summaryM
summarizes the variables listed in an S formula,
computing descriptive statistics and optionally statistical tests for
group differences. This function is typically used when there are
multiple left-hand-side variables that are independently against by
groups marked by a single right-hand-side variable. The summary
statistics may be passed to print
methods, plot
methods
for making annotated dot charts and extended box plots, and
latex
methods for typesetting tables using LaTeX. The
html
method uses htmlTable::htmlTable
to typeset the
table in html, by passing information to the latex
method with
html=TRUE
. This is for use with Quarto/RMarkdown.
The print
methods use the print.char.matrix
function to
print boxed tables when options(prType=)
has not been given or
when prType='plain'
. For plain tables, print
calls the
internal function printsummaryM
. When prType='latex'
the latex
method is invoked, and when prType='html'
html
is rendered. In Quarto/RMarkdown, proper rendering will result even
if results='asis'
does not appear in the chunk header. When
rendering in html at the console due to having options(prType='html')
the table will be rendered in a viewer.
The plot
method creates plotly
graphics if
options(grType='plotly')
, otherwise base graphics are used.
plotly
graphics provide extra information such as which
quantile is being displayed when hovering the mouse. Test statistics
are displayed by hovering over the mean.
Continuous variables are described by three quantiles (quartiles by
default) when printing, or by the following quantiles when plotting
expended box plots using the bpplt
function:
0.05, 0.125, 0.25, 0.375, 0.5, 0.625, 0.75, 0.875, 0.95. The box
plots are scaled to the 0.025 and 0.975 quantiles of each continuous
left-hand-side variable. Categorical variables are
described by counts and percentages.
The left hand side of formula
may contain mChoice
("multiple choice") variables. When test=TRUE
each choice is
tested separately as a binary categorical response.
The plot
method for method="reverse"
creates a temporary
function Key
as is done by the xYplot
and
Ecdf.formula
functions. After plot
runs, you can type Key()
to put a legend in a default location, or
e.g. Key(locator(1))
to draw a legend where you click the left
mouse button. This key is for categorical variables, so to have the
opportunity to put the key on the graph you will probably want to use
the command plot(object, which="categorical")
. A second function
Key2
is created if continuous variables are being plotted. It is
used the same as Key
. If the which
argument is not
specified to plot
, two pages of plots will be produced. If you
don't define par(mfrow=)
yourself,
plot.summaryM
will try to lay out a multi-panel
graph to best fit all the individual charts for continuous
variables.
summaryM(formula, groups=NULL, data=NULL, subset, na.action=na.retain,
overall=FALSE, continuous=10, na.include=FALSE,
quant=c(0.025, 0.05, 0.125, 0.25, 0.375, 0.5, 0.625,
0.75, 0.875, 0.95, 0.975),
nmin=100, test=FALSE,
conTest=conTestkw, catTest=catTestchisq,
ordTest=ordTestpo)# S3 method for summaryM
print(...)
printsummaryM(x, digits, prn = any(n != N),
what=c('proportion', '%'), pctdig = if(what == '%') 0 else 2,
npct = c('numerator', 'both', 'denominator', 'none'),
exclude1 = TRUE, vnames = c('labels', 'names'), prUnits = TRUE,
sep = '/', abbreviate.dimnames = FALSE,
prefix.width = max(nchar(lab)), min.colwidth, formatArgs=NULL, round=NULL,
prtest = c('P','stat','df','name'), prmsd = FALSE, long = FALSE,
pdig = 3, eps = 0.001, prob = c(0.25, 0.5, 0.75), prN = FALSE, ...)
# S3 method for summaryM
plot(x, vnames = c('labels', 'names'),
which = c('both', 'categorical', 'continuous'), vars=NULL,
xlim = c(0,1),
xlab = 'Proportion',
pch = c(16, 1, 2, 17, 15, 3, 4, 5, 0), exclude1 = TRUE,
main, ncols=2,
prtest = c('P', 'stat', 'df', 'name'), pdig = 3, eps = 0.001,
conType = c('bp', 'dot', 'raw'), cex.means = 0.5, cex=par('cex'),
height='auto', width=700, ...)
# S3 method for summaryM
latex(object, title =
first.word(deparse(substitute(object))),
file=paste(title, 'tex', sep='.'), append=FALSE, digits,
prn = any(n != N), what=c('proportion', '%'),
pctdig = if(what == '%') 0 else 2,
npct = c('numerator', 'both', 'denominator', 'slash', 'none'),
npct.size = if(html) mspecs$html$smaller else 'scriptsize',
Nsize = if(html) mspecs$html$smaller else 'scriptsize',
exclude1 = TRUE,
vnames=c("labels", "names"), prUnits = TRUE, middle.bold = FALSE,
outer.size = if(html) mspecs$html$smaller else "scriptsize",
caption, rowlabel = "", rowsep=html,
insert.bottom = TRUE, dcolumn = FALSE, formatArgs=NULL, round=NULL,
prtest = c('P', 'stat', 'df', 'name'), prmsd = FALSE,
msdsize = if(html) function(x) x else NULL, brmsd=FALSE,
long = FALSE, pdig = 3, eps = 0.001,
auxCol = NULL, table.env=TRUE, tabenv1=FALSE, prob=c(0.25, 0.5, 0.75),
prN=FALSE, legend.bottom=FALSE, html=FALSE,
mspecs=markupSpecs, ...)
