Format input values to time values using one of 41 preset date styles. Input
can be in the form of POSIXt
(i.e., datetimes), the Date
type, or
character
(must be in the ISO 8601 form of YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
or
YYYY-MM-DD
).
fmt_date(
data,
columns = everything(),
rows = everything(),
date_style = "iso",
pattern = "{x}",
locale = NULL
)
An object of class gt_tbl
.
The gt table data object
obj:<gt_tbl>
// required
This is the gt table object that is commonly created through use of the
gt()
function.
Columns to target
<column-targeting expression>
// default: everything()
Can either be a series of column names provided in c()
, a vector of
column indices, or a select helper function (e.g. starts_with()
,
ends_with()
, contains()
, matches()
, num_range()
and everything()
).
Rows to target
<row-targeting expression>
// default: everything()
In conjunction with columns
, we can specify which of their rows should
undergo formatting. The default everything()
results in all rows in
columns
being formatted. Alternatively, we can supply a vector of row
captions within c()
, a vector of row indices, or a select helper
function (e.g. starts_with()
, ends_with()
, contains()
, matches()
,
num_range()
, and everything()
). We can also use expressions to filter
down to the rows we need (e.g., [colname_1] > 100 & [colname_2] < 50
).
Predefined style for dates
scalar<character>|scalar<numeric|integer>(1<=val<=41)
// default: "iso"
The date style to use. By default this is the short name "iso"
which
corresponds to ISO 8601 date formatting. There are 41 date styles in total
and their short names can be viewed using info_date_style()
.
Specification of the formatting pattern
scalar<character>
// default: "{x}"
A formatting pattern that allows for decoration of the formatted value. The
formatted value is represented by the {x}
(which can be used multiple
times, if needed) and all other characters will be interpreted as string
literals.
Locale identifier
scalar<character>
// default: NULL
(optional
)
An optional locale identifier that can be used for formatting values
according to the locale's rules. Examples include "en"
for English (United
States) and "fr"
for French (France). We can call info_locales()
for a
useful reference for all of the locales that are supported. A locale ID can
be also set in the initial gt()
function call (where it would be used
automatically by any function with a locale
argument) but a locale
value provided here will override that global locale.
fmt_date()
is compatible with body cells that are of the "Date"
,
"POSIXt"
or "character"
types. Any other types of body cells are ignored
during formatting. This is to say that cells of incompatible data types may
be targeted, but there will be no attempt to format them.
from_column()
can be used with certain arguments of fmt_date()
to obtain
varying parameter values from a specified column within the table. This means
that each row could be formatted a little bit differently. These arguments
provide support for from_column()
:
date_style
pattern
locale
Please note that for each of the aforementioned arguments, a from_column()
call needs to reference a column that has data of the correct type (this is
different for each argument). Additional columns for parameter values can be
generated with cols_add()
(if not already present). Columns that contain
parameter data can also be hidden from final display with cols_hide()
.
Finally, there is no limitation to how many arguments the from_column()
helper is applied so long as the arguments belong to this closed set.
We need to supply a preset date style to the date_style
argument. The date
styles are numerous and can handle localization to any supported locale. A
large segment of date styles are termed flexible date formats and this means
that their output will adapt to any locale
provided. That feature makes the
flexible date formats a better option for locales other than "en"
(the
default locale).
The following table provides a listing of all date styles and their output
values (corresponding to an input date of 2000-02-29
).
