The PvSTATEM
package provides, for now, one report that
can be generated using the generate_plate_report
function.
It is an HTML report that contains a summary of the plate. It was
optimized for size so it could be sent via email. In the future, we plan
to add to the package report about Levey-Jennings plots. For now, we
will focus on the plate summary report. To present this functionality,
we use a sample dataset from the Covid OISE study, which is pre-loaded
into the package. Firstly, let us load the dataset as the
plate
object.
library(PvSTATEM)
plate_filepath <- system.file("extdata", "CovidOISExPONTENT.csv", package = "PvSTATEM", mustWork = TRUE)
layout_filepath <- system.file("extdata", "CovidOISExPONTENT_layout.xlsx", package = "PvSTATEM", mustWork = TRUE)
plate <- read_luminex_data(plate_filepath, layout_filepath)
#> Reading Luminex data from: /tmp/RtmpNm98u4/Rinst10f447d7b334/PvSTATEM/extdata/CovidOISExPONTENT.csv
#> using format xPONENT
#> [32m
#> New plate object has been created with name: CovidOISExPONTENT!
#> [39m
#> Plate with 96 samples and 30 analytes
To generate the report, we need to use the
generate_plate_report
function. There is one parameter that
needs to be set, which is the plate
object. Generation of
the report takes a few seconds, so please be patient. It can take up to
a minute for a large plate.
Default report has 4 main sections:
The user can customize the report by setting additional parameters.
The generate_plate_report
function has the following
optional parameters:
additonal_notes
- string with additional notes that
will be added to the reportnotes <- "
This is an example of additional notes that can be added to the report.
The notes support markdown syntax, for example:
**Author: Jane Doe** - bold
*Date: 2024-10-28* - italic
~~Complited~~ - strikethrough
H~2~O - subscripts
X^2^ - superscripts
[text that will be displayed](https://www.google.com) - link to resource
Ordered list:
1. First item
2. Second item
3. Third item
Unordered list:
- First item
- Second item
- Third item
> This is a blockquote
#### This is a heading
##### This is a subheading
###### This is a subsubheading
Even though headings #, ##, ### are supported, it is recommended not to use them, as the report has its own structure that is built around ### headings.
"
generate_plate_report(plate, additional_notes = notes)
Such notes looks like this in the report:
counts_lower_threshold
- the lower threshold for counts
plot, works the same way as in the plot_counts
function it
is used to change the threshold between green and yellow colourscounts_higher_threshold
- the higher threshold for
counts plot, works the same way as in the plot_counts
function it is used to change the threshold between yellow and red
coloursfilename
- The name of the output HTML report file. If
not provided or equals to NULL
, the output filename will be
based on the plate name, precisely:
{plate_name}_report.html
. By default the
plate_name
is the filename of the input file that contains
the plate data. For more details, please refer to the documentation
about the Plate
object. If the passed filename does not
contain the .html
extension, the default extension
.html
will be added. Filename can also be a path to a file,
e.g. path/to/file.html
. In this case, the
output_dir
and filename
will be joined
together. However, if the passed filepath is an absolute path and the
output_dir
parameter is also provided, the
output_dir
parameter will be ignored. If a file already
exists under a specified filepath, the function will overwrite it.output_dir
- The directory where the output CSV file
should be saved. Please note that any directory path provided will
create all necessary directories (including parent directories) if they
do not exist. If it equals to NULL
the current working
directory will be used. Default is ‘reports’.