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easystats is a collection of R packages, which aims to provide a unifying and consistent framework to tame, discipline, and harness the scary R statistics and their pesky models.
However, there is not (yet) an unique “easystats” way of doing data analysis. Instead, start with one package and, when you’ll face a new challenge, do check if there is an easystats answer for it in other packages. You will slowly uncover how using them together facilitates your life. And, who knows, you might even end up using them all.
Type | Source | Command |
---|---|---|
Release | CRAN | install.packages("easystats") |
Development | r-universe | install.packages("easystats", repos = "https://easystats.r-universe.dev") |
Development | GitHub | remotes::install_github("easystats/easystats") |
Finally, as easystats sometimes depends on some additional packages for specific functions that are not downloaded by default. If you want to benefit from the full easystats experience without any hiccups, simply run the following:
::install_suggested() easystats
To cite the package, run the following command:
citation("easystats")
in publications use:
To cite easystats
-Shachar, Wiernik, Bacher, Thériault, & Makowski
Lüdecke, Patil, Ben2022). easystats: Framework for Easy Statistical Modeling,
(
Visualization, and Reporting. CRAN.:10.32614/CRAN.package.easystats
doi<https://doi.org/10.32614/CRAN.package.easystats>
for LaTeX users is
A BibTeX entry
@Article{,
= {easystats: Framework for Easy Statistical Modeling, Visualization, and Reporting},
title = {Daniel Lüdecke and Mattan S. Ben-Shachar and Indrajeet Patil and Brenton M. Wiernik and Etienne Bacher and Rémi Thériault and Dominique Makowski},
author = {CRAN},
journal = {https://doi.org/10.32614/CRAN.package.easystats},
doi = {2022},
year = {R package},
note = {https://easystats.github.io/easystats/},
url }
If you want to do this only for certain packages in the ecosystem, have a look at this article on how you can do so! https://easystats.github.io/easystats/articles/citation.html
Each easystats package has a different scope and purpose. This means your best way to start is to explore and pick the one(s) that you feel might be useful to you. However, as they are built with a “bigger picture” in mind, you will realize that using more of them creates a smooth workflow, as these packages are meant to work together. Ideally, these packages work in unison to cover all aspects of statistical analysis and data visualization.
How is easystats different from the tidyverse?
You’ve probably already heard about the tidyverse, another very popular collection of packages (ggplot, dplyr, tidyr, …) that also makes using R easier. So, should you pick the tidyverse or easystats? Pick both!
Indeed, these two ecosystems have been designed with very different goals in mind. The tidyverse packages are primarily made to create a new R experience, where data manipulation and exploration is intuitive and consistent. On the other hand, easystats focuses more on the final stretch of the analysis: understanding and interpreting your results and reporting them in a manuscript or a report, while following best practices. You can definitely use the easystats functions in a tidyverse workflow!
easystats + tidyverse = ❤️
Can easystats be useful to advanced users and/or developers?
Yes, definitely! easystats is built in terms of modules that are general enough to be used inside other packages. For instance, the insight package is made to easily implement support for post-processing of pretty much all regression model packages under the sun. We use it in all the easystats packages, but it is also used in other non-easystats packages, such as ggstatsplot, modelsummary, ggeffects, and more.
So why not in yours?
Moreover, the easystats packages are very lightweight, with a minimal set of dependencies, which again makes it great if you want to rely on them.
Each easystats
package has a dedicated website.
For example, website for parameters
is https://easystats.github.io/parameters/.
In addition to the websites containing documentation for these
packages, you can also read posts from easystats
blog: https://easystats.github.io/blog/posts/.
In addition to these websites and blog posts, you can also check out the following presentations and talks to learn more about this ecosystem:
https://easystats.github.io/easystats/articles/resources.html
easystats packages are designed to be lightweight, i.e., they don’t have any third-party hard dependencies, other than base-R packages or other easystats packages! If you develop R packages, this means that you can safely use easystats packages as dependencies in your own packages, without the risk of entering the dependency hell.
library(deepdep)
plot_dependencies("easystats", depth = 2, show_stamp = FALSE)
As we can see, the only exception is the {see}
package,
which is responsible for plotting and creating figures and relies on
{ggplot2}
, which does have a substantial number of
dependencies.
Total | insight | datawizard | parameters | performance | bayestestR | effectsize | correlation | see | modelbased | report | easystats |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
22,854,679 | 6,693,662 | 4,046,677 | 2,785,758 | 2,708,389 | 2,646,105 | 2,105,088 | 697,969 | 577,345 | 342,849 | 189,930 | 60,907 |
We are happy to receive bug reports, suggestions, questions, and (most of all) contributions to fix problems and add features. Pull Requests for contributions are encouraged.
Here are some simple ways in which you can contribute (in the increasing order of commitment):
Please note that the ‘easystats’ project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.
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.