Date Style | Output | Notes | |
1 | "iso" | "2000-02-29" | ISO 8601 |
2 | "wday_month_day_year" | "Tuesday, February 29, 2000" | |
3 | "wd_m_day_year" | "Tue, Feb 29, 2000" | |
4 | "wday_day_month_year" | "Tuesday 29 February 2000" | |
5 | "month_day_year" | "February 29, 2000" | |
6 | "m_day_year" | "Feb 29, 2000" | |
7 | "day_m_year" | "29 Feb 2000" | |
8 | "day_month_year" | "29 February 2000" | |
9 | "day_month" | "29 February" | |
10 | "day_m" | "29 Feb" | |
11 | "year" | "2000" | |
12 | "month" | "February" | |
13 | "day" | "29" | |
14 | "year.mn.day" | "2000/02/29" | |
15 | "y.mn.day" | "00/02/29" | |
16 | "year_week" | "2000-W09" | |
17 | "year_quarter" | "2000-Q1" | |
18 | "yMd" | "2/29/2000" | flexible |
19 | "yMEd" | "Tue, 2/29/2000" | flexible |
20 | "yMMM" | "Feb 2000" | flexible |
21 | "yMMMM" | "February 2000" | flexible |
22 | "yMMMd" | "Feb 29, 2000" | flexible |
23 | "yMMMEd" | "Tue, Feb 29, 2000" | flexible |
24 | "GyMd" | "2/29/2000 A" | flexible |
25 | "GyMMMd" | "Feb 29, 2000 AD" | flexible |
26 | "GyMMMEd" | "Tue, Feb 29, 2000 AD" | flexible |
27 | "yM" | "2/2000" | flexible |
28 | "Md" | "2/29" | flexible |
29 | "MEd" | "Tue, 2/29" | flexible |
30 | "MMMd" | "Feb 29" | flexible |
31 | "MMMEd" | "Tue, Feb 29" | flexible |
32 | "MMMMd" | "February 29" | flexible |
33 | "GyMMM" | "Feb 2000 AD" | flexible |
34 | "yQQQ" | "Q1 2000" | flexible |
35 | "yQQQQ" | "1st quarter 2000" | flexible |
36 | "Gy" | "2000 AD" | flexible |
37 | "y" | "2000" | flexible |
38 | "M" | "2" | flexible |
39 | "MMM" | "Feb" | flexible |
40 | "d" | "29" | flexible |
41 | "Ed" | "29 Tue" | flexible |
We can call info_date_style()
in the console to view a similar table
of date styles with example output.
This formatting function can adapt outputs according to a provided locale
value. Examples include "en"
for English (United States) and "fr"
for
French (France). Note that a locale
value provided here will override any
global locale setting performed in gt()
's own locale
argument (it is
settable there as a value received by all other functions that have a
locale
argument). As a useful reference on which locales are supported, we
can call info_locales()
to view an info table.
Let's use the exibble
dataset to create a simple, two-column gt table
(keeping only the date
and time
columns). With fmt_date()
, we'll format
the date
column to display dates formatted with the "month_day_year"
date style.
exibble |>
dplyr::select(date, time) |>
gt() |>
fmt_date(
columns = date,
date_style = "month_day_year"
)
Again using the exibble
dataset, let's format the date
column to have
mixed date formats, where dates after April 1st will be different than the
others because of the expressions used in the rows
argument. This will
involve two calls of fmt_date()
with different statements provided for
rows
. In the first call (dates after the 1st of April) the date style
"m_day_year"
is used; for the second call, "day_m_year"
is the named
date style supplied to date_style
.
exibble |>
dplyr::select(date, time) |>
gt() |>
fmt_date(
columns = date,
rows = as.Date(date) > as.Date("2015-04-01"),
date_style = "m_day_year"
) |>
fmt_date(
columns = date,
rows = as.Date(date) <= as.Date("2015-04-01"),
date_style = "day_m_year"
)
Use the exibble
dataset to create a single-column gt table (with only
the date
column). Format the date values using the "yMMMEd"
date style
(which is one of the 'flexible' styles). Also, we'll set the locale to "nl"
to get the dates in Dutch.
exibble |>
dplyr::select(date) |>
gt() |>
fmt_date(
date_style = "yMMMEd",
locale = "nl"
)
3-13
v0.2.0.5
(March 31, 2020)
The vector-formatting version of this function: vec_fmt_date()
.
Other data formatting functions:
data_color()
,
fmt()
,
fmt_auto()
,
fmt_bins()
,
fmt_bytes()
,
fmt_chem()
,
fmt_country()
,
fmt_currency()
,
fmt_datetime()
,
fmt_duration()
,
fmt_email()
,
fmt_engineering()
,
fmt_flag()
,
fmt_fraction()
,
fmt_icon()
,
fmt_image()
,
fmt_index()
,
fmt_integer()
,
fmt_markdown()
,
fmt_number()
,
fmt_partsper()
,
fmt_passthrough()
,
fmt_percent()
,
fmt_roman()
,
fmt_scientific()
,
fmt_spelled_num()
,
fmt_tf()
,
fmt_time()
,
fmt_units()
,
fmt_url()
,
sub_large_vals()
,
sub_missing()
,
sub_small_vals()
,
sub_values()
,
sub_zero()