{funkyheatmap} allows generating heatmap-like visualisations for data frames. Funky heatmaps can be fine-tuned by providing annotations of the columns and rows, which allows assigning multiple palettes or geometries or grouping rows and columns together in categories.
You can install funkyheatmap like so:
install.packages("funkyheatmap")
You can also download {funkyheatmap} as a standalone executable or a Nextflow pipeline.
Let’s use the mtcars
dataset as an example of what a
funky heatmap looks like.
library(funkyheatmap)
library(dplyr, warn.conflicts = FALSE)
library(tibble, warn.conflicts = FALSE)
data("mtcars")
<- mtcars %>%
data rownames_to_column("id") %>%
arrange(desc(mpg))
You need to provide some information on how each column should be rendered, for example:
<- tribble(
column_info ~id, ~group, ~name, ~geom, ~palette, ~options,
"id", "", "", "text", NA, list(hjust = 0, width = 6),
"mpg", "overall", "Miles / gallon", "bar", "palette1", list(width = 4, legend = FALSE),
"cyl", "overall", "Number of cylinders", "bar", "palette2", list(width = 4, legend = FALSE),
"disp", "group1", "Displacement (cu.in.)", "funkyrect", "palette1", lst(),
"hp", "group1", "Gross horsepower", "funkyrect", "palette1", lst(),
"drat", "group1", "Rear axle ratio", "funkyrect", "palette1", lst(),
"wt", "group1", "Weight (1000 lbs)", "funkyrect", "palette1", lst(),
"qsec", "group2", "1/4 mile time", "circle", "palette2", lst(),
"vs", "group2", "Engine", "circle", "palette2", lst(),
"am", "group2", "Transmission", "circle", "palette2", lst(),
"gear", "group2", "# Forward gears", "circle", "palette2", lst(),
"carb", "group2", "# Carburetors", "circle", "palette2", lst()
)
Now you can generate the funky heatmap:
funky_heatmap(data, column_info = column_info, expand = list(xmax = 4))
The reference
documentation on funky_heatmap()
details the exact
formats of each annotation object that you can pass to it.
Check out the vignette vignette("mtcars", "funkyheatmap")
for more information on how to customize this visualisation.
In vignette("dynbenchmark", "funkyheatmap")
we use funkyheatmap to regenerate the figures from Saelens et al. (2019)
doi:10.1038/s41587-019-0071-9.
We used Viash to wrap the
funkyheatmap::funky_heatmap()
function as a standalone
executable and Nextflow
module.