# S3 method for summaryM
html(object, ...)
a list. plot.summaryM
returns the number
of pages of plots that were made if using base graphics, or
plotly
objects created by plotly::subplot
otherwise.
If both categorical and continuous variables were plotted, the
returned object is a list with two named elements Categorical
and Continuous
each containing plotly
objects.
Otherwise a plotly
object is returned.
The latex
method returns attributes legend
and
nstrata
.
An S formula with additive effects. There may be several variables
on the right hand side separated by "+",
or the numeral 1
, indicating that
there is no grouping variable so that only margin summaries are
produced. The right hand side variable, if present, must be a
discrete variable producing a limited number of groups. On the
left hand side there may be any number of variables, separated by
"+", and these may be of mixed types. These variables are analyzed
separately by the grouping variable.
if there is more than one right-hand variable, specify
groups
as a character string containing the name of the
variable used to produce columns of the table. The remaining right
hand variables are combined to produce levels that cause separate
tables or plots to be produced.
an object created by summaryM
. For
conTestkw
a numeric vector, and for ordTestpo
, a numeric
or factor variable that can be considered ordered
name or number of a data frame. Default is the current frame.
a logical vector or integer vector of subscripts used to specify the subset of data to use in the analysis. The default is to use all observations in the data frame.
function for handling missing data in the input data. The default is
a function defined here called na.retain
, which keeps all
observations for processing, with missing variables or not.
Setting overall=TRUE
makes a new column with
overall statistics for the whole sample. If test=TRUE
these
marginal statistics are ignored in doing statistical tests.
specifies the threshold for when a variable is considered to be
continuous (when there are at least continuous
unique values).
factor
variables are always considered to be categorical no matter
how many levels they have.
Set na.include=TRUE
to keep missing values of categorical
variables from being excluded from the table.
For categories of the response variable in which there
are less than or equal to nmin
non-missing observations, the raw
data are retained for later plotting in place of box plots.
Set to TRUE
to compute test
statistics using tests specified in conTest
and catTest
.
a function of two arguments (grouping variable and a continuous
variable) that returns a list with components P
(the computed
P-value), stat
(the test statistic, either chi-square or F),
df
(degrees of freedom), testname
(test name),
namefun
("chisq", "fstat"
), statname
(statistic name), an optional component latexstat
(LaTeX
representation of statname
), an optional component
plotmathstat
(for R - the plotmath
representation of
statname
, as a character string), and an
optional component note
that contains a character string note about the test (e.g.,
"test not done because n < 5"
). conTest
is applied to
continuous variables
on the right-hand-side of the formula when method="reverse"
. The
default uses the spearman2
function to run the Wilcoxon or
Kruskal-Wallis test using the F distribution.
a function of a frequency table (an integer matrix) that returns a
list with the same components as created by conTest
. By default,
the Pearson chi-square test is done, without continuity correction
(the continuity correction would make the test conservative like the
Fisher exact test).
a function of a frequency table (an integer matrix) that returns a
list with the same components as created by conTest
. By default,
the Proportional odds likelihood ratio test is done.
For Key
and Key2
these arguments are passed to key
,
text
, or mtitle
. For print
methods these are
optional arguments to print.char.matrix
. For latex
methods
these are passed to latex.default
. For html
the
arguments are passed the latex.summaryM
, and the arguments
may not include file
. For print
the arguments are
passed to printsummaryM
or latex.summaryM
depending on
options(prType=)
.
an object created by summaryM
vector of quantiles to use for summarizing continuous variables.
These must be numbers between 0 and 1
inclusive and must include the numbers 0.5, 0.25, and 0.75 which are
used for printing and for plotting
quantile intervals. The outer quantiles are used for scaling the x-axes
for such plots. Specify outer quantiles as 0
and 1
to
scale the x-axes using the whole observed data ranges instead of the
default (a 0.95 quantile interval). Box-percentile plots are drawn
using all but the outer quantiles.
vector of quantiles to use for summarizing continuous variables.
These must be numbers between 0 and 1 inclusive and have previously been
included in the quant
argument of summaryM
. The vector
must be of length three. By default it contains 0.25, 0.5, and 0.75.
