fmt_integer | R Documentation |
With numeric values in a gt table, we can perform number-based formatting so that the targeted values are always rendered as integer values. We can have fine control over integer formatting with the following options:
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
fmt_integer(
data,
columns = everything(),
rows = everything(),
use_seps = TRUE,
accounting = FALSE,
scale_by = 1,
suffixing = FALSE,
pattern = "{x}",
sep_mark = ",",
force_sign = FALSE,
system = c("intl", "ind"),
locale = NULL
)
data |
The gt table data object
This is the gt table object that is commonly created through use of the
|
columns |
Columns to target
Can either be a series of column names provided in |
rows |
Rows to target
In conjunction with |
use_seps |
Use digit group separators
An option to use digit group separators. The type of digit group separator
is set by |
accounting |
Use accounting style
An option to use accounting style for values. Normally, negative values will be shown with a minus sign but using accounting style will instead put any negative values in parentheses. |
scale_by |
Scale values by a fixed multiplier
All numeric values will be multiplied by the |
suffixing |
Specification for large-number suffixing
The We can alternatively provide a character vector that serves as a
specification for which symbols are to be used for each of the value ranges.
These preferred symbols will replace the defaults (e.g.,
Including Any use of If using |
pattern |
Specification of the formatting pattern
A formatting pattern that allows for decoration of the formatted value. The
formatted value is represented by the |
sep_mark |
Separator mark for digit grouping
The string to use as a separator between groups of digits. For example,
using |
force_sign |
Forcing the display of a positive sign
Should the positive sign be shown for positive values (effectively showing
a sign for all values except zero)? If so, use |
system |
Numbering system for grouping separators
The international numbering system (keyword: |
locale |
Locale identifier
An optional locale identifier that can be used for formatting values
according to the locale's rules. Examples include |
An object of class gt_tbl
.
fmt_integer()
is compatible with body cells that are of the "numeric"
or
"integer"
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()
helper functionfrom_column()
can be used with certain arguments of fmt_integer()
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()
:
use_seps
accounting
scale_by
suffixing
pattern
sep_mark
force_sign
system
locale
Please note that for all 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.
locale
This formatting function can adapt outputs according to a provided locale
value. Examples include "en"
for English (United States) and "fr"
for
French (France). The use of a valid locale ID here means separator marks will
be correct for the given locale. Should any value be provided in sep_mark
,
it will be overridden by the locale's preferred value.
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.
For this example, we'll use two columns from the exibble
dataset and
create a simple gt table. With fmt_integer()
, we'll format the num
column as integer values having no digit separators (with the
use_seps = FALSE
option).
exibble |> dplyr::select(num, char) |> gt() |> fmt_integer(use_seps = FALSE)
Let's use a modified version of the countrypops
dataset to create a
gt table with row labels. We will format all numeric columns with
fmt_integer()
and scale all values by 1 / 1E6
, giving us integer values
representing millions of people. We can make clear what the values represent
with an informative spanner label via tab_spanner()
.
countrypops |> dplyr::select(country_code_3, year, population) |> dplyr::filter(country_code_3 %in% c("CHN", "IND", "USA", "PAK", "IDN")) |> dplyr::filter(year > 1975 & year %% 5 == 0) |> tidyr::spread(year, population) |> dplyr::arrange(desc(`2015`)) |> gt(rowname_col = "country_code_3") |> fmt_integer(scale_by = 1 / 1E6) |> tab_spanner(label = "Millions of People", columns = everything())
Using a subset of the towny
dataset, we can do interesting things with
integer values. Through cols_add()
we'll add the difference
column (which
calculates the difference between 2021 and 2001 populations). All numeric
values will be formatted with a first pass of fmt_integer()
; a second pass
of fmt_integer()
focuses on the difference
column and here we use the
force_sign = TRUE
option to draw attention to positive and negative
difference values.
towny |> dplyr::select(name, population_2001, population_2021) |> dplyr::slice_tail(n = 10) |> gt() |> cols_add(difference = population_2021 - population_2001) |> fmt_integer() |> fmt_integer(columns = difference, force_sign = TRUE) |> cols_label_with(fn = function(x) gsub("population_", "", x)) |> tab_style( style = cell_fill(color = "gray90"), locations = cells_body(columns = difference) )
3-2
v0.3.1
(August 9, 2021)
Format number with decimal values: fmt_number()
The vector-formatting version of this function: vec_fmt_integer()
Other data formatting functions:
data_color()
,
fmt()
,
fmt_auto()
,
fmt_bins()
,
fmt_bytes()
,
fmt_chem()
,
fmt_country()
,
fmt_currency()
,
fmt_date()
,
fmt_datetime()
,
fmt_duration()
,
fmt_email()
,
fmt_engineering()
,
fmt_flag()
,
fmt_fraction()
,
fmt_icon()
,
fmt_image()
,
fmt_index()
,
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()
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