add_track.rd
Add self-defined graphics track by track
add_track(gr = NULL, category = NULL, track = current_track() + 1,
clip = TRUE, panel_fun = function(gr) NULL, panel.fun = NULL,
use_raster = FALSE,
raster_device = c("png", "jpeg", "tiff", "CairoPNG", "CairoJPEG", "CairoTIFF"),
raster_quality = 1,
raster_device_param = list())
genomic regions. It should be a data frame in BED format or a GRanges
object.
subset of categories (e.g. chromosomes) that users want to add graphics. The value can be a vector which contains more than one category. By default it is all available categories.
which track the graphics will be added to. By default it is the next track. The value should only be a scalar.
whether graphics are restricted inside the cell.
self-defined panel function to add graphics in each 'cell'. THe argument gr
in panel_fun
only contains data for the current category which is a subset of the main gr
. The function can also contains no argument if nothing needs to be passed in.
deprecated
whether render the each panel as a raster image. It helps to reduce file size when the file size is huge.
graphic device which is used to generate the raster image
a value set to larger than 1 will improve the quality of the raster image. A temporary image with raster_quality
*raster_quality
times the original size of panel is generated first and then fit into the panel by grid.raster
.
a list of further parameters for the selected graphic device
Initialization of the Trellis layout and adding graphics are two independent steps.
Once the layout initialization finished, each cell will be an independent plotting region.
As same as panel_fun
in circlize-package
, the self-defined function panel_fun
will be applied on every cell in the specified track (by default it is the 'current' track).
When adding graphics in each cell, get_cell_meta_data
can return several meta data for the current cell.
Since this package is implemented by the grid
graphic system, grid
-family functions
(such as grid.points
, grid.rect
, ...) should be used to add graphics. The usage
of grid
functions is quite similar as the traditional graphic functions.
Followings are several examples:
grid.points(x, y)
grid.lines(x, y)
grid.rect(x, y, width, height)
Graphical parameters are usually passed by gpar
:
grid.points(x, y, gp = gpar(col = "red")
grid.rect(x, y, width, height, gp = gpar(fill = "black", col = "red"))
grid
system also support a large number of coordinate measurement systems by defining proper unit
object
which provides high flexibility to place graphics on the plotting regions.
grid.points(x, y, default.units = "npc")
grid.rect(x, y, width = unit(1, "cm"))
You can refer to the documentations and vignettes of grid-package
to get a overview.
No value is returned.
There are several functions which draw specific graphics and are implemented by add_track
:
# There is no example
NULL
#> NULL