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README.Rmd
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README.Rmd
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---
output: github_document
---
<!-- README.md is generated from README.Rmd. Please edit that file -->
```{r, include = FALSE}
knitr::opts_chunk$set(
collapse = TRUE,
comment = "#>",
fig.path = "man/figures/README-",
out.width = "100%"
)
```
**NOTE: This is a toy package created for expository purposes, for the second edition of [R Packages](https://r-pkgs.org). It is not meant to actually be useful. If you want a package for factor handling, please see [forcats](https://forcats.tidyverse.org).**
# foofactors
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<!-- badges: end -->
Factors are a very useful type of variable in R, but they can also be very aggravating. This package provides some helper functions for the care and feeding of factors.
## Installation
You can install foofactors like so:
``` r
devtools::install_github("jennybc/foofactors")
```
## Quick demo
Binding two factors via `fbind()`:
```{r}
library(foofactors)
a <- factor(c("character", "hits", "your", "eyeballs"))
b <- factor(c("but", "integer", "where it", "counts"))
```
Simply catenating two factors leads to a result that most don't expect.
```{r}
c(a, b)
```
The `fbind()` function glues two factors together and returns factor.
```{r}
fbind(a, b)
```
Often we want a table of frequencies for the levels of a factor. The base `table()` function returns an object of class `table`, which can be inconvenient for downstream work.
```{r}
set.seed(1234)
x <- factor(sample(letters[1:5], size = 100, replace = TRUE))
table(x)
```
The `fcount()` function returns a frequency table as a tibble with a column of factor levels and another of frequencies:
```{r}
fcount(x)
```