Another option is to open the svg file in Inkscape which is a vector-based
editor. If you are planning to do this and work with the text labels, it is
easier to use svglite() in the package of the same name which draws text as
characters that can be selected and edited more easily than in files sav
I often have trouble with font sizes in the svg files, because they
rarely are the same as what I see on the screen. I then have to read
the documentation for "par" and play with the cex, cex.axis, cex.lab,
cex.main, and cex.sub parameters until I get what I want in the svg
file. I may als
If you look at the examples on the manual pages for the upgma() and NJ()
functions you will see that the results are generally sent to the plot()
function. To save that graph as an .svg file you need to open a graphics
device using the svg() function, plot the data, and close the graphics
device. Y
#Loading the required libraries
library(ape)
library(phangorn)
library(seqinr)
#Importing the required file
align_5 <- read.alignment("C:/Users/VAMSI/align 5.fasta", format = "fast")
align_119 <- read.alignment("C:/Users/VAMSI/align 119.fasta", format = "fasta")
Computing the distance matrix for bo
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