ArrayGrid and ArrayViewport objects
A grid is a partitioning of an array-like object into blocks (or viewports).
In the DelayedArray package, grids and viewports are formally represented by ArrayGrid and ArrayViewport objects, respectively.
There are two variants of ArrayGrid objects:
RegularArrayGrid objects: for grids where all the blocks have the same geometry (except maybe for the edge blocks).
ArbitraryArrayGrid objects: for grids where blocks don't necessarily have the same geometry.
ArrayGrid and ArrayViewport objects are used extensively in the context of block processing of array-like objects.
## Constructor functions: RegularArrayGrid(refdim, spacings=refdim) ArbitraryArrayGrid(tickmarks) downsample(x, ratio=1L)
refdim |
An integer vector containing the dimensions of the reference array. |
spacings |
An integer vector specifying the grid spacing along each dimension. |
tickmarks |
A list of integer vectors, one along each dimension of the reference array, representing the tickmarks along that dimension. Each integer vector must be sorted in ascending order. NAs or negative values are not allowed. |
x |
An ArrayGrid object. |
ratio |
An integer vector specifying the ratio of the downsampling along each dimension. Can be of length 1, in which case the same ratio is used along all the dimensions. |
RegularArrayGrid and ArbitraryArrayGrid are concrete subclasses of ArrayGrid, which itself is a virtual class.
Note that an ArrayGrid or ArrayViewport object doesn't store any array data, only the geometry of the grid or viewport. This makes these objects extremely light-weight, even for grids made of millions of blocks.
For RegularArrayGrid()
, a RegularArrayGrid instance.
For ArbitraryArrayGrid()
, an ArbitraryArrayGrid instance.
For downsample()
, an ArrayGrid object on the same reference
array than x
.
blockApply
and family for convenient block
processing of an array-like object.
mapToGrid
for mapping reference array positions to
grid positions and vice-versa.
DelayedArray objects.
array objects in base R.
## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## A. ArrayGrid OBJECTS ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## Create a regularly-spaced grid on top of a 3700 x 100 x 33 array: grid1 <- RegularArrayGrid(c(3700, 100, 33), c(250, 100, 10)) ## Dimensions of the reference array: refdim(grid1) ## Number of grid elements along each dimension of the reference array: dim(grid1) ## Total number of grid elements: length(grid1) ## First element in the grid: grid1[[1L]] # same as grid1[[1L, 1L, 1L]] ## Last element in the grid: grid1[[length(grid1)]] # same as grid1[[15L, 1L, 4L]] ## Dimensions of the grid elements: dims(grid1) # one row per grid element ## Lengths of the grid elements: lengths(grid1) # same as rowProds(dims(grid1)) stopifnot(sum(lengths(grid1)) == prod(refdim(grid1))) maxlength(grid1) # does not need to compute lengths(grid1)) first # so is more efficient than max(lengths(grid1)) stopifnot(maxlength(grid1) == max(lengths(grid1))) ## Create an arbitrary-spaced grid on top of a 15 x 9 matrix: grid2 <- ArbitraryArrayGrid(list(c(2L, 7:10, 13L, 15L), c(5:6, 6L, 9L))) refdim(grid2) dim(grid2) length(grid2) grid2[[1L]] # same as grid2[[1L, 1L]] grid2[[length(grid2)]] # same as grid2[[15L, 9L]] dims(grid2) lengths(grid2) array(lengths(grid2), dim(grid2)) # display the grid element lengths in # an array of same shape as grid2 stopifnot(sum(lengths(grid2)) == prod(refdim(grid2))) maxlength(grid2) # does not need to compute lengths(grid2)) first # so is more efficient than max(lengths(grid2)) stopifnot(maxlength(grid2) == max(lengths(grid2))) ## Max (i.e. highest) resolution grid: Hgrid <- RegularArrayGrid(6:4, c(1, 1, 1)) Hgrid dim(Hgrid) # same as refdim(Hgrid) stopifnot(identical(dim(Hgrid), refdim(Hgrid))) stopifnot(all(lengths(Hgrid) == 1)) ## Min (i.e. lowest) resolution grid: Lgrid <- RegularArrayGrid(6:4, 6:4) Lgrid stopifnot(all(dim(Lgrid) == 1)) stopifnot(identical(dim(Lgrid[[1L]]), refdim(Lgrid))) stopifnot(identical(dims(Lgrid), matrix(refdim(Lgrid), nrow=1))) ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## B. ArrayViewport OBJECTS ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## Grid elements are ArrayViewport objects: grid1[[1L]] class(grid1[[1L]]) grid1[[2L]] grid1[[2L, 1L, 1L]] grid1[[15L, 1L, 4L]] ## Construction of a standalong ArrayViewport object: m0 <- matrix(1:30, ncol=5) block_dim <- c(4, 3) viewport1 <- ArrayViewport(dim(m0), IRanges(c(3, 2), width=block_dim)) viewport1 dim(viewport1) # 'block_dim' length(viewport1) # number of array elements in the viewport ranges(viewport1) ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## C. GRIDS CAN BE TRANSPOSED ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- tgrid2 <- t(grid2) dim(tgrid2) refdim(tgrid2) ## Use aperm() if the grid has more than 2 dimensions: tgrid1 <- aperm(grid1) dim(tgrid1) refdim(tgrid1) aperm(grid1, c(3, 1, 2)) aperm(grid1, c(1, 3, 2)) aperm(grid1, c(3, 1)) # some dimensions can be dropped aperm(grid1, c(3, 2, 3)) # and some can be repeated ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## D. DOWNSAMPLING AN ArrayGrid OBJECT ## --------------------------------------------------------------------- ## The elements (ArrayViewport) of an ArrayGrid object can be replaced ## with bigger elements obtained by merging adjacent elements. How many ## adjacent elements to merge along each dimension is specified via the ## 'ratio' vector (one integer per dimension). We call this operation ## "downsampling. It can be seen as reducing the "resolution" of a grid ## by the specified ratio (if we think of the grid elements as pixels). downsample(grid2, 2) downsample(grid2, 3) downsample(grid2, 4) ## Downsampling preserves the dimensions of the reference array: stopifnot(identical(refdim(downsample(grid2, 2)), refdim(grid2))) stopifnot(identical(refdim(downsample(grid2, 3)), refdim(grid2))) stopifnot(identical(refdim(downsample(grid2, 4)), refdim(grid2))) ## A big enough ratio will eventually produce the coarsest possible grid ## i.e. a grid with a single grid element covering the entire reference ## array: grid3 <- downsample(grid2, 7) length(grid3) grid3[[1L]] stopifnot(identical(dim(grid3[[1L]]), refdim(grid3))) ## Downsampling by a ratio of 1 is a no-op: stopifnot(identical(downsample(grid2, 1), grid2)) ## Using one ratio per dimension: downsample(grid2, c(2, 1)) ## Downsample a max resolution grid: refdim <- c(45, 16, 20) grid4 <- RegularArrayGrid(refdim, c(1, 1, 1)) ratio <- c(6, 1, 3) stopifnot(identical( downsample(grid4, ratio), RegularArrayGrid(refdim, ratio) ))
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