 eight nine') wh = regexpr('[a-z][0-9]', tst) wh # [1] 5 7 -1 1 # attr(,"match.length") # [1] 2 2 -1 2 wh1 = gregexpr('[a-z][0-9]',tst) # return a list just like strsplit() wh1 # [[1]] # [1] 5 12 # attr(,"match.length") # [1] 2 2 # attr(,"useBytes") # [1] TRUE # # [[2]] # [1] 7 15 # attr(,"match.length") # [1] 2 2 # attr(,"useBytes") # [1] TRUE # # [[3]] # [1] -1 # attr(,"match.length") # [1] -1 # attr(,"useBytes") # [1] TRUE # # [[4]] # [1] 1 # attr(,"match.length") # [1] 2 # attr(,"useBytes") # [1] TRUE gregexpr("'", "|3'-5'") # find the apostrophe character # [[1]] # [1] 3 6 # attr(,"match.length") # [1] 1 1 # attr(,"useBytes") # [1] TRUE
Examples
- sub("^.*boundary=", "", string) will substitute a substring which starts with 0 or more characters and then 'boundary=' with an empty. Here ^ means beginning, dot means any character and star means the preceding item 0 or more times.
- grep("\\.zip$", pkgs) or grep("\\.tar.gz$", pkgs) will search for the string ending with .zip or .tar.gz
- grep("9.11", string) will search for the string containing '9', any character (to split 9 & 11) and '11'.
- pipe metacharacter; it is translated to 'or'. flood|fire will match strings containing floor or fire.
- [^?.]$ will match anyone ([]) not (^) ending ($) with the question mark (?) or period (.).
- ^[Gg]ood|[Bb]ad will match strings starting with Good/good and anywhere containing Bad/bad.
- ^([Gg]ood|[Bb]ad) will look for strings beginning with Good/good/Bad/bad.
- ? character; it means optional. [Gg]eorge( [Ww]\.)? [Bb]ush will match strings like 'george bush', 'George W. Bush' or 'george bushes'. Note that we escape the metacharacter dot by '\.' so it becomes a literal period.
- star and plus sign. star means any number including none and plus means at least one. For example, (.*) matches 'abc(222 )' and '()'.
- [0-9]+ (.*) [0-9]+ will match one number and following by any number of characters and a number; e.g. 'afda1080 p' and '4 by 5 size'.
- gsub("space:+", " ", " ab c ") will replace multiple spaces with 1 space.
- {} refers to as interval quantifiers; specify the minimum and maximum number of match of an expression.
- trimws() function to remove trailing/leading whitespace. The function is used in several places.
trimws <- function(x, which = c("both", "left", "right")) { which <- match.arg(which) mysub <- function(re, x) sub(re, "", x, perl = TRUE) if(which == "left") return(mysub("^[ \t\r\n]+", x)) if(which == "right") return(mysub("[ \t\r\n]+$", x)) mysub("[ \t\r\n]+$", mysub("^[ \t\r\n]+", x)) }
# returns string w/o leading whitespace trim.leading <- function (x) sub("^\\s+", "", x) # returns string w/o trailing whitespace trim.trailing <- function (x) sub("\\s+$", "", x) # returns string w/o leading or trailing whitespace trim <- function (x) gsub("^\\s+|\\s+$", "", x)
Special case: match the dot character
See Chapter 11: Strings with stringr in 'R for Data Science' by Hadley Wickham.
The printed representation of a string shows the escapes. To see the raw contents of the string, use writeLines().
x <- c("\"", "\\") # escape ", \ x # [1] "\"" "\\" writeLines(x) # " # \
"." matches any character. To match the dot character literally we shall use "\\.".
# We want to match the dot character literally writeLines("\.") # Error: '\.' is an unrecognized escape in character string starting ""\." # . should be represented as \. but \ itself should be escaped so # to escape ., we should use \\. writeLines("\\.") # \.
Special case: match the backslash \
x <- "a\\b" writeLines(x) # a\b str_view(x, "\\\\")
Clipboard
source("clipboard") read.table("clipboard")
read/manipulate binary data
- x <- readBin(fn, raw(), file.info(fn)$size)
- rawToChar(x[1:16])
- See Biostrings C API
String Manipulation
- ebook by Gaston Sanchez.
- Chapter 7 of the book 'Data Manipulation with R' by Phil Spector.
- Chapter 7 of the book 'R Cookbook' by Paul Teetor.
- Chapter 2 of the book 'Using R for Data Management, Statistical Analysis and Graphics' by Horton and Kleinman.
- http://www.endmemo.com/program/R/deparse.php. It includes lots of examples for each R function it lists.
HTTPs connection
HTTPS connection becomes default in R 3.2.2. See
- http://blog.rstudio.org/2015/08/17/secure-https-connections-for-r/
- http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2015/08/good-advice-for-security-with-r.html
R 3.3.2 patched The internal methods of ‘download.file()’ and ‘url()’ now report if they are unable to follow the redirection of a ‘http://’ URL to a ‘https://’ URL (rather than failing silently)
setInternet2
There was a bug in ftp downloading in R 3.2.2 (r69053) Windows though it is fixed now in R 3.2 patch.
Read the discussion reported on 8/8/2015. The error only happened on ftp not http connection. The final solution is explained in this post. The following demonstrated the original problem.
url <- paste0("ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/ASSEMBLY_REPORTS/All/", "GCF_000001405.13.assembly.txt") f1 <- tempfile() download.file(url, f1)
It seems the bug was fixed in R 3.2-branch. See 8/16/2015 patch r69089 where a new argument INTERNET_FLAG_PASSIVE was added to InternetOpenUrl() function of wininet library. This article and this post explain differences of active and passive FTP.
The following R command will show the exact svn revision for the R you are currently using.
