knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>" )
Instead of using SVG RAW code (which could be tricky when one needed to modify some elements), a new approach only using the {ggplot2} package (along with the {ggtext} extension) was developped.
knitr::include_graphics("img/ex_robustesse.png")
This approach is based on simple and reproducible ggplot syntax and based on a few reference dataframes containing coordinates for lines and boxes (nodes) which are stored in the package as internal data that can be exported on your computer by using :
IDEATools:::show_tree_structure("my_directory")
The node labels used in the source code which produces the colored trees are found in another internal object, reference_list
, which is a list gathering several tibbles with reference info. By modifying the name
attribute in $indic_dim
, $indic_prop
and $properties_nodes
, you can translate the colored trees which will be produced.
The algorithm for producing colored trees was the result of a long work involving the testing of many methods and R packages. The first solution chosen was to draw the models in "white" on a vectorial drawing software (Inkscape) in svg format. SVG is a markup language (similar to XML or HTML) with which it is fairly easy to apply search and replace algorithms. A rectangle tag (corresponding to a node of the illuminated tree) can be written :
<rect style="fill:#ffffff;fill-opacity:1;stroke:#001800;stroke-width:0.1" id="rect2-16" width="17.833706" height="4.9643545" x="370.30774" y="143.9761" inkscape:label="#rect2-16" />
So all we had to do was find the tag for each rectangle, assign each rectangle identifier to its corresponding indicator, then we can search-replace the argument "fill:#ffffff" by the appropriate color corresponding to the evaluation :
knitr::include_graphics("img/cap_canvas.png")
IDEATools then converted this modified SVG source code to a proper PNG/PDF image using the {rsvg}
library.
The templates were stored as internal object R named "canvas". It was a list containing in each element the complete SVG source code of each template.
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