orbi_plot_satellite_peaks {isoorbi} | R Documentation |
Visualize satellite peaks
Description
Call this function any time after flagging the satellite peaks to see where they are. Use the isotopocules
argument to focus on the specific isotopocules of interest.
Usage
orbi_plot_satellite_peaks(
dataset,
isotopocules = c(),
x = c("scan.no", "time.min"),
x_breaks = scales::breaks_pretty(5),
y_scale = c("log", "pseudo-log", "linear", "raw"),
y_scale_sci_labels = TRUE,
colors = c("#1B9E77", "#D95F02", "#7570B3", "#E7298A", "#66A61E", "#E6AB02", "#A6761D",
"#666666"),
color_scale = scale_color_manual(values = colors)
)
Arguments
dataset |
isox dataset with satellite peaks identified ( |
isotopocules |
which isotopocules to visualize, if none provided will visualize all (this may take a long time or even crash your R session if there are too many isotopocules in the data set) |
x |
x-axis column for the plot, either "time.min" or "scan.no" |
x_breaks |
what breaks to use for the x axis, change to make more specifid tickmarks |
y_scale |
what type of y scale to use: "log" scale, "pseudo-log" scale (smoothly transitions to linear scale around 0), "linear" scale, or "raw" (if you want to add a y scale to the plot manually instead) |
y_scale_sci_labels |
whether to render numbers with scientific exponential notation |
colors |
which colors to use, by default a color-blind friendly color palettes (RColorBrewer, dark2) |
color_scale |
use this parameter to replace the entire color scale rather than just the |
Value
a ggplot object