R.Version()$"svn rev"
If setInternet2(T), then https protocol is supported in download.file().
When setInternet(T) is enabled by default, download.file() does not work for ftp protocol (this is used in getGEO() function of the GEOquery package). If I use setInternet(F), download.file() works again for ftp protocol.
The setInternet2() function is defined in R> src> library> utils > R > windows > sysutils.R.
R up to 3.2.2
setInternet2 <- function(use = TRUE) .Internal(useInternet2(use))
See also
- <src/include/Internal.h> (declare do_setInternet2()),
- <src/main/names.c> (show do_setInternet2() in C)
- <src/main/internet.c> (define do_setInternet2() in C).
Note that: setInternet2(T) becomes default in R 3.2.2. To revert to the previous default use setInternet2(FALSE). See the <doc/NEWS.pdf> file. If we use setInternet2(F), then it solves the bug of getGEO() error. But it disables the https file download using the download.file() function. In R < 3.2.2, it is also possible to download from https by setIneternet2(T).
R 3.3.0
setInternet2 <- function(use = TRUE) { if(!is.na(use)) stop("use != NA is defunct") NA }
Note that setInternet2.Rd says As from \R 3.3.0 it changes nothing, and only \code{use = NA} is accepted. Also NEWS.Rd says setInternet2() has no effect and will be removed in due course.
read/download/source a file from internet
Simple text file http
retail <- read.csv("http://robjhyndman.com/data/ausretail.csv",header=FALSE)
Zip file and url() function
con = gzcon(url('http://www.systematicportfolio.com/sit.gz', 'rb')) source(con) close(con)
Here url() function is like file(), gzfile(), bzfile(), xzfile(), unz(), pipe(), fifo(), socketConnection(). They are used to create connections. By default, the connection is not opened (except for ‘socketConnection’), but may be opened by setting a non-empty value of argument ‘open’. See ?url.
Another example of using url() is
load(url("http:/www.example.com/example.RData"))
downloader package
This package provides a wrapper for the download.file function, making it possible to download files over https on Windows, Mac OS X, and other Unix-like platforms. The RCurl package provides this functionality (and much more) but can be difficult to install because it must be compiled with external dependencies. This package has no external dependencies, so it is much easier to install.
Google drive file based on https using RCurl package
require(RCurl) myCsv <- getURL("https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/pub?hl=en_US&hl=en_US&key=0AkuuKBh0jM2TdGppUFFxcEdoUklCQlJhM2kweGpoUUE&single=true&gid=0&output=csv") read.csv(textConnection(myCsv))
Google sheet file using googlesheets package
Reading data from google sheets into R
Github files https using RCurl package
- http://support.rstudio.org/help/kb/faq/configuring-r-to-use-an-http-proxy
- http://tonybreyal.wordpress.com/2011/11/24/source_https-sourcing-an-r-script-from-github/
x = getURL("https://gist.github.com/arraytools/6671098/raw/c4cb0ca6fe78054da8dbe253a05f7046270d5693/GeneIDs.txt", ssl.verifypeer = FALSE) read.table(text=x)
- gistr package
Create publication tables using tables package
See p13 for example in http://www.ianwatson.com.au/stata/tabout_tutorial.pdf
R's tables packages is the best solution. For example,
> library(tables) > tabular( (Species + 1) ~ (n=1) + Format(digits=2)* + (Sepal.Length + Sepal.Width)*(mean + sd), data=iris ) Sepal.Length Sepal.Width Species n mean sd mean sd setosa 50 5.01 0.35 3.43 0.38 versicolor 50 5.94 0.52 2.77 0.31 virginica 50 6.59 0.64 2.97 0.32 All 150 5.84 0.83 3.06 0.44 > str(iris) 'data.frame': 150 obs. of 5 variables: $ Sepal.Length: num 5.1 4.9 4.7 4.6 5 5.4 4.6 5 4.4 4.9 ... $ Sepal.Width : num 3.5 3 3.2 3.1 3.6 3.9 3.4 3.4 2.9 3.1 ... $ Petal.Length: num 1.4 1.4 1.3 1.5 1.4 1.7 1.4 1.5 1.4 1.5 ... $ Petal.Width : num 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 ... $ Species : Factor w/ 3 levels "setosa","versicolor",..: 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ...
