Creating a TI method: Script

dir <- tempdir()
knitr::opts_knit$set(root.dir = normalizePath(tempdir(), winslash = '/'))

# dyncli is not installed on travis or CRAN, so don't run some parts of the vignette there
NOT_CRAN <- Sys.getenv("NOT_CRAN") == "" || identical(tolower(Sys.getenv("NOT_CRAN")), "true")
NOT_TRAVIS <- !identical(tolower(Sys.getenv("TRAVIS")), "true")
library(dynwrap)

An alternative to wrapping a script inside R, is to wrap it using an external script. Because this does not provide any dependency management, this is not really useful for method end-users, but rather as a way to easily develop a TI method and to ultimately step up towards containerised wrapping.

Similarly as a wrapper written in R, you'll need to provide both a definition (= a definition.yml) and a way to run the methods (= a script).

definition.yml

The definition has the same hierarchical structure as used by the definition() function. A minimal example

definition.yml
definition_string <- paste0(readLines(system.file("examples/script/definition.yml", package = "dynwrap")), "\n", collapse = "")

readr::write_file(definition_string, "definition.yml")
knitr::asis_output(paste0("```yaml\n", definition_string, "\n```"))

You can use our template definition.yml to see all the different possibilities of what can be included in the definition: https://github.com/dynverse/dynmethods/tree/master/template_container . It may also be useful to check out some of the wrappers in dynmethods, e.g.: https://github.com/dynverse/ti_paga/blob/master/definition.yml

Running script

A running script reads in the data, creates a trajectory, and again writes the trajectory to a file. To do the loading and writing tasks, we provide helper libraries for R and python: dyncli and dynclipy.

The wrapper script will typically have the following structure:

A minimal example script for R:

run.R
run_r_string <- paste0(readLines(system.file("examples/script/run.R", package = "dynwrap")), "\n", collapse = "")

readr::write_file(run_r_string, "run.R")
knitr::asis_output(paste0("```r\n", run_r_string, "\n```"))

Make sure this script is executable!

```{bash, eval=NOT_CRAN && NOT_TRAVIS} chmod +x run.R

and for Python:

<div class="filename">run.py</div>
```r
run_py_script <- paste0(readLines(system.file("examples/script/run.py", package = "dynwrap")), "\n", collapse = "")

readr::write_file(run_py_script, "run.py")
knitr::asis_output(paste0("```python\n", run_py_script, "\n```"))

Testing it out

method <- create_ti_method_definition("definition.yml", "run.R")
dataset <- dynwrap::example_dataset
trajectory <- infer_trajectory(dataset, method(), verbose = TRUE)

If you have dynplot installed, you can also plot the trajectory:

library(dynplot)
# for now, install from github using:
# remotes::install_github("dynverse/dynplot")
plot_graph(trajectory)
plot_heatmap(trajectory, expression_source = dataset$expression)

Interactive development

With the debug parameter, it is possible to enter the script interactively. This makes it easier to develop TI method as you can just load in the input data, and code!

trajectory <- infer_trajectory(dataset, method(), debug = TRUE)

Making your method available for other users

Wrapping a method inside a script does not have any dependency management, and is therefore only meant for development purposes. To deploy your method to other users, check out the containerisation tutorial!

Wrapping a method without dyncli(py)

While using dyncli to load and save the data is the most straightforward when using R and python, it's also possible to skip these packages and do all the work yourself. Briefly you have to:

If after this you're still convinced you want to do this, please contact us. We'll be able to provide some further documentation!

temp_files <- c("run.R", "run.py", "definition.yml")
for (file in temp_files) {
  if (file.exists(file)) 
    file.remove(file)
}


Try the dynwrap package in your browser

Any scripts or data that you put into this service are public.

dynwrap documentation built on July 26, 2023, 5:15 p.m.