cytoset | R Documentation |
cytoset
: a reference class for efficiently managing the data representation
of a flowSet
This class is a container for a set of cytoframe
objects, analagous to
a flowSet
.
Similar to the distinction between the cytoframe
and
flowFrame
classes, the primary difference between the cytoset
and flowSet
classes is in the underlying representation of the data.
Because cytoset
is a reference class, copying or subsetting a cytoset
object will return a cytoset
pointing to the same underlying data. A
deep copy of the data can be obtained via the realize_view
method.
There is one notable exception to the typical behavior of most methods returning a cytoframe
.
The standard extraction operator ([[]]
) will by default perform a deep
copy of the subset being extracted and return a flowFrame
. This is for the sake of compatibility
with existing user scripts.
Objects can be created using cytoset()
and then adding samples
by providing a cytoframe
and sample name to cs_add_cytoframe
:
cs <- cytoset() cs_add_cytoframe(cs, "Sample Name", cytoframe)
The safest and easiest way to create cytoset
s directly from
FCS files is via the load_cytoset_from_fcs
function, and
there are alternative ways to specify the files to read. See the separate
documentation for details.
Subsetting. x[i]
where i
is a scalar,
returns a cytoset
object, and x[[i]]
a
flowFrame
object. In this respect the
semantics are similar to the behavior of the subsetting operators
for lists. x[i, j]
returns a cytoset
for which the
parameters of each cytoframe
have been subset
according to j
, x[[i,j]]
returns the subset of a
single flowFrame
for all parameters in
j
.
The reason for the default behavior of the extraction operator [[]]
returning a flowFrame
rather than cytoframe
is for backwards compatibility with existing user scripts. This behavior
can be overridden to instead return a cytoframe
with the additional
returnType
argument.
Usage:
cytoset[i]
cytoset[i,j]
cytoset[[i]]
cytoset[[i, returnType = "cytoframe"]]
Extract a cytoframe
from a cytoset
by supplying either
a sample name or index and optionally supplying a subset of columns.
The cytoframe
to be extracted (i
argument) can be specified using its sample name (character)
or index in the cytoset (int/numeric). Columns (j
argument) can be specified using channel name (character),
index (int/numeric), or logical vector. If this argument is missing, all columns will be selected.
Usage:
(Assuming cs
is a cytoset
and cf
is the extracted cytoframe
)
cf <- get_cytoframe_from_cs(cs, i, j)
cf <- get_cytoframe_from_cs(cs, i)
Subsetting by frame name. This will return a single
cytoframe
object. Note that names may have to
be quoted if they are not valid R symbols
(e.g. cytoset$"sample 1"
).
Extract or replace
the character
object with the (common)
column names of all the data matrices in the
cytoframes
.
Usage:
colnames(cytoset)
colnames(cytoset) <- value
Extract or replace the name
item from the environment.
Usage:
identifier(cytoset)
identifier(cytoset) <- value
Extract or replace the
AnnotatedDataFrame
containing the phenotypic data for the whole data set. Each row
corresponds to one of the cytoframe
s.
The sampleNames
of phenoData
(see below) must match the names of the
cytoframe
s in the frames
environment.
Usage:
phenoData(cytoset)
phenoData(cytoset) <- value
Extract or replace the data frame (or columns
thereof) containing actual phenotypic information from the
phenoData
of the underlying data.
Usage:
pData(cytoset)
pData(cytoset)$someColumn <- value
Not yet implemented.
Extract and set varLabels
in the AnnotatedDataFrame
of the phenoData
of the underyling data.
Usage:
varLabels(cytoset)
varLabels(cytoset) <- value
Extract and replace sample names from the
phenoData
. Sample names correspond to frame
identifiers, and replacing them will also replace the GUID
for each cytoframe. Note that each sample name needs to be
unique.
Usage:
sampleNames(cytoset)
sampleNames(cytoset) <- value
Extract or replace keywords specified in a character
vector or a list from the description
slot of each
frame. See keyword
for details.
Usage:
keyword(cytoset, list(keywords))
keyword(cytoset, keywords)
keyword(cytoset) <- list(foo="bar")
The number of cytoframe
objects in
the set.
Usage:
length(cytoset)
display object summary.
Return descriptive statistical summary (min, max,
mean and quantile) for each channel of each cytoframe
.
Usage:
summary(cytoset)
Apply a function on all frames in a cytoset
object. Similar to sapply
, but with additional
parameters. See fsApply
for details.
Usage:
fsApply(cytoset, function, ...)
fsApply(cytoset, function, use.exprs=TRUE, ...)
Apply a compensation matrix on all frames in a
cytoset
object. See compensate
for details.
Usage:
compensate(cytoset, matrix)
Apply a transformation function on all frames of a
cytoset
object. See transform
for details.
Usage:
transform(cytoset, ...)
Apply a filter on a cytoset
object. There are methods for filter
objects,
and lists of filter
objects. The latter has to
be a named list, where names of the list items are matching
the sampleNames
of the cytoset
. See filter
for details.
Usage:
filter(cytoset, filter)
filter(cytoset, list(filters))
Split all cytoframe
objects according to a
filter
, filterResult
or a list of such
objects, where the length of the list has to be the same as the
length of the cytoset
. This returns a list of
cytoframe
s or an object of class
cytoset
if the flowSet
argument is set to
TRUE
. Alternatively, a cytoset
can be split into
separate subsets according to a factor (or any vector that can be
coerced into a factor), similar to the behaviour of
split
for lists. This will return a list of
cytoset
s. See split
for details.
Usage:
split(cytoset, filter)
split(cytoset, filterResult)
split(cytoset, list(filters))
split(cytoset, factor)
Returns a cytoset
of
cytoframe
s that have been subset according
to a filter
or
filterResult
, or according to a list of such
items of equal length as the cytoset
. See Subset
for details.
Usage:
Subset(cytoset, filter)
Subset(cytoset, filterResult)
Subset(cytoset, list(filters))
Not yet implemented.
Combine two cytoset
objects, or one
cytoset
and one cytoframe
object.
Usage:
rbind2(cytoset, cytoset)
rbind2(cytoset, cytoframe)
Compute spillover matrix from a compensation
set. See spillover
for details.
Returns a new cytoset
with its own copy of the
underlying data (a deep copy). The optional filepath
argument accepts
a string to specify a full directory name for storing the new copies of the data
from the FCS files in h5 format.
Usage:
realize_view(cytoset, filepath)
Adds a cytoframe
to the cytoset
with sample name given
by a string.
Usage:
cs_add_cytoframe(cytoset, "SampleName", cytoframe)
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