tidytable
?tidyverse
-like syntax built on top of the fast data.table
packagedtplyr
is missing, including many tidyr
functionsInstall the released version from CRAN with:
Or install the development version from GitHub with:
tidytable
uses verb.()
syntax to replicate tidyverse
functions:
library(tidytable)
df <- data.table(x = 1:3, y = 4:6, z = c("a", "a", "b"))
df %>%
select.(x, y, z) %>%
filter.(x < 4, y > 1) %>%
arrange.(x, y) %>%
mutate.(double_x = x * 2,
x_plus_y = x + y)
#> # A tidytable: 3 × 5
#> x y z double_x x_plus_y
#> <int> <int> <chr> <dbl> <int>
#> 1 1 4 a 2 5
#> 2 2 5 a 4 7
#> 3 3 6 b 6 9
A full list of functions can be found here.
Group by calls are done by using the .by
argument of any function that has “by group” functionality.
.by = z
.by = c(y, z)
df %>%
summarize.(avg_x = mean(x),
count = n(),
.by = z)
#> # A tidytable: 2 × 3
#> z avg_x count
#> <chr> <dbl> <int>
#> 1 a 1.5 2
#> 2 b 3 1
.by
vs. group_by()
tidytable
follows data.table
semantics where .by
must be called each time you want a function to operate “by group”.
Below is some example tidytable
code that utilizes .by
that we’ll then compare to its dplyr
equivalent. The goal is to grab the first two rows of each group using slice.()
, then add a group row number column using mutate.()
:
library(tidytable)
df <- data.table(x = c("a", "a", "a", "b", "b"))
df %>%
slice.(1:2, .by = x) %>%
mutate.(group_row_num = row_number(), .by = x)
#> # A tidytable: 4 × 2
#> x group_row_num
#> <chr> <int>
#> 1 a 1
#> 2 a 2
#> 3 b 1
#> 4 b 2
Note how .by
is called in both slice.()
and mutate.()
.
Compared to a dplyr
pipe chain that utilizes group_by()
, where each function operates “by group” until ungroup()
is called:
library(dplyr)
df <- tibble(x = c("a", "a", "a", "b", "b"))
df %>%
group_by(x) %>%
slice(1:2) %>%
mutate(group_row_num = row_number()) %>%
ungroup()
#> # A tibble: 4 × 2
#> x group_row_num
#> <chr> <int>
#> 1 a 1
#> 2 a 2
#> 3 b 1
#> 4 b 2
Note that the ungroup()
call is unnecessary in tidytable
.
tidytable
allows you to select/drop columns just like you would in the tidyverse by utilizing the tidyselect
package in the background.
Normal selection can be mixed with all tidyselect
helpers: everything()
, starts_with()
, ends_with()
, any_of()
, where()
, etc.
df <- data.table(
a = 1:3,
b1 = 4:6,
b2 = 7:9,
c = c("a", "a", "b")
)
df %>%
select.(a, starts_with("b"))
#> # A tidytable: 3 × 3
#> a b1 b2
#> <int> <int> <int>
#> 1 1 4 7
#> 2 2 5 8
#> 3 3 6 9
To drop columns use a -
sign:
These same ideas can be used whenever selecting columns in tidytable
functions - for example when using count.()
, drop_na.()
, across.()
, pivot_longer.()
, etc.
A full overview of selection options can be found here.
.by
tidyselect
helpers also work when using .by
:
df <- data.table(
a = 1:3,
b = c("a", "a", "b"),
c = c("a", "a", "b")
)
df %>%
summarize.(avg_a = mean(a), .by = where(is.character))
#> # A tidytable: 2 × 3
#> b c avg_a
#> <chr> <chr> <dbl>
#> 1 a a 1.5
#> 2 b b 3
Tidy evaluation can be used to write custom functions with tidytable
functions. The embracing shortcut {{ }}
works, or you can use enquo()
with !!
if you prefer:
df <- data.table(x = c(1, 1, 1), y = c(1, 1, 1), z = c("a", "a", "b"))
add_one <- function(data, add_col) {
data %>%
mutate.(new_col = {{ add_col }} + 1)
}
df %>%
add_one(x)
#> # A tidytable: 3 × 4
#> x y z new_col
#> <dbl> <dbl> <chr> <dbl>
#> 1 1 1 a 2
#> 2 1 1 a 2
#> 3 1 1 b 2
The .data
and .env
pronouns also work within tidytable
functions:
var <- 10
df %>%
mutate.(new_col = .data$x + .env$var)
#> # A tidytable: 3 × 4
#> x y z new_col
#> <dbl> <dbl> <chr> <dbl>
#> 1 1 1 a 11
#> 2 1 1 a 11
#> 3 1 1 b 11
A full overview of tidy evaluation can be found here.
dt()
helperThe dt()
function makes regular data.table
syntax pipeable, so you can easily mix tidytable
syntax with data.table
syntax:
df <- data.table(x = 1:3, y = 4:6, z = c("a", "a", "b"))
df %>%
dt(, .(x, y, z)) %>%
dt(x < 4 & y > 1) %>%
dt(order(x, y)) %>%
dt(, double_x := x * 2) %>%
dt(, .(avg_x = mean(x)), by = z)
#> # A tidytable: 2 × 2
#> z avg_x
#> <chr> <dbl>
#> 1 a 1.5
#> 2 b 3
For those interested in performance, speed comparisons can be found here.