Combination Plot
combplotp.RdGenerates a plotly attribute plot given a series of possibly overlapping binary variables
Usage
combplotp(
formula,
data = NULL,
subset,
na.action = na.retain,
vnames = c("labels", "names"),
includenone = FALSE,
showno = FALSE,
maxcomb = NULL,
minfreq = NULL,
N = NULL,
pos = function(x) 1 * (tolower(x) %in% c("true", "yes", "y", "positive", "+",
"present", "1")),
obsname = "subjects",
ptsize = 35,
width = NULL,
height = NULL,
...
)Arguments
- formula
a formula containing all the variables to be cross-tabulated, on the formula's right hand side. There is no left hand side variable. If
formulais omitted, then all variables fromdataare analyzed.- data
input data frame. If none is specified the data are assumed to come from the parent frame.
- subset
an optional subsetting expression applied to
data- na.action
see
lmetc.- vnames
set to
"names"to use variable names to label axes instead of variable labels. When using the defaultlabels, any variable not having a label will have its name used instead.- includenone
set to
TRUEto include the combination where all conditions are absent- showno
set to
TRUEto show a light dot for conditions that are not part of the currently tabulated combination- maxcomb
maximum number of combinations to display
- minfreq
if specified, any combination having a frequency less than this will be omitted from the display
- N
set to an integer to override the global denominator, instead of using the number of rows in the data
- pos
a function of vector returning a logical vector with
TRUEvalues indicating positive- obsname
character string noun describing observations, default is
"subjects"- ptsize
point size, defaults to 35
- width
width of
plotlyplot- height
height of
plotlyplot- ...
optional arguments to pass to
table
Details
Similar to the UpSetR package, draws a special dot chart sometimes called an attribute plot that depicts all possible combination of the binary variables. By default a positive value, indicating that a certain condition pertains for a subject, is any of logical TRUE, numeric 1, "yes", "y", "positive", "+" or "present" value, and all others are considered negative. The user can override this determination by specifying her own pos function. Case is ignored in the variable values.
The plot uses solid dots arranged in a vertical line to indicate which combination of conditions is being considered. Frequencies of all possible combinations are shown above the dot chart. Marginal frequencies of positive values for the input variables are shown to the left of the dot chart. More information for all three of these component symbols is provided in hover text.
Variables are sorted in descending order of marginal frqeuencies and likewise for combinations of variables.
Examples
if (requireNamespace("plotly")) {
g <- function() sample(0:1, n, prob=c(1 - p, p), replace=TRUE)
set.seed(2); n <- 100; p <- 0.5
x1 <- g(); label(x1) <- 'A long label for x1 that describes it'
x2 <- g()
x3 <- g(); label(x3) <- 'This is<br>a label for x3'
x4 <- g()
combplotp(~ x1 + x2 + x3 + x4, showno=TRUE, includenone=TRUE)
n <- 1500; p <- 0.05
pain <- g()
anxiety <- g()
depression <- g()
soreness <- g()
numbness <- g()
tiredness <- g()
sleepiness <- g()
combplotp(~ pain + anxiety + depression + soreness + numbness +
tiredness + sleepiness, showno=TRUE)
}
#> Loading required namespace: plotly