R Notes
From Bioinformatics Software
Jump to navigationJump to searchA few very basic R examples
Contents
Loading a plain CSV file into a vector
myvector = read.csv(file="path_to_csv_file", header=FALSE)
- You may then access each of the individual components using myvector[,1], myvector[,2], ... myvector[,n]
Scatterplot two components of a vector
In this example, myvector has 4 components and we want to plot the 3rd and 4th
plot(myvector[,3], myvector[,4], main="This is the title of the plot")
Plot a simple histogram
hist(myvector[,3])
- Also try plot(density(myvector[,3])) for a density-plot
Linear regression
mymodel = lm(myvector[,3] ~ myvector[,4]) summary(mymodel)
Squeeze multiple plots onto a page ( 4x4 in this example )
par(cfrow = c(4,4)) # or par(cfcol = c(4,4)) depending on whether you want row or column ordering plot(myvector[,3], myvector[,4]) plot(myvector[,3], myvector[,4]) plot(myvector[,3], myvector[,4]) plot(myvector[,3], myvector[,4])
For loops
for (i in 1:100) { do_something_useful }
A complete example
- Launch R, and then paste this into the shell:
# Scott's quick R example par (mfrow=c(2,2), oma = c(0, 0, 2, 0), mar = c(5.1, 4.1, 2.1, 2.1), pch=20 );
a = rnorm(1000) b = rnorm(1000) c = rnorm(10000) d = rnorm(10000, mean=5, sd=20)
plot(a, b, main = "A vs B", xlab="x axis", ylab="y axis", pch=20, col="blue") plot(c, d, main = "C vs D", xlab="x axis", ylab="y axis", pch=".", col=palette(rainbow(100))) hist(a, main = "Histogram of A", col="darkgreen") plot(density(b), main = "Density plot of B", col="red")
mtext("This is an example that combines multiple plots on a single page", line=0.5, outer=TRUE)