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For all examples the movies data set contained in the package will be used.
library(UpSetR)
movies <- read.csv( system.file("extdata", "movies.csv", package = "UpSetR"), header=T, sep=";" )
Each list contained in the queries parameter takes 4
fields: query, params, color, and
active.
query specifies which query is going to be
run
params is a list of paramters for the query to work
on
color is the color that will represent the query on
the plot. If no color is provided, a color will be selected from the
UpSetR default color palette.
active determines how the query will be represented
on the plot. If active is TRUE, the
intersection size bar will be overlayed by a bar representing the query.
If active is FALSE, a jitter point will be
placed on the intersection size bar.
To learn how queries can be explored and visualized on an element level see the Attribute Plots vignette.
This example shows how to use the built in intersection query,
intersects, to find or display elements in specific
intersections. In this example the color selected for the active query
is from the default color palette.
upset(movies, queries = list(list(query = intersects, params = list("Drama", "Comedy", "Action"), color = "orange", active = T), list(query = intersects, params = list("Drama"), color = "red", active = F), list(query = intersects, params = list("Action", "Drama"), active = T)))
This example shows how to use the built in element query,
elements, to visualize how certain elements are distributed
amongst the intersections.
upset(movies, queries = list(list(query = elements, params = list("AvgRating", 3.5, 4.1), color = "blue", active = T), list(query = elements, params = list("ReleaseDate", 1980, 1990, 2000), color = "red", active = F)))
This example shows how to use the expression parameter
to subset the results of element and intersection queries.
upset(movies, queries = list(list(query = intersects, params = list("Action", "Drama"), active = T), list(query = elements, params = list("ReleaseDate", 1980, 1990, 2000), color = "red", active = F)), expression = "AvgRating > 3 & Watches > 100")
Creating a custom query to operate on the rows of the data.
Myfunc <- function(row, release, rating){
data <- (row["ReleaseDate"] %in% release) & (row["AvgRating"] > rating)
}
Applying the created query to the queries parameter.
upset(movies, queries = list(list(query = Myfunc, params = list(c(1970,1980, 1990, 1999, 2000), 2.5), color = "blue", active =T)))
To add a legend for the queries applied, the
query.legend parameter can be used. The
query.legend parameter takes the position where the legend
should be displayed, either top or bottom. To apply a
specific name to each query, the parameter query.name can
be used when defining the query in the queries paramter. If
no query.name is provided, a generic name will be used. The
example below shows how to do this.
upset(movies, query.legend = "top", queries = list(list(query = intersects, params = list("Drama", "Comedy", "Action"), color = "orange", active = T, query.name="Funny action"), list(query = intersects, params = list("Drama"), color = "red", active = F), list(query = intersects, params = list("Action", "Drama"), active = T, query.name="Emotional action")))
Combining pieces from all previous examples into one awesome query!
upset(movies, query.legend = "bottom", queries = list(list(query = Myfunc, params = list(c(1970,1980, 1990, 1999, 2000), 2.5), color = "orange", active =T), list(query = intersects, params = list("Action", "Drama"), active = F), list(query = elements, params = list("ReleaseDate", 1980, 1990, 2000), color = "red", active = F, query.name="Decades")), expression = "AvgRating > 3 & Watches > 100")
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They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
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