Performs a normalization of data, i.e., it scales variables in the range
0 - 1. This is a special case of rescale()
. unnormalize()
is the
counterpart, but only works for variables that have been normalized with
normalize()
.
normalize(x, ...)# S3 method for numeric
normalize(x, include_bounds = TRUE, verbose = TRUE, ...)
# S3 method for data.frame
normalize(
x,
select = NULL,
exclude = NULL,
include_bounds = TRUE,
ignore_case = FALSE,
regex = FALSE,
verbose = TRUE,
...
)
unnormalize(x, ...)
# S3 method for numeric
unnormalize(x, verbose = TRUE, ...)
# S3 method for data.frame
unnormalize(
x,
select = NULL,
exclude = NULL,
ignore_case = FALSE,
regex = FALSE,
verbose = TRUE,
...
)
A normalized object.
A numeric vector, (grouped) data frame, or matrix. See 'Details'.
Arguments passed to or from other methods.
Logical, if TRUE
, return value may include 0 and 1.
If FALSE
, the return value is compressed, using Smithson and Verkuilen's
(2006) formula (x * (n - 1) + 0.5) / n
, to avoid zeros and ones in the
normalized variables. This can be useful in case of beta-regression, where
the response variable is not allowed to include zeros and ones.
Toggle warnings and messages on or off.
Variables that will be included when performing the required tasks. Can be either
a variable specified as a literal variable name (e.g., column_name
),
a string with the variable name (e.g., "column_name"
), or a character
vector of variable names (e.g., c("col1", "col2", "col3")
),
a formula with variable names (e.g., ~column_1 + column_2
),
a vector of positive integers, giving the positions counting from the left
(e.g. 1
or c(1, 3, 5)
),
a vector of negative integers, giving the positions counting from the
right (e.g., -1
or -1:-3
),
one of the following select-helpers: starts_with()
, ends_with()
,
contains()
, a range using :
or regex("")
. starts_with()
,
ends_with()
, and contains()
accept several patterns, e.g
starts_with("Sep", "Petal")
.
or a function testing for logical conditions, e.g. is.numeric()
(or
is.numeric
), or any user-defined function that selects the variables
for which the function returns TRUE
(like: foo <- function(x) mean(x) > 3
),
ranges specified via literal variable names, select-helpers (except
regex()
) and (user-defined) functions can be negated, i.e. return
non-matching elements, when prefixed with a -
, e.g. -ends_with("")
,
-is.numeric
or -Sepal.Width:Petal.Length
. Note: Negation means
that matches are excluded, and thus, the exclude
argument can be
used alternatively. For instance, select=-ends_with("Length")
(with
-
) is equivalent to exclude=ends_with("Length")
(no -
). In case
negation should not work as expected, use the exclude
argument instead.
If NULL
, selects all columns. Patterns that found no matches are silently
ignored, e.g. find_columns(iris, select = c("Species", "Test"))
will just
return "Species"
.
See select
, however, column names matched by the pattern
from exclude
will be excluded instead of selected. If NULL
(the default),
excludes no columns.
Logical, if TRUE
and when one of the select-helpers or
a regular expression is used in select
, ignores lower/upper case in the
search pattern when matching against variable names.
Logical, if TRUE
, the search pattern from select
will be
treated as regular expression. When regex = TRUE
, select must be a
character string (or a variable containing a character string) and is not
allowed to be one of the supported select-helpers or a character vector
of length > 1. regex = TRUE
is comparable to using one of the two
select-helpers, select = contains("")
or select = regex("")
, however,
since the select-helpers may not work when called from inside other
functions (see 'Details'), this argument may be used as workaround.
For most functions that have a select
argument (including this function),
the complete input data frame is returned, even when select
only selects
a range of variables. That is, the function is only applied to those variables
that have a match in select
, while all other variables remain unchanged.
In other words: for this function, select
will not omit any non-included
variables, so that the returned data frame will include all variables
from the input data frame.
If x
is a matrix, normalization is performed across all values (not
column- or row-wise). For column-wise normalization, convert the matrix to a
data.frame.
If x
is a grouped data frame (grouped_df
), normalization is performed
separately for each group.
Smithson M, Verkuilen J (2006). A Better Lemon Squeezer? Maximum-Likelihood Regression with Beta-Distributed Dependent Variables. Psychological Methods, 11(1), 54–71.
Other transform utilities:
ranktransform()
,
rescale()
,
reverse()
,
standardize()
normalize(c(0, 1, 5, -5, -2))
normalize(c(0, 1, 5, -5, -2), include_bounds = FALSE)
head(normalize(trees))
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