and
# This example shows some of the less common options > Sex <- factor(sample(c("Male", "Female"), 100, rep=TRUE)) > Status <- factor(sample(c("low", "medium", "high"), 100, rep=TRUE)) > z <- rnorm(100)+5 > fmt <- function(x) { s <- format(x, digits=2) even <- ((1:length(s)) %% 2) == 0 s[even] <- sprintf("(%s)", s[even]) s } > tabular( Justify(c)*Heading()*z*Sex*Heading(Statistic)*Format(fmt())*(mean+sd) ~ Status ) Status Sex Statistic high low medium Female mean 4.88 4.96 5.17 sd (1.20) (0.82) (1.35) Male mean 4.45 4.31 5.05 sd (1.01) (0.93) (0.75)
See also a collection of R packages related to reproducible research in http://cran.r-project.org/web/views/ReproducibleResearch.html
Tabulizer- extracting tables from PDFs
extracting Tables from PDFs in R
Create flat tables in R console using ftable()
> ftable(Titanic, row.vars = 1:3) Survived No Yes Class Sex Age 1st Male Child 0 5 Adult 118 57 Female Child 0 1 Adult 4 140 2nd Male Child 0 11 Adult 154 14 Female Child 0 13 Adult 13 80 3rd Male Child 35 13 Adult 387 75 Female Child 17 14 Adult 89 76 Crew Male Child 0 0 Adult 670 192 Female Child 0 0 Adult 3 20 > ftable(Titanic, row.vars = 1:2, col.vars = "Survived") Survived No Yes Class Sex 1st Male 118 62 Female 4 141 2nd Male 154 25 Female 13 93 3rd Male 422 88 Female 106 90 Crew Male 670 192 Female 3 20 > ftable(Titanic, row.vars = 2:1, col.vars = "Survived") Survived No Yes Sex Class Male 1st 118 62 2nd 154 25 3rd 422 88 Crew 670 192 Female 1st 4 141 2nd 13 93 3rd 106 90 Crew 3 20 > str(Titanic) table [1:4, 1:2, 1:2, 1:2] 0 0 35 0 0 0 17 0 118 154 ... - attr(*, "dimnames")=List of 4 ..$ Class : chr [1:4] "1st" "2nd" "3rd" "Crew" ..$ Sex : chr [1:2] "Male" "Female" ..$ Age : chr [1:2] "Child" "Adult" ..$ Survived: chr [1:2] "No" "Yes" > x <- ftable(mtcars[c("cyl", "vs", "am", "gear")]) > x gear 3 4 5 cyl vs am 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 6 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 1 1 0 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 8 0 0 12 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 > ftable(x, row.vars = c(2, 4)) cyl 4 6 8 am 0 1 0 1 0 1 vs gear 0 3 0 0 0 0 12 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 5 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 3 1 0 2 0 0 0 4 2 6 2 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 > > ## Start with expressions, use table()'s "dnn" to change labels > ftable(mtcars$cyl, mtcars$vs, mtcars$am, mtcars$gear, row.vars = c(2, 4), dnn = c("Cylinders", "V/S", "Transmission", "Gears")) Cylinders 4 6 8 Transmission 0 1 0 1 0 1 V/S Gears 0 3 0 0 0 0 12 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 5 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 3 1 0 2 0 0 0 4 2 6 2 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 0 0 0
tracemem, data type, copy
How to avoid copying a long vector
Tell if the current R is running in 32-bit or 64-bit mode
8 * .Machine$sizeof.pointer
where sizeof.pointer returns the number of *bytes* in a C SEXP type and '8' means number of bits per byte.
32- and 64-bit
See R-admin.html.
- For speed you may want to use a 32-bit build, but to handle large datasets a 64-bit build.
- Even on 64-bit builds of R there are limits on the size of R objects, some of which stem from the use of 32-bit integers (especially in FORTRAN code). For example, the dimensionas of an array are limited to 2^31 -1.
- Since R 2.15.0, it is possible to select '64-bit Files' from the standard installer even on a 32-bit version of Windows (2012/3/30).
Handling length 2^31 and more in R 3.0.0
From R News for 3.0.0 release:
There is a subtle change in behaviour for numeric index values 2^31 and larger. These never used to be legitimate and so were treated as NA, sometimes with a warning. They are now legal for long vectors so there is no longer a warning, and x[2^31] <- y will now extend the vector on a 64-bit platform and give an error on a 32-bit one.
In R 2.15.2, if I try to assign a vector of length 2^31, I will get an error
> x <- seq(1, 2^31) Error in from:to : result would be too long a vector
However, for R 3.0.0 (tested on my 64-bit Ubuntu with 16GB RAM. The R was compiled by myself):
> system.time(x <- seq(1,2^31)) user system elapsed 8.604 11.060 120.815 > length(x) [1] 2147483648 > length(x)/2^20 [1] 2048 > gc() used (Mb) gc trigger (Mb) max used (Mb) Ncells 183823 9.9 407500 21.8 350000 18.7 Vcells 2147764406 16386.2 2368247221 18068.3 2148247383 16389.9 >
Note:
- 2^31 length is about 2 Giga length. It takes about 16 GB (2^31*8/2^20 MB) memory.
- On Windows, it is almost impossible to work with 2^31 length of data if the memory is less than 16 GB because virtual disk on Windows does not work well. For example, when I tested on my 12 GB Windows 7, the whole Windows system freezes for several minutes before I force to power off the machine.
- My slide in http://goo.gl/g7sGX shows the screenshots of running the above command on my Ubuntu and RHEL machines. As you can see the linux is pretty good at handling large (> system RAM) data. That said, as long as your linux system is 64-bit, you can possibly work on large data without too much pain.
- For large dataset, it makes sense to use database or specially crafted packages like bigmemory or ff or bigstatsr.
NA in index
- Question: what is seq(1, 3)[c(1, 2, NA)]?
Answer: It will reserve the element with NA in indexing and return the value NA for it.
- Question: What is TRUE & NA?
Answer: NA
- Question: What is FALSE & NA?
Answer: FALSE
- Question: c("A", "B", NA) != "" ?
Answer: TRUE TRUE NA
- Question: which(c("A", "B", NA) != "") ?
Answer: 1 2
- Question: c(1, 2, NA) != "" & !is.na(c(1, 2, NA)) ?
Answer: TRUE TRUE FALSE
- Question: c("A", "B", NA) != "" & !is.na(c("A", "B", NA)) ?
Answer: TRUE TRUE FALSE
Conclusion: In order to exclude empty or NA for numerical or character data type, we can use which() or a convenience function keep.complete(x) <- function(x) x != "" & !is.na(x). This will guarantee return logical values and not contain NAs.
Don't just use x != "" OR !is.na(x).
Constant
Add 'L' after a constant. For example,
for(i in 1L:n) { } if (max.lines > 0L) { } label <- paste0(n-i+1L, ": ") n <- length(x); if(n == 0L) { }
Data frame
data.frame to vector
> a= matrix(1:6, 2,3) > rownames(a) <- c("a", "b") > colnames(a) <- c("x", "y", "z") > a x y z a 1 3 5 b 2 4 6 > unlist(data.frame(a)) x1 x2 y1 y2 z1 z2 1 2 3 4 5 6
matrix vs data.frame
ip1 <- installed.packages()[,c(1,3:4)] # class(ip1) = 'matrix' unique(ip1$Priority) # Error in ip1$Priority : $ operator is invalid for atomic vectors unique(ip1[, "Priority"]) # OK ip2 <- as.data.frame(installed.packages()[,c(1,3:4)], stringsAsFactors = FALSE) # matrix -> data.frame unique(ip2$Priority) # OK
Print a vector by suppressing names
Use unname.
sprintf does not print
Use cat() or print() outside sprintf(). sprintf() do not print in a non interactive mode.
cat(sprintf('%5.2f\t%i\n',1.234, l234))
Creating publication quality graphs in R
HDF5 : Hierarchical Data Format
HDF5 is an open binary file format for storing and managing large, complex datasets. The file format was developed by the HDF Group, and is widely used in scientific computing.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_Data_Format
- HDF5 tutorial and others
- rhdf5 package
- rhdf5 is used by ARCHS4 where you can download R program that will download hdf5 file storing expression and metadata such as gene ID, sample/GSM ID, tissues, et al.
> h5ls(destination_file) group name otype dclass dim 0 / data H5I_GROUP 1 /data expression H5I_DATASET INTEGER 35238 x 65429 2 / info H5I_GROUP 3 /info author H5I_DATASET STRING 1 4 /info contact H5I_DATASET STRING 1 5 /info creation-date H5I_DATASET STRING 1 6 /info lab H5I_DATASET STRING 1 7 /info version H5I_DATASET STRING 1 8 / meta H5I_GROUP 9 /meta Sample_channel_count H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 10 /meta Sample_characteristics_ch1 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 11 /meta Sample_contact_address H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 12 /meta Sample_contact_city H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 13 /meta Sample_contact_country H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 14 /meta Sample_contact_department H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 15 /meta Sample_contact_email H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 16 /meta Sample_contact_institute H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 17 /meta Sample_contact_laboratory H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 18 /meta Sample_contact_name H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 19 /meta Sample_contact_phone H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 20 /meta Sample_contact_zip-postal_code H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 21 /meta Sample_data_processing H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 22 /meta Sample_data_row_count H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 23 /meta Sample_description H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 24 /meta Sample_extract_protocol_ch1 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 25 /meta Sample_geo_accession H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 26 /meta Sample_instrument_model H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 27 /meta Sample_last_update_date H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 28 /meta Sample_library_selection H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 29 /meta Sample_library_source H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 30 /meta Sample_library_strategy H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 31 /meta Sample_molecule_ch1 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 32 /meta Sample_organism_ch1 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 33 /meta Sample_platform_id H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 34 /meta Sample_relation H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 35 /meta Sample_series_id H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 36 /meta Sample_source_name_ch1 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 37 /meta Sample_status H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 38 /meta Sample_submission_date H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 39 /meta Sample_supplementary_file_1 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 40 /meta Sample_supplementary_file_2 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 41 /meta Sample_taxid_ch1 H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 42 /meta Sample_title H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 43 /meta Sample_type H5I_DATASET STRING 65429 44 /meta genes H5I_DATASET STRING 35238
Formats for writing/saving and sharing data
Efficiently Saving and Sharing Data in R
Write unix format files on Windows and vice versa
https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2012-April/063931.html
with() and within() functions
within() is similar to with() except it is used to create new columns and merge them with the original data sets. See youtube video.
closePr <- with(mariokart, totalPr - shipPr) head(closePr, 20) mk <- within(mariokart, { closePr <- totalPr - shipPr }) head(mk) # new column closePr mk <- mariokart aggregate(. ~ wheels + cond, mk, mean) # create mean according to each level of (wheels, cond) aggregate(totalPr ~ wheels + cond, mk, mean) tapply(mk$totalPr, mk[, c("wheels", "cond")], mean)
stem(): stem-and-leaf plot, bar chart on terminals
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stem-and-leaf_display
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14736556/ascii-plotting-functions-for-r
- txtplot package
Graphical Parameters, Axes and Text, Combining Plots
15 Questions All R Users Have About Plots
See http://blog.datacamp.com/15-questions-about-r-plots/. This is a tremendous post. It covers the built-in plot() function and ggplot() from ggplot2 package.
- How To Draw An Empty R Plot? plot.new()
- How To Set The Axis Labels And Title Of The R Plots?
- How To Add And Change The Spacing Of The Tick Marks Of Your R Plot? axis()
- How To Create Two Different X- or Y-axes? par(new=TRUE), axis(), mtext()
- How To Add Or Change The R Plot’s Legend? legend()
- How To Draw A Grid In Your R Plot? grid()
- How To Draw A Plot With A PNG As Background? rasterImage() from the png package
- How To Adjust The Size Of Points In An R Plot? cex argument
- How To Fit A Smooth Curve To Your R Data? loess() and lines()
- How To Add Error Bars In An R Plot? arrows()
- How To Save A Plot As An Image On Disc
- How To Plot Two R Plots Next To Each Other? par(mfrow), gridBase package, lattice package
- How To Plot Multiple Lines Or Points? plot(), lines()
- How To Fix The Aspect Ratio For Your R Plots? asp parameter
- What Is The Function Of hjust And vjust In ggplot2?
Scatterplot with rugs
require(stats) # both 'density' and its default method with(faithful, { plot(density(eruptions, bw = 0.15)) rug(eruptions) rug(jitter(eruptions, amount = 0.01), side = 3, col = "light blue") })
Draw a single plot with two different y-axes
Barplot with values
- barplot(), text() and axis() functions. The data can be from a table() object.
- two bars in one factor (stack). The data can be a 2-dim matrix with numerical values.
