| group_nest | R Documentation |
Nest a tibble using a grouping specification
group_nest(.tbl, ..., .key = "data", keep = FALSE)
.tbl |
A tbl |
... |
Grouping specification, forwarded to |
.key |
the name of the list column |
keep |
Should the grouping columns be kept in the list column. |
A tbl with one row per unique combination of the grouping variables. The first columns are the grouping variables, followed by a list column of tibbles with matching rows of the remaining columns.
group_nest() is not stable because tidyr::nest(.by =)
provides very similar behavior. It may be deprecated in the future.
The primary use case for group_nest() is with already grouped data frames,
typically a result of group_by(). In this case group_nest() only uses
the first argument, the grouped tibble, and warns when ... is used.
When used on ungrouped data frames, group_nest() forwards the ... to
group_by() before nesting, therefore the ... are subject to the data mask.
Other grouping functions:
group_by(),
group_map(),
group_split(),
group_trim()
#----- use case 1: a grouped data frame
iris %>%
group_by(Species) %>%
group_nest()
# this can be useful if the grouped data has been altered before nesting
iris %>%
group_by(Species) %>%
filter(Sepal.Length > mean(Sepal.Length)) %>%
group_nest()
#----- use case 2: using group_nest() on a ungrouped data frame with
# a grouping specification that uses the data mask
starwars %>%
group_nest(species, homeworld)
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