as_tree_data | R Documentation |
The tree_network
function uses a 'native' data format that consists of a data
frame with minimally 2 vectors/columns, one named 'nodeId'
and one named
'parentId'
. Other columns in the data frame are also passed on to the
JavaScript code and attached to the elements in the D3 visualization so that
they can potentially be accessed by other JavaScript functions. This is an
advantageous format because:
it's an easy to use and understand R-like format
a hierarchical network can be succinctly defined by a list of each unique node and its parent node
since each row defines a unique node, additional columns can be added to add node-specific properties
in a hierarchical network, every link/edge can be uniquely identified by the node which it leads to, therefore each link/edge can also be specifically addressed by adding columns for formatting of the incoming link
as_tree_data
can convert from any of the following data types:
leafpathdf
(table)–parent|parent|node
–data.frame
hierarchical nested list (JSON)
hclust
data.tree
Node
igraph
ape phylo
as_tree_data(data, ...)
## S3 method for class 'character'
as_tree_data(data, ...)
## S3 method for class 'hclust'
as_tree_data(data, ...)
## S3 method for class 'list'
as_tree_data(data, children_name = "children", node_name = "name", ...)
## S3 method for class 'Node'
as_tree_data(data, ...)
## S3 method for class 'phylo'
as_tree_data(data, ...)
## S3 method for class 'tbl_graph'
as_tree_data(data, ...)
## S3 method for class 'igraph'
as_tree_data(data, root = "root", ...)
## S3 method for class 'data.frame'
as_tree_data(
data,
cols = NULL,
df_type = "treenetdf",
subset = names(data),
root,
...
)
data |
a tree network description in one of numerous forms (see details). |
... |
other arguments that will be passed on to as_tree_data |
children_name |
character specifying the name used for the list element that contains the childeren elements. |
node_name |
character specifying the name used for the list element that contains the name of the node |
root |
root name. |
cols |
named character vector specifying the names of columns to be
converted to the standard |
df_type |
character specifying which type of data frame to convert. Can
be |
subset |
character vector specifying the names of the columns (in order) that should be used to define the hierarchy. |
as_tree_data(character)
: Convert JSON from URL to treenetdf
as_tree_data(hclust)
: Convert hclust objects to treenetdf
as_tree_data(list)
: Convert a nested list to treenetdf
as_tree_data(Node)
: data.tree to treenetdf
as_tree_data(phylo)
: Phylo tree to treenetdf
as_tree_data(tbl_graph)
: tbl_graph_to_treenetdf
as_tree_data(igraph)
: Convert igraph tree to treenetdf
as_tree_data(data.frame)
: Convert a data.frame to a treenetdf
links <- read.csv(header = TRUE, stringsAsFactors = FALSE, text = '
source,target,name
1,,one
2,1,two
3,1,three
4,1,four
5,2,five
6,2,six
7,2,seven
8,6,eight')
# Convert data
as_tree_data(links, cols = c(nodeId = 'source', parentId = 'target'))
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.