- two bars in one factor (next to each other)
Draw Color Palette
SVG
Embed svg in html
svglite
https://blog.rstudio.org/2016/11/14/svglite-1-2-0/
pdf -> svg
Using Inkscape. See this post.
read.table
clipboard
source("clipboard") read.table("clipboard")
inline text
mydf <- read.table(header=T, text=' cond yval A 2 B 2.5 C 1.6 ')
http(s) connection
temp = getURL("https://gist.github.com/arraytools/6743826/raw/23c8b0bc4b8f0d1bfe1c2fad985ca2e091aeb916/ip.txt", ssl.verifypeer = FALSE) ip <- read.table(textConnection(temp), as.is=TRUE)
read only specific columns
Use 'colClasses' option in read.table, read.delim, .... For example, the following example reads only the 3rd column of the text file and also changes its data type from a data frame to a vector. Note that we have include double quotes around NULL.
x <- read.table("var_annot.vcf", colClasses = c(rep("NULL", 2), "character", rep("NULL", 7)), skip=62, header=T, stringsAsFactors = FALSE)[, 1] # system.time(x <- read.delim("Methylation450k.txt", colClasses = c("character", "numeric", rep("NULL", 188)), stringsAsFactors = FALSE))
To know the number of columns, we might want to read the first row first.
library(magrittr) scan("var_annot.vcf", sep="\t", what="character", skip=62, nlines=1, quiet=TRUE) %>% length()
Serialization
If we want to pass an R object to C (use recv() function), we can use writeBin() to output the stream size and then use serialize() function to output the stream to a file. See the post on R mailing list.
> a <- list(1,2,3) > a_serial <- serialize(a, NULL) > a_length <- length(a_serial) > a_length [1] 70 > writeBin(as.integer(a_length), connection, endian="big") > serialize(a, connection)
In C++ process, I receive one int variable first to get the length, and then read <length> bytes from the connection.
socketConnection
See ?socketconnection.
Simple example
from the socketConnection's manual.
Open one R session
con1 <- socketConnection(port = 22131, server = TRUE) # wait until a connection from some client writeLines(LETTERS, con1) close(con1)
Open another R session (client)
con2 <- socketConnection(Sys.info()["nodename"], port = 22131) # as non-blocking, may need to loop for input readLines(con2) while(isIncomplete(con2)) { Sys.sleep(1) z <- readLines(con2) if(length(z)) print(z) } close(con2)
Use nc in client
The client does not have to be the R. We can use telnet, nc, etc. See the post here. For example, on the client machine, we can issue
nc localhost 22131 [ENTER]
Then the client will wait and show anything written from the server machine. The connection from nc will be terminated once close(con1) is given.
If I use the command
nc -v -w 2 localhost -z 22130-22135
then the connection will be established for a short time which means the cursor on the server machine will be returned. If we issue the above nc command again on the client machine it will show the connection to the port 22131 is refused. PS. "-w" switch denotes the number of seconds of the timeout for connects and final net reads.
Some post I don't have a chance to read. http://digitheadslabnotebook.blogspot.com/2010/09/how-to-send-http-put-request-from-r.html
Use curl command in client
On the server,
con1 <- socketConnection(port = 8080, server = TRUE)
On the client,
curl --trace-ascii debugdump.txt http://localhost:8080/
Then go to the server,
while(nchar(x <- readLines(con1, 1)) > 0) cat(x, "\n") close(con1) # return cursor in the client machine
Use telnet command in client
On the server,
con1 <- socketConnection(port = 8080, server = TRUE)
On the client,
sudo apt-get install telnet telnet localhost 8080 abcdefg hijklmn qestst
Go to the server,
readLines(con1, 1) readLines(con1, 1) readLines(con1, 1) close(con1) # return cursor in the client machine
Some tutorial about using telnet on http request. And this is a summary of using telnet.
Subsetting
Subset assignment of R Language Definition and Manipulation of functions.
The result of the command x[3:5] <- 13:15 is as if the following had been executed
`*tmp*` <- x x <- "[<-"(`*tmp*`, 3:5, value=13:15) rm(`*tmp*`)
S3 and S4
- Software for Data Analysis: Programming with R by John Chambers
- Programming with Data: A Guide to the S Language by John Chambers
- https://www.rmetrics.org/files/Meielisalp2009/Presentations/Chalabi1.pdf
- https://www.stat.auckland.ac.nz/S-Workshop/Gentleman/S4Objects.pdf
- packS4: Toy Example of S4 Package
- http://www.cyclismo.org/tutorial/R/s4Classes.html
- http://adv-r.had.co.nz/S4.html
To get the source code of S4 methods, we can use showMethod(), getMethod() and showMethod(). For example
library(qrqc) showMethods("gcPlot") getMethod("gcPlot", "FASTQSummary") # get an error showMethods("gcPlot", "FASTQSummary") # good.
- getClassDef() in S4 (Bioconductor course).
library(IRanges) ir <- IRanges(start=c(10, 20, 30), width=5) ir class(ir) ## [1] "IRanges" ## attr(,"package") ## [1] "IRanges" getClassDef(class(ir)) ## Class "IRanges" [package "IRanges"] ## ## Slots: ## ## Name: start width NAMES elementType ## Class: integer integer characterORNULL character ## ## Name: elementMetadata metadata ## Class: DataTableORNULL list ## ## Extends: ## Class "Ranges", directly ## Class "IntegerList", by class "Ranges", distance 2 ## Class "RangesORmissing", by class "Ranges", distance 2 ## Class "AtomicList", by class "Ranges", distance 3 ## Class "List", by class "Ranges", distance 4 ## Class "Vector", by class "Ranges", distance 5 ## Class "Annotated", by class "Ranges", distance 6 ## ## Known Subclasses: "NormalIRanges"
mcols() and DataFrame() from Bioc S4Vectors package
- mcols: Get or set the metadata columns.
