label(x)
retrieves the label
attribute of x
.
label(x) <- "a label"
stores the label attribute, and also puts
the class labelled
as the first class of x
(for S-Plus
this class is not used and methods for handling this class are
not defined so the "label"
and "units"
attributes are lost
upon subsetting). The reason for having this class is so that the
subscripting method for labelled
, [.labelled
, can preserve
the label
attribute in S. Also, the print
method for labelled
objects prefaces the print with the object's
label
(and units
if there). If the variable is also given
a "units"
attribute using the units
function, subsetting
the variable (using [.labelled
) will also retain the
"units"
attribute.
label
can optionally append a "units"
attribute to the
string, and it can optionally return a string or expression (for R's
plotmath
facility) suitable for plotting. labelPlotmath
is a function that also has this function, when the input arguments are
the 'label'
and 'units'
rather than a vector having those
attributes. When plotmath
mode is used to construct labels, the
'label'
or 'units'
may contain math expressions but they
are typed verbatim if they contain percent signs, blanks, or
underscores. labelPlotmath
can optionally create the
expression as a character string, which is useful in building
ggplot
commands.
For Surv
objects, label
first looks to see if there is
an overall "label"
attribute for the object, then it looks for
saved attributes that Surv
put in the "inputAttributes"
object, looking first at the event
variable, then time2
,
and finally time
. You can restrict the looking by specifying
type
.
labelLatex
constructs suitable LaTeX labels a variable or from the
label
and units
arguments, optionally right-justifying
units
if hfill=TRUE
. This is useful when making tables
when the variable in question is not a column heading. If x
is specified, label
and units
values are extracted from
its attributes instead of from the other arguments.
Label
(actually Label.data.frame
) is a function which generates
S source code that makes the labels in all the variables in a data
frame easy to edit.
llist
is like list
except that it preserves the names or
labels of the component variables in the variables label
attribute. This can be useful when looping over variables or using
sapply
or lapply
. By using llist
instead of
list
one can annotate the output with the current variable's name
or label. llist
also defines a names
attribute for the
list and pulls the names
from the arguments' expressions for
non-named arguments.
prList
prints a list with element names (without the dollar
sign as in default list printing) and if an element of the list is an
unclassed list with a name, all of those elements are printed, with
titles of the form "primary list name : inner list name". This is
especially useful for Rmarkdown html notebooks when a user-written
function creates multiple html and graphical outputs to all be printed
in a code chunk. Optionally the names can be printed after the
object, and the htmlfig
option provides more capabilities when
making html reports. prList
does not work for regular html
documents.
putHfig
is similar to prList
but for a single graphical
object that is rendered with a print
method, making it easy to
specify long captions, and short captions for the table of contents in
HTML documents.
Table of contents entries are generated with the short caption, which
is taken as the long caption if there is none. One can optionally not
make a table of contents entry. If argument table=TRUE
table
captions will be produced instead. Using expcoll
,
markupSpecs
html
function expcoll
will be used to
make tables expand upon clicking an arrow rather than always appear.
putHcap
is like putHfig
except it is for figures only,
and assumes that users render the graphics outside of the
putHcap
call. This allows things to work in ordinary html
documents.
plotmathTranslate
is a simple function that translates certain
character strings to character strings that can be used as part of R
plotmath
expressions. If the input string has a space or percent
inside, the string is surrounded by a call to plotmath
's
paste
function.
as.data.frame.labelled
is a utility function that is called by
[.data.frame
. It is just a copy of as.data.frame.vector
.
data.frame.labelled
is another utility function, that adds a
class "labelled"
to every variable in a data frame that has a
"label"
attribute but not a "labelled"
class.
relevel.labelled
is a method for preserving label
s with the relevel
function.
reLabelled
is used to add a 'labelled'
class back to
variables in data frame that have a 'label' attribute but no 'labelled'
class. Useful for changing cleanup.import()
'd S-Plus data
frames back to general form for R and old versions of S-Plus.
label(x, default=NULL, ...)# S3 method for default
label(x, default=NULL, units=plot, plot=FALSE,
grid=FALSE, html=FALSE, …)
# S3 method for Surv
label(x, default=NULL, units=plot, plot=FALSE,
grid=FALSE, html=FALSE, type=c('any', 'time', 'event'), …)
# S3 method for data.frame
label(x, default=NULL, self=FALSE, …)
label(x, ...) <- value
# S3 method for default
label(x, ...) <- value
# S3 method for data.frame
label(x, self=TRUE, ...) <- value
labelPlotmath(label, units=NULL, plotmath=TRUE, html=FALSE, grid=FALSE,
chexpr=FALSE)
labelLatex(x=NULL, label='', units='', size='smaller[2]',
hfill=FALSE, bold=FALSE, default='', double=FALSE)
# S3 method for labelled
print(x, …) ## or x - calls print.labelled
Label(object, …)
# S3 method for data.frame
Label(object, file='', append=FALSE, …)
llist(…, labels=TRUE)
prList(x, lcap=NULL, htmlfig=0, after=FALSE)
putHfig(x, …, scap=NULL, extra=NULL, subsub=TRUE, hr=TRUE,
table=FALSE, file='', append=FALSE, expcoll=NULL)
putHcap(…, scap=NULL, extra=NULL, subsub=TRUE, hr=TRUE,
file='', append=FALSE)
plotmathTranslate(x)
data.frame.labelled(object)
# S3 method for labelled
relevel(x, …)
reLabelled(object)
combineLabels(…)
any object (for plotmathTranslate
is a character string). For
relevel
is a factor
variable. For prList
is a
named list. For putHfig
is a graphical object for which a
print
method will render the graphic (e.g., a ggplot2
or plotly
object).
