With numeric values in a vector, we can perform number-based formatting so that the values are rendered to a character vector with some level of precision. The following major options are available:
decimals: choice of the number of decimal places, option to drop trailing zeros, and a choice of the decimal symbol
digit grouping separators: options to enable/disable digit separators and provide a choice of separator symbol
scaling: we can choose to scale targeted values by a multiplier value
large-number suffixing: larger figures (thousands, millions, etc.) can be autoscaled and decorated with the appropriate suffixes
pattern: option to use a text pattern for decoration of the formatted values
locale-based formatting: providing a locale ID will result in number formatting specific to the chosen locale
vec_fmt_number(
x,
decimals = 2,
n_sigfig = NULL,
drop_trailing_zeros = FALSE,
drop_trailing_dec_mark = TRUE,
use_seps = TRUE,
accounting = FALSE,
scale_by = 1,
suffixing = FALSE,
pattern = "{x}",
sep_mark = ",",
dec_mark = ".",
force_sign = FALSE,
locale = NULL,
output = c("auto", "plain", "html", "latex", "rtf", "word")
)
A character vector.
A numeric vector.
An option to specify the exact number of decimal places to
use. The default number of decimal places is 2
.
A option to format numbers to n significant figures. By
default, this is NULL
and thus number values will be formatted according
to the number of decimal places set via decimals
. If opting to format
according to the rules of significant figures, n_sigfig
must be a number
greater than or equal to 1
. Any values passed to the decimals
and
drop_trailing_zeros
arguments will be ignored.
A logical value that allows for removal of trailing zeros (those redundant zeros after the decimal mark).
A logical value that determines whether decimal
marks should always appear even if there are no decimal digits to display
after formatting (e.g, 23
becomes 23.
). The default for this is TRUE
,
which means that trailing decimal marks are not shown.
An option to use digit group separators. The type of digit
group separator is set by sep_mark
and overridden if a locale ID is
provided to locale
. This setting is TRUE
by default.
An option to use accounting style for values. With FALSE
(the default), negative values will be shown with a minus sign. Using
accounting = TRUE
will put negative values in parentheses.
A value to scale the input. The default is 1.0
. All numeric
values will be multiplied by this value first before undergoing formatting.
This value will be ignored if using any of the suffixing
options (i.e.,
where suffixing
is not set to FALSE
).
An option to scale and apply suffixes to larger numbers
(e.g., 1924000
can be transformed to 1.92M
). This option can accept a
logical value, where FALSE
(the default) will not perform this
transformation and TRUE
will apply thousands (K
), millions (M
),
billions (B
), and trillions (T
) suffixes after automatic value scaling.
We can also specify which symbols to use for each of the value ranges by
using a character vector of the preferred symbols to replace the defaults
(e.g., c("k", "Ml", "Bn", "Tr")
).
Including NA
values in the vector will ensure that the particular range
will either not be included in the transformation (e.g, c(NA, "M", "B", "T")
won't modify numbers in the thousands range) or the range will
inherit a previous suffix (e.g., with c("K", "M", NA, "T")
, all numbers
in the range of millions and billions will be in terms of millions).
Any use of suffixing
(where it is not set expressly as FALSE
) means
that any value provided to scale_by
will be ignored.
A formatting pattern that allows for decoration of the
formatted value. The value itself is represented by {x}
and all other
characters are taken to be string literals.
The mark to use as a separator between groups of digits
(e.g., using sep_mark = ","
with 1000
would result in a formatted value
of 1,000
).
The character to use as a decimal mark (e.g., using
dec_mark = ","
with 0.152
would result in a formatted value of
0,152
).
Should the positive sign be shown for positive values
(effectively showing a sign for all values except zero)? If so, use TRUE
for this option. The default is FALSE
, where only negative numbers will
display a minus sign. This option is disregarded when using accounting
notation with accounting = TRUE
.
An optional locale ID that can be used for formatting the value
according the locale's rules. Examples include "en"
for English (United
States) and "fr"
for French (France). The use of a valid locale ID will
override any values provided in sep_mark
and dec_mark
. We can use the
info_locales()
function as a useful reference for all of the locales that
are supported.
The output style of the resulting character vector. This can
either be "auto"
(the default), "plain"
, "html"
, "latex"
, "rtf"
,
or "word"
. In knitr rendering (i.e., Quarto or R Markdown), the
"auto"
option will choose the correct output
value
Let's create a numeric vector for the next few examples:
num_vals <- c(5.2, 8.65, 0, -5.3, NA)
Using vec_fmt_number()
with the default options will create a character
vector where the numeric values have two decimal places and NA
values will
render as "NA"
. Also, the rendering context will be autodetected unless
specified in the output
argument (here, it is of the "plain"
output
type).
vec_fmt_number(num_vals)
#> [1] "5.20" "8.65" "0.00" "-5.30" "NA"
We can change the decimal mark to a comma, and we have to be sure to change the digit separator mark from the default comma to something else (a period works here):
vec_fmt_number(num_vals, sep_mark = ".", dec_mark = ",")
#> [1] "5,20" "8,65" "0,00" "-5,30" "NA"
If we are formatting for a different locale, we could supply the locale ID and let gt handle these locale-specific formatting options:
vec_fmt_number(num_vals, locale = "fr")
#> [1] "5,20" "8,65" "0,00" "-5,30" "NA"
There are many options for formatting values. Perhaps you need to have
explicit positive and negative signs? Use force_sign = TRUE
for that.
vec_fmt_number(num_vals, force_sign = TRUE)
#> [1] "+5.20" "+8.65" "0.00" "-5.30" "NA"
Those trailing zeros past the decimal mark can be stripped out by using the
drop_trailing_zeros
option.
vec_fmt_number(num_vals, drop_trailing_zeros = TRUE)
#> [1] "5.2" "8.65" "0" "-5.3" "NA"
As a last example, one can wrap the values in a pattern with the pattern
argument. Note here that NA
values won't have the pattern applied.
vec_fmt_number(num_vals, pattern = "`{x}`")
#> [1] "`5.20`" "`8.65`" "`0.00`" "`-5.30`" "NA"
14-1
Other vector formatting functions:
vec_fmt_bytes()
,
vec_fmt_currency()
,
vec_fmt_datetime()
,
vec_fmt_date()
,
vec_fmt_duration()
,
vec_fmt_engineering()
,
vec_fmt_fraction()
,
vec_fmt_integer()
,
vec_fmt_markdown()
,
vec_fmt_partsper()
,
vec_fmt_percent()
,
vec_fmt_roman()
,
vec_fmt_scientific()
,
vec_fmt_time()