The hardware and bandwidth for this mirror is donated by METANET, the Webhosting and Full Service-Cloud Provider.
If you wish to report a bug, or if you are interested in having us mirror your free-software or open-source project, please feel free to contact us at mirror[@]metanet.ch.

dtplyr: Data Table Back-End for 'dplyr'

Provides a data.table backend for 'dplyr'. The goal of 'dtplyr' is to allow you to write 'dplyr' code that is automatically translated to the equivalent, but usually much faster, data.table code.

Version: 1.3.1
Depends: R (≥ 3.3)
Imports: cli (≥ 3.4.0), data.table (≥ 1.13.0), dplyr (≥ 1.1.0), glue, lifecycle, rlang (≥ 1.0.4), tibble, tidyselect (≥ 1.2.0), vctrs (≥ 0.4.1)
Suggests: bench, covr, knitr, rmarkdown, testthat (≥ 3.1.2), tidyr (≥ 1.1.0), waldo (≥ 0.3.1)
Published: 2023-03-22
DOI: 10.32614/CRAN.package.dtplyr
Author: Hadley Wickham [cre, aut], Maximilian Girlich [aut], Mark Fairbanks [aut], Ryan Dickerson [aut], Posit Software, PBC [cph, fnd]
Maintainer: Hadley Wickham <hadley at posit.co>
BugReports: https://github.com/tidyverse/dtplyr/issues
License: MIT + file LICENSE
URL: https://dtplyr.tidyverse.org, https://github.com/tidyverse/dtplyr
NeedsCompilation: no
Materials: README NEWS
CRAN checks: dtplyr results

Documentation:

Reference manual: dtplyr.pdf
Vignettes: translation

Downloads:

Package source: dtplyr_1.3.1.tar.gz
Windows binaries: r-devel: dtplyr_1.3.1.zip, r-release: dtplyr_1.3.1.zip, r-oldrel: dtplyr_1.3.1.zip
macOS binaries: r-release (arm64): dtplyr_1.3.1.tgz, r-oldrel (arm64): dtplyr_1.3.1.tgz, r-release (x86_64): dtplyr_1.3.1.tgz, r-oldrel (x86_64): dtplyr_1.3.1.tgz
Old sources: dtplyr archive

Reverse dependencies:

Reverse depends: immunarch
Reverse imports: brpop, cohorts, forecastML, genieBPC, MicrobiotaProcess, neonPlantEcology, portvine, pvda, ReSurv, tidyverse
Reverse suggests: editbl, orbital, skimr, sparrow, tidyft, tidyquery

Linking:

Please use the canonical form https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=dtplyr to link to this page.

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.