skim
objectsskimr
has custom print methods for all supported objects. Default printing
methods for knitr
/ rmarkdown
documents is also provided.
# S3 method for skim_df
print(
x,
include_summary = TRUE,
n = Inf,
width = Inf,
summary_rule_width = getOption("skimr_summary_rule_width", default = 40),
...
)# S3 method for skim_list
print(x, n = Inf, width = Inf, ...)
# S3 method for summary_skim_df
print(x, .summary_rule_width = 40, ...)
Object to format or print.
Whether a summary of the data frame should be printed
Number of rows to show. If NULL
, the default, will print all rows
if less than the print_max
option.
Otherwise, will print as many rows as specified by the
print_min
option.
Width of text output to generate. This defaults to NULL
, which
means use the width
option.
Width of Data Summary cli rule, defaults to 40.
Passed on to tbl_format_setup()
.
the width for the main rule above the summary.
print(skim_df)
: Print a skimmed data frame (skim_df
from skim()
).
print(skim_list)
: Print a skim_list
, a list of skim_df
objects.
print(summary_skim_df)
: Print method for a summary_skim_df
object.
For better or for worse, skimr
often produces more output than can fit in
the standard R console. Fortunately, most modern environments like RStudio
and Jupyter support more than 80 character outputs. Call
options(width = 90)
to get a better experience with skimr
.
The print methods in skimr
wrap those in the tibble
package. You can control printing behavior using the same global options.
Printing a skim_df
requires specific columns that might be dropped when
using dplyr::select()
or dplyr::summarize()
on a skim_df
. In those
cases, this method falls back to tibble::print.tbl()
.
You can control the width rule line for the printed subtables with an option:
skimr_table_header_width
.
tibble::trunc_mat()
For a list of global options for customizing
print formatting. crayon::has_color()
for the variety of issues that
affect tibble's color support.