Warning: specifying 0 and 1 as two of the quantiles will result in computing the minimum and maximum of the variable. As for many random variables the minimum will continue to become smaller as the sample size grows, and the maximum will continue to get larger. Thus the min and max are not recommended as summary statistics.
By default, tables and plots are usually labeled with variable labels
(see the label
and sas.get
functions). To use the shorter
variable names, specify vnames="name"
.
vector of plotting characters to represent different groups, in order of group levels.
see print.char.matrix
see print.char.matrix
minimum column width to use for boxes printed with print.char.matrix
.
The default is the maximum of the minimum column label length and
the minimum length of entries in the data cells.
a list containing other arguments to pass to format.default
such as
scientific
, e.g., formatArgs=list(scientific=c(-5,5))
. For
print.summary.formula.reverse
and
format.summary.formula.reverse
, formatArgs
applies only to
statistics computed on continuous variables, not to percents,
numerators, and denominators. The round
argument may be preferred.
number of significant digits to print. Default is to use the current
value of the digits
system option.
specifies whether proportions or percentages are to be printed or LaTeX'd
number of digits to the right of the decimal place for printing
percentages or proportions. The default is zero if what='%'
,
so percents will be rounded to the nearest percent. The default is
2 for proportions.
set to TRUE
to print the number of non-missing observations on the
current (row) variable. The default is to print these only if any of
the counts of non-missing values differs from the total number of
non-missing values of the left-hand-side variable.
set to TRUE
to print the number of non-missing observations on
rows that contain continuous variables.
specifies which counts are to be printed to the right of percentages.
The default is to print the frequency (numerator of the percent) in
parentheses. You can specify "both"
to print both numerator and
denominator as a fraction, "denominator"
, "slash"
to
typeset horizontally using a forward slash, or "none"
.
the size for typesetting npct
information which appears after
percents. The default is "scriptsize"
.
When a second row of column headings is added showing sample sizes,
Nsize
specifies the LaTeX size for these subheadings. Default
is "scriptsize"
.
By default, summaryM
objects will be printed, plotted, or typeset by
removing redundant entries from percentage tables for categorical
variables. For example, if you print the percent of females, you
don't need to print the percent of males. To override this, set
exclude1=FALSE
.
set to FALSE
to suppress printing or latexing units
attributes of variables, when method='reverse'
or 'response'
character to use to separate quantiles when printing tables
a vector of test statistic components to print if test=TRUE
was in
effect when summaryM
was called. Defaults to printing all
components. Specify prtest=FALSE
or prtest="none"
to not
print any tests. This applies to print
, latex
, and
plot
methods.
Specify round
to round
the quantiles and optional mean and standard deviation to
round
digits after the decimal point. Set round='auto'
to try an automatic choice.
set to TRUE
to print mean and SD after the three quantiles, for
continuous variables
defaults to NULL
to use the current font size for the mean and
standard deviation if prmsd
is TRUE
. Set to a character
string or function to specify an alternate LaTeX font size.
set to TRUE
to put the mean and standard deviation
on a separate line, for html
set to TRUE
to print the results for the first category on its own
line, not on the same line with the variable label
number of digits to the right of the decimal place for printing
P-values. Default is 3
. This is passed to format.pval
.
P-values less than eps
will be printed as < eps
. See
format.pval
.
an optional auxiliary column of information, right justified, to add
in front of statistics typeset by
latex.summaryM
. This argument is a list with a
single element that has a name specifying the column heading. If this
name includes a newline character, the portions of the string before
and after the newline form respectively the main heading and the
subheading (typically set in smaller font), respectively. See the
extracolheads
argument to latex.default
. auxCol
is filled with blanks when a variable being summarized takes up more
than one row in the output. This happens with categorical variables.
set to FALSE
to use tabular
environment
with no caption
set to TRUE
in the case of stratification when
you want only the first stratum's table to be in a table
environment. This is useful when using hyperref
.
Specifies whether to plot results for categorical variables, continuous variables, or both (the default).
Subscripts (indexes) of variables to plot for
plotly
graphics. Default is to plot all variables of each
type (categorical or continuous).
For drawing plots for continuous variables,
extended box plots (box-percentile-type plots) are drawn by default,
using all quantiles in quant
except for the outermost ones
which are using for scaling the overall plot based on the
non-stratified marginal distribution of the current response variable.
