AMR/inst/tinytest/test-resistance_predict.R

121 lines
4.3 KiB
R

# ==================================================================== #
# TITLE: #
# AMR: An R Package for Working with Antimicrobial Resistance Data #
# #
# SOURCE CODE: #
# https://github.com/msberends/AMR #
# #
# PLEASE CITE THIS SOFTWARE AS: #
# Berends MS, Luz CF, Friedrich AW, et al. (2022). #
# AMR: An R Package for Working with Antimicrobial Resistance Data. #
# Journal of Statistical Software, 104(3), 1-31. #
# https://doi.org/10.18637/jss.v104.i03 #
# #
# Developed at the University of Groningen and the University Medical #
# Center Groningen in The Netherlands, in collaboration with many #
# colleagues from around the world, see our website. #
# #
# This R package is free software; you can freely use and distribute #
# it for both personal and commercial purposes under the terms of the #
# GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GNU GPL-2), as published by #
# the Free Software Foundation. #
# We created this package for both routine data analysis and academic #
# research and it was publicly released in the hope that it will be #
# useful, but it comes WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY OR LIABILITY. #
# #
# Visit our website for the full manual and a complete tutorial about #
# how to conduct AMR data analysis: https://msberends.github.io/AMR/ #
# ==================================================================== #
if (AMR:::pkg_is_available("dplyr", min_version = "1.0.0", also_load = TRUE)) {
expect_stdout(AMX_R <- example_isolates %>%
filter(mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI") %>%
sir_predict(
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "date",
model = "binomial",
minimum = 10,
info = TRUE
) %>%
pull("value"))
# AMX resistance will increase according to data set `example_isolates`
expect_true(AMX_R[3] < AMX_R[20])
}
expect_stdout(x <- suppressMessages(resistance_predict(example_isolates,
col_ab = "AMX",
year_min = 2010,
model = "binomial",
info = TRUE
)))
pdf(NULL) # prevent Rplots.pdf being created
expect_silent(plot(x))
if (AMR:::pkg_is_available("ggplot2")) {
expect_silent(ggplot_sir_predict(x))
expect_silent(ggplot2::autoplot(x))
expect_error(ggplot_sir_predict(example_isolates))
}
expect_stdout(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
model = "binomial",
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "date",
info = TRUE
))
expect_stdout(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
model = "loglin",
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "date",
info = TRUE
))
expect_stdout(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
model = "lin",
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "date",
info = TRUE
))
expect_error(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
model = "INVALID MODEL",
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "date",
info = TRUE
))
expect_error(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
model = "binomial",
col_ab = "NOT EXISTING COLUMN",
col_date = "date",
info = TRUE
))
expect_error(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
model = "binomial",
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "NOT EXISTING COLUMN",
info = TRUE
))
expect_error(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "NOT EXISTING COLUMN",
info = TRUE
))
expect_error(sir_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
col_ab = "AMX",
col_date = "date",
info = TRUE
))
# almost all E. coli are MEM S in the Netherlands :)
expect_error(resistance_predict(
x = subset(example_isolates, mo == "B_ESCHR_COLI"),
model = "binomial",
col_ab = "MEM",
col_date = "date",
info = TRUE
))