# NOT RUN {
# Unnamed arguments are named with their expression:
a <- 1:5
tibble(a, a * 2)
# Scalars (vectors of length one) are recycled:
tibble(a, b = a * 2, c = 1)
# Columns are available in subsequent expressions:
tibble(x = runif(10), y = x * 2)
# tibble() never coerces its inputs,
str(tibble(letters))
str(tibble(x = list(diag(1), diag(2))))
# or munges column names (unless requested),
tibble(`a + b` = 1:5)
# but it forces you to take charge of names, if they need repair:
try(tibble(x = 1, x = 2))
tibble(x = 1, x = 2, .name_repair = "unique")
tibble(x = 1, x = 2, .name_repair = "minimal")
## By default, non-syntactic names are allowed,
df <- tibble(`a 1` = 1, `a 2` = 2)
## because you can still index by name:
df[["a 1"]]
df$`a 1`
with(df, `a 1`)
## Syntactic names are easier to work with, though, and you can request them:
df <- tibble(`a 1` = 1, `a 2` = 2, .name_repair = "universal")
df$a.1
## You can specify your own name repair function:
tibble(x = 1, x = 2, .name_repair = make.unique)
fix_names <- function(x) gsub("\\s+", "_", x)
tibble(`year 1` = 1, `year 2` = 2, .name_repair = fix_names)
## purrr-style anonymous functions and constants
## are also supported
tibble(x = 1, x = 2, .name_repair = ~ make.names(., unique = TRUE))
tibble(x = 1, x = 2, .name_repair = ~ c("a", "b"))
# Tibbles can contain columns that are tibbles or matrices
# if the number of rows is compatible. Unnamed tibbled are
# spliced, i.e. the inner columns are inserted into the
# tibble under construction.
tibble(
a = 1:3,
tibble(
b = 4:6,
c = 7:9
),
d = tibble(
e = tibble(
f = b
)
)
)
tibble(
a = 1:3,
b = diag(3),
c = cor(trees)
)
# data can not contain POSIXlt columns, or tibbles or matrices
# with incompatible number of rows:
try(tibble(y = strptime("2000/01/01", "%x")))
try(tibble(a = 1:3, b = tibble(c = 4:7)))
# Use := to create columns with names that start with a dot:
tibble(.dotted = 3)
tibble(.dotted := 3)
# You can unquote an expression:
x <- 3
tibble(x = 1, y = x)
tibble(x = 1, y = !!x)
# You can splice-unquote a list of quosures and expressions:
tibble(!!! list(x = rlang::quo(1:10), y = quote(x * 2)))
# Use tibble_row() to construct a one-row tibble:
tibble_row(a = 1, lm = lm(Height ~ Girth + Volume, data = trees))
# }
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