sfl | R Documentation |
This constructor is used to create a named list of functions. It also you
also pass NULL
to identify a skimming function that you wish to remove.
Only functions that return a single value, working with dplyr::summarize()
,
can be used within sfl
.
sfl(..., skim_type = "")
... |
Inherited from dplyr::data_masking() for dplyr version 1 or later or dplyr::funs() for older versions of dplyr. A list of functions specified by:
|
skim_type |
A character scalar. This is used to match locally-provided
skimmers with defaults. See |
sfl()
will automatically generate callables and names for a variety of
inputs, including functions, formulas and strings. Nonetheless, we recommend
providing names when reasonable to get better skim()
output.
A skimr_function_list
, which contains a list of fun_calls
,
returned by dplyr::funs()
and a list of skimming functions to drop.
dplyr::funs()
, skim_with()
and get_skimmers()
.
# sfl's can take a variety of input formats and will generate names # if not provided. sfl(mad, "var", ~ length(.)^2) # But these can generate unpredictable names in your output. # Better to set your own names. sfl(mad = mad, variance = "var", length_sq = ~ length(.)^2) # sfl's can remove individual skimmers from defaults by passing NULL. sfl(hist = NULL) # When working interactively, you don't need to set a type. # But you should when defining new defaults with `get_skimmers()`. get_skimmers.my_new_class <- function(column) { sfl(n_missing, skim_type = "my_new_class") }
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