clean_factor() switched the names and values of
levelsclean_Date() and clean_POSIXct():
allow argument max_date to be the same length as
xdigits in format()Fix for latest R-devel, that does not allow
digits = 0 for format()
clean_Date() now supports month-year format for
which it sets the day as 1:
clean_Date("March")
#> (assuming format 'mmmm')
#> [1] "2021-03-01"
clean_Date("March 2020")
#> (assuming format 'mmmm yyyy')
#> [1] "2020-03-01"freq() now contains a wt argument to
set the weights. The default (NULL) yields the old
behaviour.
Fixed a bug in clean_POSIXct() that led to the
warning
Incompatible methods ("Ops.POSIXt", "Ops.Date") for ">"
New function format_p_value() to format raw p values
according to the APA guideline
clean_Date() now works with POSIX standards:
clean_Date("2020-11-12 12:24:12")
clean_Date(c("2020-11-12 12:24:12", "2020-11-13"), guess_each = TRUE)Currency now prints and formats without symbols as default, use
as_symbol = TRUE to print/format with currency
symbols
Support for older versions of R (v3.2)
New function format_names() to quickly and easily
change names of data.frame columns, lists or
character vectors.
df <- data.frame(old.name = "test1", value = "test2")
format_names(df, snake_case = TRUE)
format_names(df, camelCase = TRUE)
format_names(df, c(old.name = "new_name", value = "measurement"))
library(dplyr)
starwars %>%
format_names(camelCase = TRUE) %>% # column names
mutate(name = name %>%
format_names(snake_case = TRUE)) # values in columnNew generic function na_replace() to replace
NA values in any data type. Its default replacement value
is dependent on the data type that is given as input: 0 for
numeric values and class matrix, FALSE for
class logical, today for class Date, and
"" otherwise.
na_replace(c(1, 2, NA, NA))
#> [1] 1 2 0 0
na_replace(c(1, 2, NA, NA), replacement = -1)
#> [1] 1 2 -1 -1
library(dplyr)
starwars %>%
na_replace(hair_color) # only replace NAs in this column
starwars %>%
na_replace() # replace NAs in all columns ("" for hair_color and 0 for birth_year)Support for the upcoming R 4.1.0
New function rdate() to generate random dates (in
analogy to e.g. runif())
Frequency tables (freq()):
Added availability of data to header
Fix for using na.rm
Fix for transforming to a visual histogram with
hist()
New method for using format() on a frequency
table
New method for transforming the values of a frequency table to a
vector with as.vector(), which also supports dates
library(dplyr)
library(cleaner)
data.frame(dates = rdate(100)) %>%
freq(dates) %>%
as.vector()Fix for clean_Date() not accepting already
POSIX or Date input
When using clean_Date(..., guess_each = TRUE) it now
accepts the format parameter as a vector of options to let
it choose from
clean_Date() and clean_POSIXct gained a
parameter max_date (that defaults to today), so that they
will never return years beyond a specified date:
# old
clean_Date("23-01-67")
#> [1] "2067-01-23"
# new
clean_Date("23-01-67")
#> [1] "1967-01-23"
#> Warning: Some years were decreased by 100 to not exceed today.
#> Use clean_Date(..., max_date = Inf) to prevent this.
clean_Date("23-01-67", max_date = Inf)
#> [1] "2067-01-23"Cleaned all code using the lintr package
percentage class into the
percentage() function,
i.e. percentage(as.percentage(1)) would failas.percentage(2.5e-14)clean_double() and
clean_integer()median() in percentagesNA in percentages would not be
formatted correctlycleaneras.percentage() and clean_percentage(). They
also come with ‘S3 methods’ for print, format,
sum, min and max.clean_numeric(),
clean_percentage() and clean_currency()clean_character() on R v3.5 and loweras.currency() and clean_currency(). They also
come with ‘S3 methods’ for print, format,
sum, min and max.clean_POSIXct() to clean date/time objectstop_freq() now correctly selects bottoms items using
negative a number for nfreq.default() is now exported for use in other
packagesstats::quantile())clean_character(), it also
keeps in-between spaces nowclean_numeric() now supports currencyfreq() where the precentage of NAs in the
header was not calculated right