- colData: SummarizedExperiment instances from GenomicRanges
- DataFrame: The DataFrame class extends the DataTable virtual class and supports the storage of any type of object (with length and [ methods) as columns.
For example, in Shrinkage of logarithmic fold changes vignette of the DESeq2paper package
> mcols(ddsNoPrior[genes, ]) DataFrame with 2 rows and 21 columns baseMean baseVar allZero dispGeneEst dispFit dispersion dispIter dispOutlier dispMAP <numeric> <numeric> <logical> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <logical> <numeric> 1 163.5750 8904.607 FALSE 0.06263141 0.03862798 0.0577712 7 FALSE 0.0577712 2 175.3883 59643.515 FALSE 2.25306109 0.03807917 2.2530611 12 TRUE 1.6011440 Intercept strain_DBA.2J_vs_C57BL.6J SE_Intercept SE_strain_DBA.2J_vs_C57BL.6J WaldStatistic_Intercept <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> 1 6.210188 1.735829 0.1229354 0.1636645 50.515872 2 6.234880 1.823173 0.6870629 0.9481865 9.074686 WaldStatistic_strain_DBA.2J_vs_C57BL.6J WaldPvalue_Intercept WaldPvalue_strain_DBA.2J_vs_C57BL.6J <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> 1 10.60602 0.000000e+00 2.793908e-26 2 1.92280 1.140054e-19 5.450522e-02 betaConv betaIter deviance maxCooks <logical> <numeric> <numeric> <numeric> 1 TRUE 3 210.4045 0.2648753 2 TRUE 9 243.7455 0.3248949
findInterval()
Related functions are cuts() and split(). See also
do.call, rbind, lapply
Lots of examples. See for example this one for creating a data frame from a vector.
x <- readLines(textConnection("---CLUSTER 1 --- 3 4 5 6 ---CLUSTER 2 --- 9 10 8 11")) # create a list of where the 'clusters' are clust <- c(grep("CLUSTER", x), length(x) + 1L) # get size of each cluster clustSize <- diff(clust) - 1L # get cluster number clustNum <- gsub("[^0-9]+", "", x[grep("CLUSTER", x)]) result <- do.call(rbind, lapply(seq(length(clustNum)), function(.cl){ cbind(Object = x[seq(clust[.cl] + 1L, length = clustSize[.cl])] , Cluster = .cl ) })) result Object Cluster [1,] "3" "1" [2,] "4" "1" [3,] "5" "1" [4,] "6" "1" [5,] "9" "2" [6,] "10" "2" [7,] "8" "2" [8,] "11" "2"
A 2nd example is to sort a data frame by using do.call(order, list()).
How to get examples from help file
See this post. Method 1:
example(acf, give.lines=TRUE)
Method 2:
Rd <- utils:::.getHelpFile(?acf) tools::Rd2ex(Rd)
"[" and "[[" with the sapply() function
Suppose we want to extract string from the id like "ABC-123-XYZ" before the first hyphen.
sapply(strsplit("ABC-123-XYZ", "-"), "[", 1)
is the same as
sapply(strsplit("ABC-123-XYZ", "-"), function(x) x[1])
Dealing with date
d1 = date() class(d1) # "character" d2 = Sys.Date() class(d2) # "Date" format(d2, "%a %b %d") library(lubridate); ymd("20140108") # "2014-01-08 UTC" mdy("08/04/2013") # "2013-08-04 UTC" dmy("03-04-2013") # "2013-04-03 UTC" ymd_hms("2011-08-03 10:15:03") # "2011-08-03 10:15:03 UTC" ymd_hms("2011-08-03 10:15:03", tz="Pacific/Auckland") # "2011-08-03 10:15:03 NZST" ?Sys.timezone x = dmy(c("1jan2013", "2jan2013", "31mar2013", "30jul2013")) wday(x[1]) # 3 wday(x[1], label=TRUE) # Tues
- http://www.r-statistics.com/2012/03/do-more-with-dates-and-times-in-r-with-lubridate-1-1-0/
- http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/lubridate/vignettes/lubridate.html
- http://rpubs.com/seandavi/GEOMetadbSurvey2014
- We want our dates and times as class "Date" or the class "POSIXct", "POSIXlt". For more information type ?POSIXlt.
Nonstandard evaluation
- substitute(expr, env) - capture expression. substitute() is often paired with deparse() to create informative labels for data sets and plots.
- quote(expr) - similar to substitute() but do nothing??
- eval(expr, envir), evalq(expr, envir) - eval evaluates its first argument in the current scope before passing it to the evaluator: evalq avoids this.
- deparse(expr) - turns unevaluated expressions into character strings. For example,
> deparse(args(lm)) [1] "function (formula, data, subset, weights, na.action, method = \"qr\", " [2] " model = TRUE, x = FALSE, y = FALSE, qr = TRUE, singular.ok = TRUE, " [3] " contrasts = NULL, offset, ...) " [4] "NULL" > deparse(args(lm), width=20) [1] "function (formula, data, " " subset, weights, " [3] " na.action, method = \"qr\", " " model = TRUE, x = FALSE, " [5] " y = FALSE, qr = TRUE, " " singular.ok = TRUE, " [7] " contrasts = NULL, " " offset, ...) " [9] "NULL"
- parse(text) - returns the parsed but unevaluated expressions in a list. See Create a Simple Socket Server in R for the application of eval(parse(text)).
The ‘…’ argument
See Section 10.4 of An Introduction to R. Especially, the expression list(...) evaluates all such arguments and returns them in a named list
Lazy evaluation in R functions arguments
- http://adv-r.had.co.nz/Functions.html
- https://stat.ethz.ch/pipermail/r-devel/2015-February/070688.html
R function arguments are lazy — they’re only evaluated if they’re actually used.
