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This package is designed for applying formatting on vectors and data frames to make data presentation easier, richer, more flexible and hopefully convey more information.
This document is also translated into 日本語 by @hoxo_m, @dichika and @teramonagi.
The package is available on both GitHub and CRAN.
Install from GitHub:
# install.packages("devtools")
::install_github("renkun-ken/formattable") devtools
Install from CRAN:
install.packages("formattable")
Atomic vectors are basic units to store data. Some data can be read more easily with formatting. A numeric vector, for example, stores a group of percentage numbers yet still shows in the form of typical floating numbers. This package provides functions to create data structures with predefined formatting rules so that these objects store the original data but are printed with formatting.
The package provides several typical formattable objects such as
percent
, comma
, currency
,
accounting
and scientific
. These objects are
essentially numeric vectors with pre-defined formatting rules and
parameters. For example,
library(formattable)
<- percent(c(0.1, 0.02, 0.03, 0.12))
p p
## [1] 10.00% 2.00% 3.00% 12.00%
The percent vector is no different from a numeric vector but has a percentage representation as being printed. It works with arithmetic operations and common functions and preserves its formatting.
+ 0.05 p
## [1] 15.00% 7.00% 8.00% 17.00%
max(p)
## [1] 12.00%
<- accounting(c(1000, 500, 200, -150, 0, 1200))
balance balance
## [1] 1,000.00 500.00 200.00 (150.00) 0.00 1,200.00
+ 1000 balance
## [1] 2,000.00 1,500.00 1,200.00 850.00 1,000.00 2,200.00
These functions are special cases of what formattable()
can do. formattable()
applies highly customizable
formatting to objects of a wide range of classes like
numeric
, logical
, factor
,
Date
, data.frame
, etc. A typical data frame
may look more friendly with formattable
column vectors. For
example,
<- data.frame(
p id = c(1, 2, 3, 4, 5),
name = c("A1", "A2", "B1", "B2", "C1"),
balance = accounting(c(52500, 36150, 25000, 18300, 7600), format = "d"),
growth = percent(c(0.3, 0.3, 0.1, 0.15, 0.15), format = "d"),
ready = formattable(c(TRUE, TRUE, FALSE, FALSE, TRUE), "yes", "no"))
p
## id name balance growth ready
## 1 1 A1 52,500 30% yes
## 2 2 A2 36,150 30% yes
## 3 3 B1 25,000 10% no
## 4 4 B2 18,300 15% no
## 5 5 C1 7,600 15% yes
In a typical workflow of dynamic document production, knitr and rmarkdown are powerful tools to render documents with R code to different types of portable documents.
knitr is able to render an RMarkdown document (markdown document with
R code chunks) to Markdown document. rmarkdown calls pandoc to render a markdown
document to HTML web page. To put a table (data.frame
in R)
on the page, one may call knitr::kable
to produce its
markdown representation. By default the resulted table is in a plain
theme with no additional formatting. However, in some cases, additional
formatting may help clarify the information and make contrast of the
data. This package provides functions to produce formatted tables in
dynamic documents.
<- data.frame(
df id = 1:10,
name = c("Bob", "Ashley", "James", "David", "Jenny",
"Hans", "Leo", "John", "Emily", "Lee"),
age = c(28, 27, 30, 28, 29, 29, 27, 27, 31, 30),
grade = c("C", "A", "A", "C", "B", "B", "B", "A", "C", "C"),
test1_score = c(8.9, 9.5, 9.6, 8.9, 9.1, 9.3, 9.3, 9.9, 8.5, 8.6),
test2_score = c(9.1, 9.1, 9.2, 9.1, 8.9, 8.5, 9.2, 9.3, 9.1, 8.8),
final_score = c(9, 9.3, 9.4, 9, 9, 8.9, 9.25, 9.6, 8.8, 8.7),
registered = c(TRUE, FALSE, TRUE, FALSE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, FALSE, FALSE, FALSE),
stringsAsFactors = FALSE)
Plain table:
id | name | age | grade | test1_score | test2_score | final_score | registered |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Bob | 28 | C | 8.9 | 9.1 | 9.00 | TRUE |
2 | Ashley | 27 | A | 9.5 | 9.1 | 9.30 | FALSE |
3 | James | 30 | A | 9.6 | 9.2 | 9.40 | TRUE |
4 | David | 28 | C | 8.9 | 9.1 | 9.00 | FALSE |
5 | Jenny | 29 | B | 9.1 | 8.9 | 9.00 | TRUE |
6 | Hans | 29 | B | 9.3 | 8.5 | 8.90 | TRUE |
7 | Leo | 27 | B | 9.3 | 9.2 | 9.25 | TRUE |
8 | John | 27 | A | 9.9 | 9.3 | 9.60 | FALSE |
9 | Emily | 31 | C | 8.5 | 9.1 | 8.80 | FALSE |
10 | Lee | 30 | C | 8.6 | 8.8 | 8.70 | FALSE |
Formatted table with the following visualizations:
test1_score
and test2_score
are indicated
by horizontal bars and are background-colorized: white (low score) to
pink (high score)final_score
shows score and ranking. Top 3 are green,
and others are gray.registered
texts are transformed to an icon and yes/no
text.library(formattable)
formattable(df, list(
age = color_tile("white", "orange"),
grade = formatter("span", style = x ~ ifelse(x == "A",
style(color = "green", font.weight = "bold"), NA)),
area(col = c(test1_score, test2_score)) ~ normalize_bar("pink", 0.2),
final_score = formatter("span",
style = x ~ style(color = ifelse(rank(-x) <= 3, "green", "gray")),
~ sprintf("%.2f (rank: %02d)", x, rank(-x))),
x registered = formatter("span",
style = x ~ style(color = ifelse(x, "green", "red")),
~ icontext(ifelse(x, "ok", "remove"), ifelse(x, "Yes", "No")))
x ))
The icon set used in the table is by GLYPHICONS.com and included in Bootstrap.
htmlwidget
conversion in interactive environmentsformattable
will automatically convert to an
htmlwidget
when in an interactive()
context
such as the console or RStudio IDE. If you would like to avoid this
conversion and see the html
table output, please use
format_table
that calls knitr::kable
with
formatters or call format
with the
formattable data.frame
object.
This package is under MIT License.
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.