recode | R Documentation |
recode()
is superseded in favor of case_match()
, which handles the most
important cases of recode()
with a more elegant interface.
recode_factor()
is also superseded, however, its direct replacement is not
currently available but will eventually live in
forcats. For creating new variables based
on logical vectors, use if_else()
. For even more complicated criteria, use
case_when()
.
recode()
is a vectorised version of switch()
: you can replace numeric
values based on their position or their name, and character or factor values
only by their name. This is an S3 generic: dplyr provides methods for
numeric, character, and factors. You can use recode()
directly with
factors; it will preserve the existing order of levels while changing the
values. Alternatively, you can use recode_factor()
, which will change the
order of levels to match the order of replacements.
recode(.x, ..., .default = NULL, .missing = NULL)
recode_factor(.x, ..., .default = NULL, .missing = NULL, .ordered = FALSE)
.x |
A vector to modify |
... |
< When named, the argument names should be the current values to be replaced, and the argument values should be the new (replacement) values. All replacements must be the same type, and must have either
length one or the same length as |
.default |
If supplied, all values not otherwise matched will
be given this value. If not supplied and if the replacements are
the same type as the original values in
|
.missing |
If supplied, any missing values in |
.ordered |
If |
A vector the same length as .x
, and the same type as
the first of ...
, .default
, or .missing
.
recode_factor()
returns a factor whose levels are in the same order as
in ...
. The levels in .default
and .missing
come last.
na_if()
to replace specified values with a NA
.
coalesce()
to replace missing values with a specified value.
tidyr::replace_na()
to replace NA
with a value.
char_vec <- sample(c("a", "b", "c"), 10, replace = TRUE)
# `recode()` is superseded by `case_match()`
recode(char_vec, a = "Apple", b = "Banana")
case_match(char_vec, "a" ~ "Apple", "b" ~ "Banana", .default = char_vec)
# With `case_match()`, you don't need typed missings like `NA_character_`
recode(char_vec, a = "Apple", b = "Banana", .default = NA_character_)
case_match(char_vec, "a" ~ "Apple", "b" ~ "Banana", .default = NA)
# Throws an error as `NA` is logical, not character.
try(recode(char_vec, a = "Apple", b = "Banana", .default = NA))
# `case_match()` is easier to use with numeric vectors, because you don't
# need to turn the numeric values into names
num_vec <- c(1:4, NA)
recode(num_vec, `2` = 20L, `4` = 40L)
case_match(num_vec, 2 ~ 20, 4 ~ 40, .default = num_vec)
# `case_match()` doesn't have the ability to match by position like
# `recode()` does with numeric vectors
recode(num_vec, "a", "b", "c", "d")
recode(c(1,5,3), "a", "b", "c", "d", .default = "nothing")
# For `case_match()`, incompatible types are an error rather than a warning
recode(num_vec, `2` = "b", `4` = "d")
try(case_match(num_vec, 2 ~ "b", 4 ~ "d", .default = num_vec))
# The factor method of `recode()` can generally be replaced with
# `forcats::fct_recode()`
factor_vec <- factor(c("a", "b", "c"))
recode(factor_vec, a = "Apple")
# `recode_factor()` does not currently have a direct replacement, but we
# plan to add one to forcats. In the meantime, you can use the `.ptype`
# argument to `case_match()`.
recode_factor(
num_vec,
`1` = "z",
`2` = "y",
`3` = "x",
.default = "D",
.missing = "M"
)
case_match(
num_vec,
1 ~ "z",
2 ~ "y",
3 ~ "x",
NA ~ "M",
.default = "D",
.ptype = factor(levels = c("z", "y", "x", "D", "M"))
)
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