- Example 1. By default, R function arguments are lazy.
f <- function(x) { 999 } f(stop("This is an error!")) #> [1] 999
- Example 2. If you want to ensure that an argument is evaluated you can use force().
add <- function(x) { force(x) function(y) x + y } adders2 <- lapply(1:10, add) adders2[[1]](10) #> [1] 11 adders2[[10]](10) #> [1] 20
- Example 3. Default arguments are evaluated inside the function.
f <- function(x = ls()) { a <- 1 x } # ls() evaluated inside f: f() # [1] "a" "x" # ls() evaluated in global environment: f(ls()) # [1] "add" "adders" "f"
- Example 4. Laziness is useful in if statements — the second statement below will be evaluated only if the first is true.
x <- NULL if (!is.null(x) && x > 0) { }
Backtick sign, infix/prefix/postfix operators
The backtick sign ` (not the single quote) refers to functions or variables that have otherwise reserved or illegal names; e.g. '&&', '+', '(', 'for', 'if', etc. See some examples in this note.
infix operator.
1 + 2 # infix + 1 2 # prefix 1 2 + # postfix
List data type
Calling a function given a list of arguments
> args <- list(c(1:10, NA, NA), na.rm = TRUE) > do.call(mean, args) [1] 5.5 > mean(c(1:10, NA, NA), na.rm = TRUE) [1] 5.5
Error handling and exceptions
- http://adv-r.had.co.nz/Exceptions-Debugging.html
- try() allows execution to continue even after an error has occurred. You can suppress the message with try(..., silent = TRUE).
out <- try({ a <- 1 b <- "x" a + b }) elements <- list(1:10, c(-1, 10), c(T, F), letters) results <- lapply(elements, log) is.error <- function(x) inherits(x, "try-error") succeeded <- !sapply(results, is.error)
- tryCatch(): With tryCatch() you map conditions to handlers (like switch()), named functions that are called with the condition as an input. Note that try() is a simplified version of tryCatch().
tryCatch(expr, ..., finally) show_condition <- function(code) { tryCatch(code, error = function(c) "error", warning = function(c) "warning", message = function(c) "message" ) } show_condition(stop("!")) #> [1] "error" show_condition(warning("?!")) #> [1] "warning" show_condition(message("?")) #> [1] "message" show_condition(10) #> [1] 10
Below is another snippet from available.packages() function,
z <- tryCatch(download.file(....), error = identity) if (!inherits(z, "error")) STATEMENTS
Using list type
Avoid if-else or switch
?plot.stepfun.
y0 <- c(1,2,4,3) sfun0 <- stepfun(1:3, y0, f = 0) sfun.2 <- stepfun(1:3, y0, f = .2) sfun1 <- stepfun(1:3, y0, right = TRUE) for(i in 1:3) lines(list(sfun0, sfun.2, stepfun(1:3, y0, f = 1))[[i]], col = i) legend(2.5, 1.9, paste("f =", c(0, 0.2, 1)), col = 1:3, lty = 1, y.intersp = 1)
Open a new Window device
X11() or dev.new()
par()
?par
layout
http://datascienceplus.com/adding-text-to-r-plot/
mtext vs title
http://datascienceplus.com/adding-text-to-r-plot/
mgp
The margin line (in ‘mex’ units) for the axis title, axis labels and axis line. Note that ‘mgp[1]’ affects ‘title’ whereas ‘mgp[2:3]’ affect ‘axis’. The default is ‘c(3, 1, 0)’.
If we like to make the axis labels closer to an axis, we can use mgp=c(2.3, 1, 0) for example.
lty
1=solid (default), 2=dashed, 3=dotted, 4=dotdash, 5=longdash, 6=twodash
oma
The following trick is useful when we want to draw multiple plots with a common title.
par(mfrow=c(1,2),oma = c(0, 0, 2, 0)) # oma=c(0, 0, 0, 0) by default plot(1:10, main="Plot 1") plot(1:100, main="Plot 2") mtext("Title for Two Plots", outer = TRUE, cex = 1.5) # outer=FALSE by default
Suppress warnings
Use options(). If warn is negative all warnings are ignored. If warn is zero (the default) warnings are stored until the top--level function returns.
op <- options("warn") options(warn = -1) .... options(op)
save() vs saveRDS()
- saveRDS() can only save one R object while save() does not have this constraint.
- saveRDS() doesn’t save the both the object and its name it just saves a representation of the object. As a result, the saved object can be loaded into a named object within R that is different from the name it had when originally serialized. See this post.
x <- 5 saveRDS(x, "myfile.rds") x2 <- readRDS("myfile.rds") identical(mod, mod2, ignore.environment = TRUE)
all.equal(), identical()
- all.equal: compare R objects x and y testing ‘near equality’
- identical: The safe and reliable way to test two objects for being exactly equal.
x <- 1.0; y <- 0.99999999999 all.equal(x, y) # [1] TRUE identical(x, y) # [1] FALSE
See also the testhat package.
Numerical Pitfall
Numerical pitfalls in computing variance
.1 - .3/3 ## [1] 0.00000000000000001388
Sys.getpid()
This can be used to monitor R process memory usage or stop the R process. See this post.
How to debug an R code
Using assign() in functions
For example, insert the following line to your function
assign(envir=globalenv(), "GlobalVar", localvar)
Debug R source code
Build R with debug information
- R -> Build R from its source on Windows
- http://www.stats.uwo.ca/faculty/murdoch/software/debuggingR/
- http://www.stats.uwo.ca/faculty/murdoch/software/debuggingR/gdb.shtml
- My note of debugging cor() function
.Call
- Writing R Extensions manual.
