Tidy summarizes information about the components of a model. A model component might be a single term in a regression, a single hypothesis, a cluster, or a class. Exactly what tidy considers to be a model component varies across models but is usually self-evident. If a model has several distinct types of components, you will need to specify which components to return.
# S3 method for varest
tidy(x, conf.int = FALSE, conf.level = 0.95, ...)A tibble::tibble() with columns:
Upper bound on the confidence interval for the estimate.
Lower bound on the confidence interval for the estimate.
The estimated value of the regression term.
The two-sided p-value associated with the observed statistic.
The value of a T-statistic to use in a hypothesis that the regression term is non-zero.
The standard error of the regression term.
The name of the regression term.
Whether a particular term was used to model the mean or the precision in the regression. See details.
A varest object produced by a call to vars::VAR().
Logical indicating whether or not to include a confidence
interval in the tidied output. Defaults to FALSE.
The confidence level to use for the confidence interval
if conf.int = TRUE. Must be strictly greater than 0 and less than 1.
Defaults to 0.95, which corresponds to a 95 percent confidence interval.
Additional arguments. Not used. Needed to match generic
signature only. Cautionary note: Misspelled arguments will be
absorbed in ..., where they will be ignored. If the misspelled
argument has a default value, the default value will be used.
For example, if you pass conf.lvel = 0.9, all computation will
proceed using conf.level = 0.95. Two exceptions here are:
tidy() methods will warn when supplied an exponentiate argument if
it will be ignored.
augment() methods will warn when supplied a newdata argument if it
will be ignored.
The tibble has one row for each term in the regression. The
component column indicates whether a particular
term was used to model either the "mean" or "precision". Here the
precision is the inverse of the variance, often referred to as phi.
At least one term will have been used to model the precision phi.
The vars package does not include a confint method and does not report
confidence intervals for varest objects. Setting the tidy argument
conf.int = TRUE will return a warning.
tidy(), vars::VAR()
if (FALSE) { # rlang::is_installed("vars")
# load libraries for models and data
library(vars)
# load data
data("Canada", package = "vars")
# fit models
mod <- VAR(Canada, p = 1, type = "both")
# summarize model fit with tidiers
tidy(mod)
glance(mod)
}
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab