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cranly provides core visualizations and summaries for the CRAN package database. It is aimed mainly as an analytics tool for developers to keep track of their CRAN packages and profiles, as well as those of others, which, at least for me, is proving harder and harder as the CRAN ecosystem grows.
The package provides comprehensive methods for cleaning up and organizing the information in the CRAN package database, for building package directives networks (depends, imports, suggests, enhances) and collaboration networks, and for computing summaries and producing interactive visualizations from the resulting networks. Network visualization is through the visNetwork package. The package also provides functions to coerce the networks to igraph https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=igraph objects for further analyses and modelling.
This vignette is a tour to the current capabilities in cranly.
Let’s attach cranly
library("cranly")
and use an instance of the cleaned CRAN package database
<- readRDS(url("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ikosmidis/cranly/develop/inst/extdata/cran_db.rds")) cran_db
as of 2022-08-26 14:43:43 BST.
Alternatively, today’s package directives and author collaboration networks can be constructed by doing
<- tools::CRAN_package_db() p_db
and then we need to clean and organize author names, depends, imports, suggests, enhances
<- clean_CRAN_db(p_db) cran_db
The resulting dataset carries the timestamp of when it was put together, which helps keeping track of when the data import has taken place and will be helpful in future versions when dynamic analyses and visualization methods are implemented.
attr(cran_db, "timestamp")
#> [1] "2022-08-26 14:43:43 BST"
We can now extract edges and nodes for the CRAN package directives network by simply doing
<- build_network(cran_db) package_network
and compute various statistics for the package network
## Global package network statistics
<- summary(package_network) package_summaries
The package_summaries
object can now be used for finding
the top-20 packages according to various statistics
plot(package_summaries, according_to = "n_authors", top = 20)
plot(package_summaries, according_to = "n_imports", top = 20)
plot(package_summaries, according_to = "n_imported_by", top = 20)
The names of the available statistics are
names(package_summaries)
#> [1] "package" "n_authors" "n_imports" "n_imported_by"
#> [5] "n_suggests" "n_suggested_by" "n_depends" "n_depended_by"
#> [9] "n_enhances" "n_enhanced_by" "n_linking_to" "n_linked_by"
#> [13] "betweenness" "closeness" "page_rank" "degree"
#> [17] "eigen_centrality"
The sub-network for my packages can be found using the extractor
function package_of
which use exact matching by default
<- package_by(package_network, "Ioannis Kosmidis")
my_packages
my_packages#> [1] "PlackettLuce" "betareg" "brglm" "brglm2"
#> [5] "detectseparation" "enrichwith" "profileModel" "trackeR"
#> [9] "trackeRapp"
We can now get an interactive visualization of the sub-network for my packages using
plot(package_network, package = my_packages, title = TRUE, legend = TRUE)
You can hover over the nodes and the edges to get package-specific information and links to the package pages.
In order to focus only on optional packages (i.e. exclude base and recommended packages), we do
<- subset(package_network, recommended = FALSE, base = FALSE)
optional_packages <- summary(optional_packages)
optional_summary plot(optional_summary, top = 30, according_to = "n_imported_by")
Next let’s build the CRAN collaboration network
<- build_network(object = cran_db, perspective = "author") author_network
Statistics for the collaboration network can be computed using the
summary
method as we did for package directives.
<- summary(author_network) author_summaries
The top-20 collaborators according to various network statistics are
plot(author_summaries, according_to = "n_packages", top = 20)
plot(author_summaries, according_to = "page_rank", top = 20)
plot(author_summaries, according_to = "betweenness", top = 20)
The R Core’s collaboration sub-network is
plot(author_network, author = "R Core")
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.