R package to interact with the modeling framework Simplace
This package provides methods to interact with the modelling
framework Simplace -
Scientific
Impact assessment and
Modelling
PLatform for
Advanced
Crop and
Ecosystem management.
See www.simplace.net for more
information on Simplace. Simplace is written in Java (and some parts in
Scala) so one can access it from R via rJava.
The purpose of this package is to simplify the interaction between R and
Simplace, by providing functions to:
For installing Simplace, please consult the webpage www.simplace.net.
A brief guide to install Simplace:
simplace package in R:install.packages('simplace')The most recent development version can be installed from github:
devtools::install_github("gk-crop/simplace_rpkg")If you encounter errors, make sure to install the packages
devtools and rJava.
The usage of Simplace in R follows roughly this scheme:
data.frame,
list etc.)rJava should be installed automatically with
simplace. If not, install it manually:install.packages('rJava')simplace_core,
simplace_modules and optionally simplace_run
are in a common directory and set the installation dir to this
directory.library(simplace)
SimplaceInstallationDir <- findSimplaceInstallations()
Solution <- paste(SimplaceInstallationDir,
"simplace_run/simulation/gk/solution/complete/Complete.sol.xml",sep="")
simplace <- initSimplace(SimplaceInstallationDir)
openProject(simplace, Solution)
parameter <- list()
parameter$enddate <- "31-12-1992"
sid <- createSimulation(simplace,parameter)
runSimulations(simplace)
result <- getResult(simplace,"DIAGRAM_OUT", sid);
closeProject(simplace)After specifying the directories and the solution, the framework is initialized and the project opened. The end date of the simulation is (re)set and the simulation is run. After the run the result is retrieved.
resf <- resultToDataframe(result)
dates <- 300:730
weights <- resf[dates,
c("TOP_LINE_Roots","TOP_LINE_Leaves","TOP_LINE_Stems","TOP_LINE_StorageOrgans")]
matplot(dates,weights,type="l",xlab="Days",ylab="Weight [g/m2]",main="Simulated Biomass")
legend(300,800,legend=c("Roots","Leaves","Stems","Storage Organs"),lty=1:4,col=1:4)The result is converted to a dataframe. Interesting variables are extracted and then plotted.
resultlistexp <- resultToList(result,expand=TRUE)
water <- resultlistexp$BOTTOM_ARRAY_VolumetricWaterContent
wmat <- do.call(rbind,water)
wmatpart <- wmat[dates,]
layers <- dim(wmatpart)[2]
filled.contour(dates,-(layers:1),wmatpart[,layers:1],
xlab="Day", ylab="Layer", main="Water content in soil",
color.palette = function(n){rgb((n:1)/n,(n:1)/n,1)})As the result contains an array which holds the water content for 40 layers, it is transformed to a list and the array is expanded.