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rr-init's Introduction

Reproducible Research Project Initialization

Research project initialization and organization following reproducible research guidelines.

Overview

project
|- doc/            # documentation for the study
|  +- paper/       # manuscript(s), whether generated or not
|
|- data            # raw and primary data, are not changed once created 
|  |- raw/         # raw data, will not be altered
|  +- clean/       # cleaned data, will not be altered once created
|
|- code/           # any programmatic code
|- results         # all output from workflows and analyses
|  |- figures/     # graphs, likely designated for manuscript figures
|  +- pictures/    # diagrams, images, and other non-graph graphics
|
|- scratch/        # temporary files that can be safely deleted or lost
|- README          # the top level description of content
|- study.Rmd       # executable Rmarkdown for this study, if applicable
|- Makefile        # executable Makefile for this study, if applicable
|- study.Rproj     # RStudio project for this study, if applicable
|- datapackage.json # metadata for the (input and output) data files 

How to use

  • Create a new directory for your project.
  • Download the latest release of this repository, and unzip it in the directory you just created.
  • Open this document in an editor. Change the first line to reflect the title of your research study, and delete the rest of the content in this file. You can, but are not obligated to keep the Acknowledgements section.
  • Delete the LICENSE.md file, unless it will also apply to your project. (However, it probbaly will not to all of it.)
  • Go forth and experiment, keeping files in their appropriate places.

To the extent possible under law, the author(s) of this template have dedicated all copyright and related and neighboring rights to it to the public domain worldwide under the CC0 Public Domain Dedication. The template and all other content in the rr-init repository is distributed without any warranty.

Key concepts and goals

See Noble 2009 for a full description of and argument for the principle template structure. Some concepts and goals that guided this work:

  • (Good) There is a folder for the raw data, which do not get altered, or intermixed with data that is the result of manual or programmatic manipulation. I.e., derived data is kept separate from raw data, and raw data are not duplicated.
  • (Good) Code is kept separate from data.
  • (Better) Manuscript production output is kept separate from everything else.
  • (Good) There is a scratch directory for experimentation. Everything in the scratch directory can be deleted at any time without negative impact.
  • (Better) There should be a README in evey directory, describing the purpose of the directory and its contents.
  • (Best) There is a top-level Makefile or Rmarkdown file that documents the computational study in executable form. Those files may call out to other Makefile's or .Rmd files in subdirectories.
  • (Best) There is a formal metadata descriptor at the root of the package that describes all the important input and output data files.
  • (Meta) The template structure should have no special software or skill prerequisites to install. Specifically, deploying the template structure should not require installing git, or using the command line.

Acknowledgements

The initial file and directory structure of this project was developed by a group of participants in the Reproducible Science Curriculum Workshop, held at NESCent in December 2014. The structure is based on, and heavily follows the one proposed by Noble 2009, with a few but small modifications.

rr-init's People

Contributors

hlapp avatar

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rr-init's Issues

Output directory for knitr can only be set as function argument

If we want the top-level .Rmd file to be rendered to the doc/paper directory, then this output directory needs to be configurable as an option. However, apparently it isn't; only the directory for figure output can be set. This means that rendering the Markdown, HTML, LaTeX, and PDF versions need to be executed as rmarkdown::render() so that the output path can be passed as an argument. That the "Knit HTML" button is not to be used is likely rather undesirable for practical use and teaching purposes.

references folder

This looks great! I think it might be good to add a references or refs folder. For genomics/microbial ecology project we often use references to map our data against or for classifying sequences. We find it is helpful to have all of those references in a single place.

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