Description Usage Arguments Methods Author(s) Examples
An early, simple example of how to create useful interactive graphics in a class derived from BrowserViz. This package could evolve to be a drop-in replacement for the R base "plot" function, for plotting xy values. It has the additional virtue of full interactivity on the plotting surface, which is here an HTML5/d3 canvas. Manually selected points on that canvas, for example, can be queried in R. This may facilitate exploratory data analysis.
1 2 3 4 5 6 | BrowserVizDemo(portRange, host="localhost", title="BrowserVizDemo", quiet=TRUE)
## S4 method for signature 'BrowserVizDemoClass'
plot(obj, x, y)
## S4 method for signature 'BrowserVizDemoClass'
getSelection(obj)
|
obj |
The |
x |
A numeric vector, the x-coordinates of the points to plot. |
y |
A numeric vector, the y-coordinates of the points to plot. |
portRange |
One or more consecutive integers in the range
1025-65535. A typical choice is |
host |
Nearly always left to its default value, "localhost" but included as a parameter supporting remote computers for future flexibility. |
title |
The constructor creates a new window (or a new tab, depending on how you web browser is configured). This title is displayed at the top of the window or tab. |
quiet |
Trace and tracking messages are written to the R console if this variable is set to FALSE. |
In the code snippets below, obj
is an instance of the BrowserVizDemoClass.
BrowserVizDemo(portRange, host="localhost", title="BrowserVizDemo", quiet=TRUE, browserFile=NA)
:
Constructs a BrowserVizDemo object. Among the several actions
included are: your default webrowser browses to the uri of a minimal
http server embedded in BrowserVizDemo; the browserFile
is returned
to the browser; the websocket connection is initialized on both ends,
and the lowest numbered port in portRange
.
plot(obj, x, y)
: Draws an interactive xy plot in your
browser window, with labeled axes, and the surface scaled to the
x and y coordinates. In time this method will mimic the rich
behavior of the base R plot method, and all of its optional parameters.
Paul Shannon
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 | library(BrowserVizDemo)
plotter <- BrowserVizDemo(4000:4024)
## make sure everything is ready to use
while(!ready(plotter)) Sys.sleep(0.1)
## plot a simple set of x-y paris
plot(plotter, 1:10, (1:10)^2)
## learn which port we are using
port(plotter)
## illustrate a "low level" call. This detail is usually hidden from
## the user, implemented and contained (in the case of this example)
## in a getWindowTitle(plotter) method call. This level of detail
## reveals what goes on behind the scenes.
msg <- list(cmd="getWindowTitle", status="request", callback="handleResponse", payload="")
send(plotter, msg)
while(!browserResponseReady(plotter)) Sys.sleep(0.1)
getBrowserResponse(plotter)
## a simpler user-level approach:
getBrowserWindowTitle(plotter)
## set and get the windowTitle
setBrowserWindowTitle(plotter, "new title")
getBrowserWindowTitle(plotter)
## BrowserVizDemo provides another information method which, like the others, will apply
## and maybe be of some use to derived classes
getBrowserWindowSize(plotter)
## finally, you should close BrowserVizDemo when you are done, returning
## the port for use by other applications.
closeWebSocket(plotter)
|
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