lgoical, where to interact with the object or its components
set to TRUE
to append the 'units'
attribute (if present)
to the returned label. The 'units'
are surrounded
by brackets. For labelPlotmath
and labelLatex
is a
character string containing the units of measurement. When
plot
is TRUE
, units
defaults to TRUE
.
set to TRUE
to return a label suitable for R's plotmath
facility (returns an expression instead of a character string) if R is
in effect. If units
is also TRUE
, and if both
'label'
and 'units'
attributes are present, the
'units'
will appear after the label but in smaller type and
will not be surrounded by brackets.
if x
does not have a 'label'
attribute and
default
(a character string) is specified, the label will be
taken as default
. For labelLatex
the default
is the name of the first argument if it is a variable and not a label.
Currently R's lattice
and grid
functions do not support
plotmath
expressions for xlab
and ylab
arguments. When using lattice
functions in R, set the
argument grid
to TRUE
so that labelPlotmath
can
return an ordinary character string instead of an expression.
set to TRUE
to use HTML formatting instead of
plotmath expressions for constructing labels with units
for Surv
objects specifies the type of element for
which to restrict the search for a label
a character string containing a variable's label
set to TRUE
to have labelMathplot
return an expression
for plotting using R's plotmath
facility. If R is not in
effect, an ordinary character string is returned.
set to TRUE
to have labelPlotmath
return a
character string of the form "expression(...)"
LaTeX size for units
. Default is two sizes smaller
than label
, which assumes that the LaTeX relsize
package is in use.
set to TRUE
to right-justify units
in the
field. This is useful when multiple labels are being put into rows
in a LaTeX tabular
environment, and will cause a problem if
the label is used in an environment where hfill
is not
appropriate.
set to TRUE
to have labelLatex
put the
label
in bold face.
set to TRUE
to represent backslash in LaTeX as
four backslashes in place of two. This is needed if, for example,
you need to convert the result using as.formula
the label of the object, or "".
a data frame
a list of variables or expressions to be formed into a list
.
Ignored for print.labelled
. For relevel
is the
level
(a single character string) to become the new reference
(first) category. For putHfig
and putHcap
represents
one or more character strings that are pasted together, separated by
a blank.
the name of a file to which to write S source code. Default is
""
, meaning standard output. For putHcap
, set
file
to FALSE
to return a character vector instead of
writing to file
.
set to TRUE
to append code generated by Label
to file
file
. Also used for putHfig, putHcap
.
set to FALSE
to make llist
ignore the variables'
label
attribute and use the variables' names.
an optional vector of character strings corresponding to
elements in x
for prList
. These contain long captions
that do not appear in the table of contents but which are printed
right after the short caption in the body, in the same font.
for prList
set to 1
to use HTML markup by
running the object names through markupSpecs$html$cap
for
figure captions. Set htmlfig=2
to also preface the figure
caption with "### "
so that it will appear in the table of
contents.
set to TRUE
to have prList
put names after
the printed object instead of before
a character string specifying the short (or possibly only) caption.
an optional vector of character strings. When present
the long caption will be put in the first column of an HTML table
and the elements of extra
in subsequent columns. This allows
extra information to appear in the long caption in a way that is
right-justified to the right of the flowing caption text.
set to FALSE
to suppress "### "
from being
placed in front of the short caption.
applies if a caption is present. Specify FALSE
to
not put a horizontal line before the caption and figure.
set to TRUE
to produce table captions instead of
figure captions
character string to be visible, with a clickable arrow
following to allow initial hiding of a table and its captions.
Cannot be used with table=FALSE
.
label
returns the label attribute of x, if any; otherwise, "".
label
is used
most often for the individual variables in data frames. The function
sas.get
copies labels over from SAS if they exist.
# NOT RUN {
age <- c(21,65,43)
y <- 1:3
label(age) <- "Age in Years"
plot(age, y, xlab=label(age))
data <- data.frame(age=age, y=y)
label(data)
label(data, self=TRUE) <- "A data frame"
label(data, self=TRUE)
x1 <- 1:10
x2 <- 10:1
label(x2) <- 'Label for x2'
units(x2) <- 'mmHg'
x2
x2[1:5]
dframe <- data.frame(x1, x2)
Label(dframe)
labelLatex(x2, hfill=TRUE, bold=TRUE)
labelLatex(label='Velocity', units='m/s')
##In these examples of llist, note that labels are printed after
##variable names, because of print.labelled
a <- 1:3
b <- 4:6
label(b) <- 'B Label'
llist(a,b)
llist(a,b,d=0)
llist(a,b,0)
w <- llist(a, b>5, d=101:103)
sapply(w, function(x){
hist(as.numeric(x), xlab=label(x))
# locator(1) ## wait for mouse click
})
# Or: for(u in w) {hist(u); title(label(u))}
# }
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