mo_source.Rd
These functions can be used to predefine your own reference to be used in as.mo
and consequently all mo_*
functions like mo_genus
and mo_gramstain
.
set_mo_source(path) get_mo_source()
path | location of your reference file, see Details |
---|
The reference file can be a text file seperated with commas (CSV) or pipes, an Excel file (old 'xls' format or new 'xlsx' format) or an R object file (extension '.rds'). To use an Excel file, you need to have the readxl
package installed.
set_mo_source
will check the file for validity: it must be a data.frame
, must have a column named "mo"
which contains values from microorganisms$mo
and must have a reference column with your own defined values. If all tests pass, set_mo_source
will read the file into R and export it to "~/.mo_source.rds"
. This compressed data file will then be used at default for MO determination (function as.mo
and consequently all mo_*
functions like mo_genus
and mo_gramstain
). The location of the original file will be saved as option with options(mo_source = path)
. Its timestamp will be saved with options(mo_source_datetime = ...)
.
get_mo_source
will return the data set by reading "~/.mo_source.rds"
with readRDS
. If the original file has changed (the file defined with path
), it will call set_mo_source
to update the data file automatically.
Reading an Excel file (.xlsx
) with only one row has a size of 8-9 kB. The compressed file will have a size of 0.1 kB and can be read by get_mo_source
in only a couple of microseconds (a millionth of a second).
On our website https://msberends.gitlab.io/AMR you can find a comprehensive tutorial about how to conduct AMR analysis, the complete documentation of all functions (which reads a lot easier than here in R) and an example analysis using WHONET data.
# NOT RUN { # imagine this Excel file (mo codes looked up in `microorganisms` data set): # A B # 1 our code mo # 2 lab_mo_ecoli B_ESCHR_COL # 3 lab_mo_kpneumoniae B_KLBSL_PNE # 1. We save it as 'home/me/ourcodes.xlsx' # 2. We use it for input: set_mo_source("C:\path\ourcodes.xlsx") #> Created mo_source file '~/.mo_source.rds' from 'home/me/ourcodes.xlsx'. # 3. And use it in our functions: as.mo("lab_mo_ecoli") #> B_ESCHR_COL mo_genus("lab_mo_kpneumoniae") #> "Klebsiella" # 4. It will look for changes itself: # (add new row to the Excel file and save it) mo_genus("lab_mo_kpneumoniae") #> Updated mo_source file '~/.mo_source.rds' from 'home/me/ourcodes.xlsx'. #> "Klebsiella" # }