--- title: "Introduction to epivizrStandalone" author: "Héctor Corrada Bravo" date: "`r Sys.Date()`" output: BiocStyle::html_document vignette: > %\VignetteIndexEntry{Introduction to epivizrStandalone} %\VignetteEngine{knitr::rmarkdown} %\VignetteEncoding{UTF-8} --- [`Epiviz`](http://epiviz.cbcb.umd.edu) is an interactive visualization tool for functional genomics data. It supports genome navigation like other genome browsers, but allows multiple visualizations of data within genomic regions using scatterplots, heatmaps and other user-supplied visualizations. You can find more information about Epiviz at [http://epiviz.cbcb.umd.edu/help](http://epiviz.cbcb.umd.edu/help) and see a video tour [here](http://youtu.be/099c4wUxozA). This package, `epivizrStandalone`, makes it possible to run the web app UI locally completely within R. The `epivizr` package implements two-way communication between the `R/Bioconductor` computational genomics environment and `Epiviz`. Objects in an `R` session can be displayed as tracks or plots on Epiviz. Epivizr uses Websockets for communication between the browser Javascript client and the R environmen, the same technology underlying the popular [Shiny](http://www.rstudio.com/shiny/) system for authoring interactive web-based reports in R. See the `epivizr` package vignette for more information on how to interact with the epiviz JS app. Running the epiviz visualization app as a standalone allows it to browse any genome of interest using Bioconductor infrastructure. For example, to browse the mouse genome we would do the following. ```{r,eval=FALSE,echo=TRUE} library(epivizrStandalone) library(Mus.musculus) app <- startStandalone(Mus.musculus, keep_seqlevels=paste0("chr",c(1:19,"X","Y")), verbose=TRUE, use_viewer_option = TRUE) ``` ```{r,eval=FALSE,echo=FALSE,message=FALSE} library(epivizrStandalone) library(Mus.musculus) app <- startStandalone(seqinfo=seqinfo(Mus.musculus), keep_seqlevels=paste0("chr",c(1:19,"X","Y")), non_interactive=TRUE, try_ports=TRUE) app$server$start_server() ``` ## Launch Epiviz Desktop App There is also an epiviz desktop application based on the electron platform: http://epiviz.org. This package allows `epivizr` sessions to connect to the desktop app trough the `startStandaloneApp` function. For example, we can start a genome browser using the epiviz desktop app: ```{r,eval=FALSE,echo=TRUE} library(epivizrStandalone) library(Mus.musculus) app <- startStandaloneApp(Mus.musculus, keep_seqlevels=paste0("chr",c(1:19,"X","Y")), verbose=TRUE) ``` ```{r,eval=FALSE} app$stop_app() ```