rodeo
-
Code generator for ODE-models in Rrodeo
is an add-on package for the R
statistical
computing software. It facilitates the implementation of mechanistic
models built on ordinary differential equations (ODE).
rodeo
imposes a well-known standard notation for
simultaneous ODE based on the stoichiometry
matrix. This notation is widely used in chemical and wastewater
engineering or biogeoscience.
rodeo
separates the conceptual model (the set of
ODE) from its implementation (computer program) by means of automatic
code generation. This makes models more easy (1) to understand by
non-programmers, (2) to run on different platforms/environments, (3) to
develop or modify, and (4) to ‘archive’ in times of rapidly changing
software.
The generated code (Fortran, R) can be used with existing suites
of numerical solvers, namely the R-packages deSolve
for dynamic simulation and rootSolve
for steady-state estimation. The use of compiled Fortran speeds up
numerical integration significantly compared to a purely R-based model
implementation (often by a factor between 2 and 100).
rodeo
has with built-in support for 1-D partial
differential equations (PDE) being tackled with the numerical method-of-lines.
The package currently provides a single R6 class named just like the
package (rodeo
). It contains several class- and non-class
methods to
The package vignette provides further details.
A current installation of R is required. In order to work with
rodeo
in high-performance mode, one needs the tools to
compile Fortran 2008 code (compiler, make utilities, etc.). These tools
are typically available by default on Linux systems. Users of other
systems should have a look at the Rtools.
The development version of the package can be installed directly from
the github repository as shown below. For this, the
devtools
package is required.
# Install and load development version
library("devtools")
install_github("dkneis/rodeo")
library("rodeo")
The release version should be available on CRAN and can be installed as usual (see below). Note that the release version may lag behind the development version in terms of functionality.
# Install and load release version
install.packages("rodeo")
library("rodeo")