Registering native routines
https://cran.rstudio.com/doc/manuals/r-release/R-exts.html#Registering-native-routines
Pay attention to the prefix argument .fixes (eg .fixes = "C_") in useDynLib() function in the NAMESPACE file.
Example of debugging cor() function
Note that R's cor() function called a C function cor().
stats::cor .... .Call(C_cor, x, y, na.method, method == "kendall")
A step-by-step screenshot of debugging using the GNU debugger gdb can be found on my Github repository https://github.com/arraytools/r-debug.
Locale bug (grep did not handle UTF-8 properly PR#16264)
https://bugs.r-project.org/bugzilla3/show_bug.cgi?id=16264
Path length in dir.create() (PR#17206)
https://bugs.r-project.org/bugzilla3/show_bug.cgi?id=17206 (Windows only)
install.package() error, R_LIBS_USER is empty in R 3.4.1
- https://support.rstudio.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/115008369408-Since-update-to-R-3-4-1-R-LIBS-USER-is-empty and http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/R-LIBS-USER-on-Ubuntu-16-04-td4740935.html. Modify /etc/R/Renviron (if you have a sudo right) by uncomment out line 43.
R_LIBS_USER=${R_LIBS_USER-'~/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.4'}
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/44873972/default-r-personal-library-location-is-null. Modify $HOME/.Renviron by adding a line
R_LIBS_USER="${HOME}/R/${R_PLATFORM}-library/3.4"
- http://stat.ethz.ch/R-manual/R-devel/library/base/html/libPaths.html. Play with .libPaths()
On Mac & R 3.4.0 (it's fine)
> Sys.getenv("R_LIBS_USER") [1] "~/Library/R/3.4/library" > .libPaths() [1] "/Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/3.4/Resources/library"
On Linux & R 3.3.1 (ARM)
> Sys.getenv("R_LIBS_USER") [1] "~/R/armv7l-unknown-linux-gnueabihf-library/3.3" > .libPaths() [1] "/home/$USER/R/armv7l-unknown-linux-gnueabihf-library/3.3" [2] "/usr/local/lib/R/library"
On Linux & R 3.4.1 (*Problem*)
> Sys.getenv("R_LIBS_USER") [1] "" > .libPaths() [1] "/usr/local/lib/R/site-library" "/usr/lib/R/site-library" [3] "/usr/lib/R/library"
I need to specify the lib parameter when I use the install.packages command.
> install.packages("devtools", "~/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.4") > library(devtools) Error in library(devtools) : there is no package called 'devtools' # Specify lib.loc parameter will not help with the dependency package > library(devtools, lib.loc = "~/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.4") Error: package or namespace load failed for 'devtools': .onLoad failed in loadNamespace() for 'devtools', details: call: loadNamespace(name) error: there is no package called 'withr' # A solution is to redefine .libPaths > .libPaths(c("~/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.4", .libPaths())) > library(devtools) # Works
A better solution is to specify R_LIBS_USER in ~/.Renviron file or ~/.bash_profile; see ?Startup.
Using external data from within another package
https://logfc.wordpress.com/2017/03/02/using-external-data-from-within-another-package/
How to exit a sourced R script
- How to exit a sourced R script
- Problem using the source-function within R-functions The best way to handle the generic sort of problem you are describing is to take those source'd files, and rewrite their content as functions to be called from your other functions.
Decimal point & decimal comma
Countries using Arabic numerals with decimal comma (Austria, Belgium, Brazil France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, ...) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_mark
R's internal C API
https://github.com/hadley/r-internals
Resource
Books
- A list of recommended books http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2015/11/r-recommended-reading.html
- Learning R programming by reading books: A book list
- Modern Applied Statistics with S by William N. Venables and Brian D. Ripley
- Seamless R and C++ Integration with Rcpp by Dirk Eddelbuettel
- Advanced R by Hadley Wickham 2014
- http://brettklamer.com/diversions/statistical/compile-hadleys-advanced-r-programming-to-a-pdf/ Compile Hadley's Advanced R to a PDF
- Functional programming and unit testing for data munging with R by Bruno Rodrigues
- R Cookbook by Paul Teetor
- Machine Learning with R by Brett Lantz
- R for Everyone by Jared P. Lander
- The Art of R Programming by Norman Matloff
- Applied Predictive Modeling by Max Kuhn
- R in Action by Robert Kabacoff
- The R Book by Michael J. Crawley
- Regression Modeling Strategies, with Applications to Linear Models, Survival Analysis and Logistic Regression by Frank E. Harrell
- Data Manipulation with R by Phil Spector
- Review of Efficient R Programming
- R packages: Organize, Test, Document, and Share Your Code by Hadley Wicklam 2015
- Text Mining with R: A Tidy Approach and a blog
- Efficient R programming by Colin Gillespie and Robin Lovelace. It works to re-create the html version of the book if we follow their simple instruction in the Appendix. Note that pdf version has advantages of expected output (mathematical notations, tables) over the epub version.
# R 3.4.1 .libPaths(c("~/R/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu-library/3.4", .libPaths())) setwd("/tmp/efficientR/") bookdown::render_book("index.Rmd", output_format = "bookdown::pdf_book") # generated pdf file is located _book/_main.pdf bookdown::render_book("index.Rmd", output_format = "bookdown::epub_book") # generated epub file is located _book/_main.epub. # This cannot be done in RStudio ("parse_dt" not resolved from current namespace (lubridate)) # but it is OK to run in an R terminal
Webinar
useR!
Blogs, Tips, Socials, Communities
- Google: revolutionanalytics In case you missed it
- Why R is hard to learn by Bob Musenchen.
- My 15 practical tips for a bioinformatician
- The R community is one of R's best features
Bug Tracking System
https://bugs.r-project.org/bugzilla3/ and Search existing bug reports. Remember to select 'All' in the Status drop-down list.