visNetAnimate: Function to animate the same graph but with multiple graph...

Description Usage Arguments Value Note See Also Examples

Description

visNetAnimate is supposed to animate the same graph but with multiple colorings according to input data matrix. The output can be a pdf file containing a list of frames/images, a mp4 video file or a gif file. To support video output file, the software 'ffmpeg' must be first installed (also put its path into the system PATH variable; see Note). To support gif output file, the software 'ImageMagick' must be first installed (also put its path into the system PATH variable; see Note).

Usage

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visNetAnimate(
g,
data,
filename = "visNetAnimate",
filetype = c("pdf", "mp4", "gif"),
image.type = c("jpg", "png"),
num.frame = ncol(data),
sec_per_frame = 1,
height.device = 7,
margin = rep(0.1, 4),
border.color = "#EEEEEE",
colormap = c("bwr", "jet", "gbr", "wyr", "br", "yr", "rainbow", "wb"),
ncolors = 40,
zlim = NULL,
colorbar = T,
colorbar.fraction = 0.25,
glayout = layout.fruchterman.reingold,
glayout.dynamics = F,
mtext.side = 3,
mtext.adj = 0,
mtext.cex = 1,
mtext.font = 2,
mtext.col = "black",
...
)

Arguments

g

an object of class "igraph" or "graphNEL"

data

an input data matrix used to color-code vertices/nodes. One column corresponds to one graph node coloring. The input matrix must have row names, and these names should include all node names of input graph, i.e. V(g)$name, since there is a mapping operation. After mapping, the length of the patern vector should be the same as the number of nodes of input graph. The way of how to color-code is to map values in the pattern onto the whole colormap (see the next arguments: colormap, ncolors, zlim and colorbar)

filename

the without-extension part of the name of the output file. By default, it is 'visNetAnimate'

filetype

the type of the output file, i.e. the extension of the output file name. It can be one of either 'pdf' for the pdf file, 'mp4' for the mp4 video file, 'gif' for the gif file

image.type

the type of the image files temporarily generated. It can be one of either 'jpg' or 'png'. These temporary image files are used for producing mp4/gif output file. The reason doing so is to accommodate that sometimes only one of image types is supported so that you can choose the right one

num.frame

a numeric value specifying the number of frames/images. By default, it sets to the number of columns in the input data matrix

sec_per_frame

a numeric value specifying how long (seconds) it takes to stream a frame/image. This argument only works when producing mp4 video or gif file.

height.device

a numeric value specifying the height (or width) of device/frame/image.

margin

margins as units of length 4 or 1

border.color

the border color of each figure

colormap

short name for the colormap. It can be one of "jet" (jet colormap), "bwr" (blue-white-red colormap), "gbr" (green-black-red colormap), "wyr" (white-yellow-red colormap), "br" (black-red colormap), "yr" (yellow-red colormap), "wb" (white-black colormap), and "rainbow" (rainbow colormap, that is, red-yellow-green-cyan-blue-magenta). Alternatively, any hyphen-separated HTML color names, e.g. "blue-black-yellow", "royalblue-white-sandybrown", "darkgreen-white-darkviolet". A list of standard color names can be found in http://html-color-codes.info/color-names

ncolors

the number of colors specified over the colormap

zlim

the minimum and maximum z/patttern values for which colors should be plotted, defaulting to the range of the finite values of z. Each of the given colors will be used to color an equispaced interval of this range. The midpoints of the intervals cover the range, so that values just outside the range will be plotted

colorbar

logical to indicate whether to append a colorbar. If pattern is null, it always sets to false

colorbar.fraction

the relative fraction of colorbar block against the figure block

glayout

either a function or a numeric matrix configuring how the vertices will be placed on the plot. If layout is a function, this function will be called with the graph as the single parameter to determine the actual coordinates. This function can be one of "layout.auto", "layout.random", "layout.circle", "layout.sphere", "layout.fruchterman.reingold", "layout.kamada.kawai", "layout.spring", "layout.reingold.tilford", "layout.fruchterman.reingold.grid", "layout.lgl", "layout.graphopt", "layout.svd" and "layout.norm". A full explanation of these layouts can be found in http://igraph.org/r/doc/layout_nicely.html

glayout.dynamics

logical to indicate whether graph layout should be dynamic. By default, it always sets to false. If YES, the Fruchterman-Reingold layout algorithm http://igraph.org/r/doc/layout_with_fr.html will be used to stimulate the dynamic layout

mtext.side

on which side of the mtext plot (1=bottom, 2=left, 3=top, 4=right)

mtext.adj

the adjustment for mtext alignment (0 for left or bottom alignment, 1 for right or top alignment)

mtext.cex

the font size of mtext labels

mtext.font

the font weight of mtext labels

mtext.col

the color of mtext labels

...

additional graphic parameters. See http://igraph.org/r/doc/plot.common.html for the complete list.

Value

If specifying the output file name (see argument 'filename' above), the output file is either 'filename.pdf' or 'filename.mp4' or 'filename.gif' in the current working directory. If no output file name specified, by default the output file is either 'visNetAnimate.pdf' or 'visNetAnimate.mp4' or 'visNetAnimate.gif'

Note

When producing mp4 video, this function requires the installation of the software 'ffmpeg' at https://www.ffmpeg.org. Shell command lines for ffmpeg installation in Terminal (for both Linux and Mac) are:

When producing gif file, this function requires the installation of the software 'ImageMagick' at http://www.imagemagick.org. Shell command lines for ImageMagick installation in Terminal are:

See Also

visNetMul

Examples

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## Not run: 
# 1) generate a random graph according to the ER model
g <- erdos.renyi.game(100, 1/100)

# 2) produce the induced subgraph only based on the nodes in query
subg <- dNetInduce(g, V(g), knn=0)

# 3) visualise the module with vertices being color-coded by scores
nnodes <- vcount(subg)
nsamples <- 10
data <- matrix(runif(nnodes*nsamples), nrow=nnodes, ncol=nsamples)
rownames(data) <- V(subg)$name
# output as a <a href="visNetAnimate.pdf">pdf</a> file
visNetAnimate(g=subg, data=data, filetype="pdf")
# output as a <a href="visNetAnimate.mp4">mp4</a> file but with dynamic layout
visNetAnimate(g=subg, data=data, filetype="mp4", glayout.dynamics=TRUE)
# output as a <a href="visNetAnimate.gif">gif</a> file but with dynamic layout
visNetAnimate(g=subg, data=data, filetype="gif", glayout.dynamics=TRUE)

## End(Not run)

dnet documentation built on Feb. 20, 2020, 5:08 p.m.

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