Specify conType='dot'
to draw dot plots showing the three
quartiles instead. For extended box plots, means are drawn
with a solid dot and vertical reference lines are placed at the three
quartiles. Specify conType='raw'
to make a strip chart showing
the raw data. This can only be used if the sample size for each
right-hand-side group is less than or equal to nmin
.
character size for means in box-percentile plots; default is .5
character size for other plotted items
dimensions in pixels for the plotly
subplot
object containing all the extended box plots. If
height="auto"
, plot.summaryM
will set height
based on the number of
continuous variables and ncols
or for dot charts it will use
Hmisc::plotlyHeightDotchart
. At present height
is
ignored for extended box plots due to vertical spacing problem with
plotly
graphics.
vector of length two specifying x-axis limits. This is only used
for plotting categorical variables. Limits for continuous
variables are determined by the outer quantiles specified in
quant
.
x-axis label
a main title. This applies only to the plot for categorical variables.
number of columns for plotly
graphics for extended
box plots. Defaults to 2. Recommendation is for 1-2.
character string containing LaTeX table captions.
name of resulting LaTeX file omitting the .tex
suffix. Default
is the name of the summary
object. If caption
is specied,
title
is also used for the table's symbolic reference label.
name of file to write LaTeX code to. Specifying
file=""
will cause LaTeX code to just be printed to
standard output rather than be stored in a permanent file.
specify TRUE
to add code to an existing file
see latex.default
(under the help file
latex
)
if html
is TRUE
, instructs the function to
use a horizontal line to separate variables from one another.
Recommended if brmsd
is TRUE
. Ignored for LaTeX.
set to TRUE
to have LaTeX use bold face for the middle
quantile
the font size for outer quantiles
set to FALSE
to suppress inclusion of definitions placed at the
bottom of LaTeX tables. You can also specify a character string
containing other text that overrides the automatic text. At
present such text always appears in the main caption for LaTeX.
set to TRUE
to separate the table caption and legend. This
will place table legends at the bottom of LaTeX tables.
set to TRUE
to typeset with html
list defining markup syntax for various languages,
defaults to Hmisc markupSpecs
which the user can use as a
starting point for editing
see latex
plot.summaryM
creates a function Key
and
Key2
in frame 0 that will draw legends, if base graphics are
being used.
Frank Harrell
Department of Biostatistics
Vanderbilt University
fh@fharrell.com
Harrell FE (2004): Statistical tables and plots using S and LaTeX. Document available from https://hbiostat.org/R/Hmisc/summary.pdf.
mChoice
, label
, dotchart3
,
print.char.matrix
, update
,
formula
,
format.default
, latex
,
latexTranslate
, bpplt
,
tabulr
, bpplotM
, summaryP
options(digits=3)
set.seed(173)
sex <- factor(sample(c("m","f"), 500, rep=TRUE))
country <- factor(sample(c('US', 'Canada'), 500, rep=TRUE))
age <- rnorm(500, 50, 5)
sbp <- rnorm(500, 120, 12)
label(sbp) <- 'Systolic BP'
units(sbp) <- 'mmHg'
treatment <- factor(sample(c("Drug","Placebo"), 500, rep=TRUE))
treatment[1]
sbp[1] <- NA
# Generate a 3-choice variable; each of 3 variables has 5 possible levels
symp <- c('Headache','Stomach Ache','Hangnail',
'Muscle Ache','Depressed')
symptom1 <- sample(symp, 500,TRUE)
symptom2 <- sample(symp, 500,TRUE)
symptom3 <- sample(symp, 500,TRUE)
Symptoms <- mChoice(symptom1, symptom2, symptom3, label='Primary Symptoms')
table(as.character(Symptoms))
# Note: In this example, some subjects have the same symptom checked
# multiple times; in practice these redundant selections would be NAs
# mChoice will ignore these redundant selections
f <- summaryM(age + sex + sbp + Symptoms ~ treatment, test=TRUE)
f
# trio of numbers represent 25th, 50th, 75th percentile
print(f, long=TRUE)
plot(f) # first specify options(grType='plotly') to use plotly
plot(f, conType='dot', prtest='P')
bpplt() # annotated example showing layout of bp plot
# Produce separate tables by country
f <- summaryM(age + sex + sbp + Symptoms ~ treatment + country,
groups='treatment', test=TRUE)
f
if (FALSE) {
getHdata(pbc)
s5 <- summaryM(bili + albumin + stage + protime + sex +
age + spiders ~ drug, data=pbc)
print(s5, npct='both')
# npct='both' : print both numerators and denominators
plot(s5, which='categorical')
Key(locator(1)) # draw legend at mouse click
par(oma=c(3,0,0,0)) # leave outer margin at bottom
plot(s5, which='continuous') # see also bpplotM
Key2() # draw legend at lower left corner of plot
# oma= above makes this default key fit the page better
options(digits=3)
w <- latex(s5, npct='both', here=TRUE, file='')
options(grType='plotly')
pbc <- upData(pbc, moveUnits = TRUE)
s <- summaryM(bili + albumin + alk.phos + copper + spiders + sex ~
drug, data=pbc, test=TRUE)
# Render html
options(prType='html')
s # invokes print.summaryM
a <- plot(s)
a$Categorical
a$Continuous
plot(s, which='con')
}
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