\name{SPADE.layout.arch} \alias{SPADE.layout.arch} \title{ Generate coordinates for plotting graphs } \description{ Performing "arch" layouts of graph vertices } \usage{ SPADE.layout.arch(mst_graph) } \arguments{ \item{mst_graph}{ The graph to layout. Must be acyclic and undirected. } } \details{ These functions calculate the coordinates of the vertices for a graph. \code{layout.arch} lays out the longest chain of the graph, the "backbone", on an arch, and the "side chains" as trees normal to that backbone. } \value{ All these functions return a numeric matrix with at least two columns, x and y positions, and the same number of lines as the number of vertices. } \author{ Michael Linderman } \seealso{ \code{\link{SPADE.annotateGraph}} } \examples{ # Not run ## Load two-parameters sample data included in package #data_file_path = paste(installed.packages()["spade","LibPath"],"spade","extdata","SimulatedRawData.fcs",sep=.Platform$file.sep) ## Run basic SPADE analyses, clustering on two parameters. #output_dir <- tempdir() #SPADE.driver(data_file_path, out_dir=output_dir, cluster_cols=c("marker1","marker2")) ## Generate PDFs of annotated graphs (into output_dir/pdf) using arch layout #mst_graph <- igraph:::read.graph(paste(output_dir,"mst.gml",sep=.Platform$file.sep),format="gml") #SPADE.plot.trees(mst_graph, output_dir, out_dir=paste(output_dir,"pdf",sep=.Platform$file.sep), layout=SPADE.layout.arch(mst_graph)) }