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Pivot tables are generally used to present raw and summary data. They are generated from spreadsheets and, more recently, also from R (pivottabler).

If we generate pivot tables from our own data, flattabler package is not necessary. But, if we get data in pivot table format and need to represent or analyse it using another tool, this package can be very helpful: It can save us several hours of programming or manual transformation.

flattabler package offers a set of operations that allow us to transform one or more pivot tables into a flat table.

Installation

You can install the released version of flattabler from CRAN with:

install.packages("flattabler")

And the development version from GitHub with:

# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("josesamos/flattabler")

Example

A pivot table contains label rows and columns, and an array of values, usually numeric data. It can contain additional information, such as table header or footer.

Below is an example of a pivot table obtained from the pivottabler package. It is included in flattabler package in the form of the variable df_pivottabler, defined as a data frame.

V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 V7 V8 V9 V10
Express Passenger Ordinary Passenger Total
DMU EMU HST Total DMU EMU Total
Number of Trains Arriva Trains Wales 3079 3079 830 830 3909
CrossCountry 22133 732 22865 63 63 22928
London Midland 5638 8849 14487 5591 28201 33792 48279
Virgin Trains 2137 6457 8594 8594
Total 32987 15306 732 49025 6484 28201 34685 83710
Maximum Speed Arriva Trains Wales 90 90 90 90 90
CrossCountry 125 125 125 100 100 125
London Midland 100 110 110 100 100 100 110
Virgin Trains 125 125 125 125
Total 125 125 125 125 100 100 100 125

The transformation to obtain a flat table from the previous pivot table using flattabler package is as follows:

library(flattabler)

ft <- pivot_table(df_pivottabler) |>
  define_labels(n_col = 2, n_row = 2) |>
  fill_labels() |>
  remove_agg() |>
  fill_values() |>
  unpivot(na_rm = TRUE)

The result is a tibble object that can be further transformed, for example, by the dplyr package to remove the added data.

ft <- ft |>
  dplyr::filter(col2 != "Total") |>
  dplyr::filter(row2 != "Total")

The result obtained is as follows:

col1 col2 row1 row2 value
Number of Trains Arriva Trains Wales Express Passenger DMU 3079
Number of Trains Arriva Trains Wales Ordinary Passenger DMU 830
Number of Trains CrossCountry Express Passenger DMU 22133
Number of Trains CrossCountry Express Passenger HST 732
Number of Trains CrossCountry Ordinary Passenger DMU 63
Number of Trains London Midland Express Passenger DMU 5638
Number of Trains London Midland Express Passenger EMU 8849
Number of Trains London Midland Ordinary Passenger DMU 5591
Number of Trains London Midland Ordinary Passenger EMU 28201
Number of Trains Virgin Trains Express Passenger DMU 2137
Number of Trains Virgin Trains Express Passenger EMU 6457
Maximum Speed Arriva Trains Wales Express Passenger DMU 90
Maximum Speed Arriva Trains Wales Ordinary Passenger DMU 90
Maximum Speed CrossCountry Express Passenger DMU 125
Maximum Speed CrossCountry Express Passenger HST 125
Maximum Speed CrossCountry Ordinary Passenger DMU 100
Maximum Speed London Midland Express Passenger DMU 100
Maximum Speed London Midland Express Passenger EMU 110
Maximum Speed London Midland Ordinary Passenger DMU 100
Maximum Speed London Midland Ordinary Passenger EMU 100
Maximum Speed Virgin Trains Express Passenger DMU 125
Maximum Speed Virgin Trains Express Passenger EMU 125

Once we have defined the necessary transformations for a pivot table, we can apply them to any other with the same structure. Candidate tables can have different number of rows or columns, depending on the number of labels, but they must have the same number of rows and columns of labels, and the same number of header or footer rows, so that the transformations are the same for each table.

To easily perform this operation, we define a function f from the transformations, as shown below.

f <- function(pt) {
  pt |>
    set_page(1, 1) |>
    define_labels(n_col = 2, n_row = 2) |>
    remove_top(1) |>
    fill_labels() |>
    remove_agg() |>
    fill_values() |>
    remove_k() |>
    replace_dec() |>
    unpivot()
}

folder <- system.file("extdata", "csvfolder", package = "flattabler")
lpt <- read_text_folder(folder)

lft <- flatten_table_list(lpt, f)

lft
#> # A tibble: 201 × 6
#>    page  col1  col2  row1  row2  value
#>    <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr> <chr>
#>  1 M1    b1    a01   e2    d4    1.88 
#>  2 M1    b1    a05   e1    d1    1.91 
#>  3 M1    b1    a05   e2    d3    1.10 
#>  4 M1    b1    a05   e2    d4    2.25 
#>  5 M1    b1    a09   e1    d1    2.55 
#>  6 M1    b1    a09   e1    d2    2.74 
#>  7 M1    b1    a09   e2    d3    3.99 
#>  8 M1    b1    a13   e1    d1    2.99 
#>  9 M1    b1    a13   e1    d2    1.02 
#> 10 M1    b1    a13   e2    d3    3.48 
#> # ℹ 191 more rows

In this way we can generate a flat table from a list of pivot tables. The list of pivot tables is generated using package functions to import them from various data sources.

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.