# vanni_et_al-figures Code for the figures included in the manuscript [*Light into the darkness: Unifying the known and unknown coding sequence space in microbiome analyses*](https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.06.30.180448v1) To recreate the figures follow the instructions below: > This has been tested on R 3.6.3 Clone the repo with: ```bash git clone https://github.com/functional-dark-side/vanni_et_al-figures.git cd vanni_et_al-figures ``` Then get the data we used from [here](https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12738476.v1). The data is stored in [SQlite](https://www.sqlite.org/index.html) dbs, one DB for each figure. ```bash curl -JLO https://ndownloader.figshare.com/files/24109856 tar xvfz vanni_et_al-data.tar.gz ``` Then let's install the packages we used to plot the figures. First start R to get renv installed: ``` R ``` > If you open the project file `vanni_et_al-figures.Rproj` in Rstudio it will perform the same steps. If everything went well, [renv](https://rstudio.github.io/renv/articles/renv.html) will be installed and you will get a message like: ``` * Installing renv 0.11.0 ... Done! Successfully installed and loaded renv 0.11.0. * Project '/vol/cloud/SANDBOX/vanni_et_al-figures' loaded. [renv 0.11.0] ``` And restore the environment: ```r renv::restore() q() ``` Now you can recreate the basic figures with: ```bash ./scripts/Figure1.R ``` > Figures will be saved in figures/ Or you can play with the code and recreate the figures in your favorite IDE. In the folder `figures-manuscipt` you can find the final figures used in the manuscript after some beautifying.